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Page 923, results 23051 - 23075

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Do non-native plant species affect the shape of productivity-diversity relationships?
J.M. Drake, E.E. Cleland, M. C. Horner-Devine, E. Fleishman, C. Bowles, M. D. Smith, K. Carney, S. Emery, J. Gramling, D.B. Vandermast, J.B. Grace
2008, American Midland Naturalist (159) 55-66
The relationship between ecosystem processes and species richness is an active area of research and speculation. Both theoretical and experimental studies have been conducted in numerous ecosystems. One finding of these studies is that the shape of the relationship between productivity and species richness varies considerably among ecosystems and at...
Brown treesnake (Boiga irregularis) trappability: Attributes of the snake, environment and trap
V.L. Boyarski, J. A. Savidge, G.H. Rodda
2008, Applied Herpetology (5) 47-61
We examined three classes of factors that may influence brown treesnake (Boiga irregularis) trappability on Guam: (1) attributes of the snake, (2) attributes of the environment and (3) attributes of the trap. The attributes of the snake we considered included body condition, length and sex. Heavier snakes for a given...
The effect of terrace geology on ground-water movement and on the interaction of ground water and surface water on a mountainside near Mirror Lake, New Hampshire, USA
T. C. Winter, D.C. Buso, P.C. Shattuck, P. T. Harte, D.A. Vroblesky, D.J. Goode
2008, Hydrological Processes (22) 21-32
The west watershed of Mirror Lake in the White Mountains of New Hampshire contains several terraces that are at different altitudes and have different geologic compositions. The lowest terrace (FSE) has 5 m of sand overlying 9 m of till. The two next successively higher terraces (FS2 and FS1) consist...
Experience preferences as mediators of the wildlife related recreation participation: Place attachment relationship
D.H. Anderson, D.C. Fulton
2008, Human Dimensions of Wildlife (13) 73-88
The human dimensions literature challenges the notion that settings are simply features and attributes that can be manipulated to satisfy public demand; instead, people view specific recreation settings as unique kinds of places. Land managers provide recreation experience opportunities, but most conventional management frameworks do not allow managers to address...
Plant-herbivore interactions mediated by plant toxicity
Z. Feng, R. Liu, D.L. DeAngelis
2008, Theoretical Population Biology (73) 449-459
We explore the impact of plant toxicity on the dynamics of a plant-herbivore interaction, such as that of a mammalian browser and its plant forage species, by studying a mathematical model that includes a toxin-determined functional response. In this functional response, the traditional Holling Type 2 response is modified to...
Food web dynamics in a seasonally varying wetland
D.L. DeAngelis, J.C. Trexler, D.D. Donalson
2008, Mathematical Biosciences and Engineering (5) 877-887
A spatially explicit model is developed to simulate the small fish community and its underlying food web, in the freshwater marshes of the Everglades. The community is simplified to a few small fish species feeding on periphyton and invertebrates. Other compartments are detritus, crayfish, and a piscivorous fish species. This...
A modeling tool to evaluate regional coral reef responses to changes in climate and ocean chemistry
R. W. Buddemeier, P. L. Jokiel, K.M. Zimmerman, D.R. Lane, J.M. Carey, Geoffrey C. Bohling, J.A. Martinich
2008, Limnology and Oceanography: Methods (6) 395-411
We developed a spreadsheet-based model for the use of managers, conservationists, and biologists for projecting the effects of climate change on coral reefs at local-to-regional scales. The COMBO (Coral Mortality and Bleaching Output) model calculates the impacts to coral reefs from changes in average SST and CO2 concentrations, and from...
A trade-off between model resolution and variance with selected Rayleigh-wave data
J. Xia, R. D. Miller, Y. Xu
2008, Conference Paper, SEG Technical Program Expanded Abstracts
Inversion of multimode surface-wave data is of increasing interest in the near-surface geophysics community. For a given near-surface geophysical problem, it is essential to understand how well the data, calculated according to a layered-earth model, might match the observed data. A data-resolution matrix is a function of the data kernel...
Range-wide patterns of greater sage-grouse persistence
Cameron L. Aldridge, Scott E. Nielsen, Hawthorne L. Beyer, Mark S. Boyce, John W. Connelly, Steven T. Knick, Michael A. Schroeder
2008, Diversity and Distributions (14) 983-994
Aim: Greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus), a shrub-steppe obligate species of western North America, currently occupies only half its historical range. Here we examine how broad-scale, long-term trends in landscape condition have affected range contraction. Location: Sagebrush biome of the western USA. Methods: Logistic regression was used to assess persistence and...
Holocene vertical displacement on the central segments of the Wasatch fault zone, Utah
C. B. DuRoss
2008, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (98) 2918-2933
Compiled per-event vertical-displacement observations from 17 paleoseismic sites along the six central segments of the Wasatch fault zone (WFZ) highlight possible biases and trends in displacement along the fault. The displacement data are consistent with a model of characteristic-type slip, but anomalous and variable displacements indicate that significant natural variability...
Reducing sedimentation of depressional wetlands in agricultural landscapes
S. K. Skagen, Cynthia Melcher, D.A. Haukos
2008, Wetlands (28) 594-604
Depressional wetlands in agricultural landscapes are easily degraded by sediments and contaminants accumulated from their watersheds. Several best management practices can reduce transport of sediments into wetlands, including the establishment of vegetative buffers. We summarize the sources, transport dynamics, and effect of sediments, nutrients, and contaminants that threaten wetlands and...
Sensitivity of wetland saturated hydraulic heads and water budgets to evapotranspiration
W.B. Shoemaker, S. Huddleston, C.L. Boudreau, A. M. O’Reilly
2008, Wetlands (28) 1040-1047
The sensitivity of wetland saturated hydraulic heads and water budgets to evapotranspiration (ET) was examined using a simplified hydrologic model and eight representations of ET. Estimates of ET that created the most reliable wetland saturated hydraulic heads and water budgets employed vegetation coefficients to correct potential ET, calculated by the...
The ancestral cascades arc: Cenozoic evolution of the central Sierra Nevada (California) and the birth of the new plate boundary
C.J. Busby, J.C. Hagan, K. Putirka, Christopher J. Pluhar, P. B. Gans, D.L. Wagner, D. Rood, S.B. DeOreo, I. Skilling
2008, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 331-378
We integrate new stratigraphic, structural, geochemical, geochronological, and magnetostratigraphic data on Cenozoic volcanic rocks in the central Sierra Nevada to arrive at closely inter-related new models for: (1) the paleogeography of the ancestral Cascades arc, (2) the stratigraphic record of uplift events in the Sierra Nevada, (3) the tectonic controls...
Stratigraphic evidence for the role of lake spillover in the inception of the lower Colorado River in southern Nevada and western Arizona
P.K. House, P. A. Pearthree, M. E. Perkins
2008, Conference Paper, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America
Late Miocene and early Pliocene sediments exposed along the lower Colorado River near Laughlin, Nevada, contain evidence that establishment of this reach of the river after 5.6 Ma involved flooding from lake spillover through a bedrock divide between Cottonwood Valley to the north and Mohave Valley to the south. Lacustrine...
Multistage late Cenozoic evolution of the Amargosa River drainage, southwestern Nevada and eastern California Society of America. All rights reserved
C.M. Menges
2008, Conference Paper, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America
Stratigraphic and geomorphic analyses reveal that the regional drainage basin of the modern Amargosa River formed via multistage linkage of formerly isolated basins in a diachronous series of integration events between late Miocene and latest Pleistocene-Holocene time. The 275-km-long Amargosa River system drains generally southward across a large (15,540 km<sup>...
Protracted construction of gabbroic crust at a slow spreading ridge: Constraints from 206Pb/238U zircon ages from Atlantis Massif and IODP Hole U1309D (30°N, MAR)
Craig B. Grimes, Barbara E. John, Michael J. Cheadle, Joseph L. Wooden
2008, Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems (9)
Sensitive high-resolution ion microprobe (SHRIMP) U-Pb zircon ages of 24 samples from oceanic crust recovered in Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Hole U1309D and from the surface of Atlantis Massif, Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) (30°N) document a protracted history of accretion in the footwall to an oceanic detachment fault. Ages for...
Do beavers promote the invasion of non-native Tamarix in the Grand Canyon riparian zone
S.G. Mortenson, P.J. Weisberg, B.E. Ralston
2008, Wetlands (28) 666-675
Beavers (Castor canadensis Kuhl) can influence the competitive dynamics of plant species through selective foraging, collection of materials for dam creation, and alteration of hydrologic conditions. In the Grand Canyon National Park, the native Salix gooddingii C.R.Ball (Goodding's willow) and Salix exigua Nutt. (coyote willow) are a staple food of...
Late Quaternary MIS 6-8 shoreline features of pluvial Owens Lake, Owens Valley, eastern California
A. S. Jayko, S.N. Bacon
2008, Conference Paper, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America
The chronologic history of pluvial Owens Lake along the eastern Sierra Nevada in Owens Valley, California, has previously been reported for the interval of time from ca. 25 calibrated ka to the present. However, the age, distribution, and paleoclimatic context of higher-elevation shoreline features have not been formally documented. We...
Canadian groundwater inventory: Regional hydrogeological characterization of the south-central part of the maritimes basin
C. Rivard, Y. Michaud, C. Deblonde, V. Boisvert, C. Carrier, R. H. Morin, T. Calvert, H. Vigneault, D. Conohan, S. Castonguay, R. Lefebvre, A. Rivera, M. Parent
2008, Bulletin of the Geological Survey of Canada 1-96
The Maritimes Groundwater Initiative (MGWI) is a large, integrated, regional hydrogeological study focusing on a representative area of the Maritimes Basin in eastern Canada. The study area covers a land surface of 10 500 km2, of which 9 400 km2 are underlain by sedimentary rocks. This sedimentary bedrock is composed...
An evaluation of the evolution of the latest miocene to earliest pliocene bouse lake system in the lower Colorado river valley, southwestern USA
J.E. Spencer, P. A. Pearthree, P.K. House
2008, Conference Paper, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America
The upper Miocene to lower Pliocene Bouse Formation in the lower Colorado River trough of the American Southwest was deposited in three basins - from north to south, the Mohave, Havasu, and Blythe Basins - that were formed by extensional fault ing in the early to middle Miocene. Fossils of...
Deciphering the mid-Carboniferous eustatic event in the central Appalachian foreland basin, southern West Virginia, USA
B.M. Blake Jr., J.D. Beuthin
2008, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 249-260
A prominent unconformity, present across shallow shelf areas of the Euramerican paleoequatorial basins, is used to demark the boundary between the Mississippian and Pennsylvanian subsystems. This unconformity, the mid-Carboniferous eustatic event, is generally attributed to a major glacio-eustatic sea-level fall. Although a Mississippian-Pennsylvanian unconformity is recognized throughout most of the...
Middle to late cenozoic geology, hydrography, and fish evolution in the American Southwest
J.E. Spencer, G.R. Smith, T.E. Dowling
2008, Conference Paper, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America
An evaluation of the poorly understood Cenozoic hydrologic history of the American Southwest using combined geological and biological data yields new insights with implications for tectonic evolution. The Mesozoic Cordilleran orogen next to the continental margin of southwestern North America probably formed the continental divide. Mountain building migrated eastward to...
Reevaluation of the macroseismic effects of the 1887 Sonora, Mexico earthquake and its magnitude estimation
Gerardo Suarez, Susan E. Hough
2008, Geo-UNAM : boletín informativo del área de ciencias de la tierra 1-15
The Sonora, Mexico, earthquake of 3 May 1887 occurred a few years before the start of the instrumental era in seismology. We revisit all available accounts of the earthquake and assign Modified Mercalli Intensities (MMI), interpreting and analyzing macroseismic information using the best available modern methods. We find that earlier...
Information fusion in regularized inversion of tomographic pumping tests
Geoffrey C. Bohling
CaiCaiJim Yeh T.-C., editor(s)
2008, Studies in Computational Intelligence (79) 137-162
In this chapter we investigate a simple approach to incorporating geophysical information into the analysis of tomographic pumping tests for characterization of the hydraulic conductivity (K) field in an aquifer. A number of authors have suggested a tomographic approach to the analysis of hydraulic tests in aquifers - essentially simultaneous...