Genetic effects of a large-scale Spartina alterniflora (smooth cordgrass) dieback and recovery in the northern Gulf of Mexico
K.R. Edwards, S.E. Travis, C.E. Proffitt
2005, Estuaries (28) 204-214
A large-scale dieback event struck marshes along the northwestern Gulf of Mexico coast during summer 2000, in apparent response to a prolonged and severe drought. Along the Louisiana coast, large areas of the dominant marsh species, Spartina alterniflora, turned brown, followed by death of at least the aboveground...
Ranking the risk of wildlife species hazardous to military aircraft
E. J. Zakrajsek, John A. Bissonette
2005, Wildlife Society Bulletin (33) 258-264
Collisions between birds and aircraft (birdstrikes) pose a major threat to aviation safety. Different species pose different levels of threat; thus, identification of the most hazardous species can help managers identify the level of hazard and prioritize mitigation efforts. Dolbeer et al. (2000) assessed the hazard posed by birds to...
Climate science and famine early warning
James P. Verdin, Chris Funk, Gabriel B. Senay, R. Choularton
2005, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences (360) 2155-2168
Food security assessment in sub-Saharan Africa requires simultaneous consideration of multiple socio-economic and environmental variables. Early identification of populations at risk enables timely and appropriate action. Since large and widely dispersed populations depend on rainfed agriculture and pastoralism, climate monitoring and forecasting are important inputs to food security analysis. Satellite...
Geomorphic control of radionuclide diffusion in desert soils
J.D. Pelletier, C.D. Harrington, J.W. Whitney, M. Cline, S.B. DeLong, G. Keating, T.K. Ebert
2005, Geophysical Research Letters (32) 1-4
Diffusion is a standard model for the vertical migration of radionuclides in soil profiles. Here we show that diffusivity values inferred from fallout 137CS profiles in soils on the Fortymile Wash alluvial fan, Nye County, Nevada, have a strong inverse correlation with the age of the geomorphic surface. This result...
Quantifying Northern Goshawk diets using remote cameras and observations from blinds
A. S. Rogers, S. DeStefano, M.F. Ingraldi
2005, Journal of Raptor Research (39) 303-309
Raptor diet is most commonly measured indirectly, by analyzing castings and prey remains, or directly, by observing prey deliveries from blinds. Indirect methods are not only time consuming, but there is evidence to suggest these methods may overestimate certain prey taxa within raptor diet. Remote video surveillance systems have been...
Interpreting DNAPL saturations in a laboratory-scale injection using one- and two-dimensional modeling of GPR Data
Raymond H. Johnson, Eileen P. Poeter
2005, Ground Water Monitoring and Remediation (25) 159-169
Ground-penetrating radar (GPR) is used to track a dense non-aqueous phase liquid (DNAPL) injection in a laboratory sand tank. Before modeling, the GPR data provide a qualitative image of DNAPL saturation and movement. One-dimensional (1D) GPR modeling provides a quantitative interpretation of DNAPL volume within a given thickness during and...
Coseismic slip distribution of the 1923 Kanto earthquake, Japan
F. F. Pollitz, M. Nyst, T. Nishimura, W. Thatcher
2005, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (110) 1-16
The slip distribution associated with the 1923 M = 7.9 Kanto, Japan, earthquake is reexamined in light of new data and modeling. We utilize a combination of first-order triangulation, second-order triangulation, and leveling data in order to constrain the coseismic deformation. The second-order triangulation data, which have not been utilized...
River nutrient loads and catchment size
S. V. Smith, D.P. Swaney, R. W. Buddemeier, M.R. Scarsbrook, M.A. Weatherhead, Christoph Humborg, H. Eriksson, F. Hannerz
2005, Biogeochemistry (75) 83-107
We have used a total of 496 sample sites to calibrate a simple regression model for calculating dissolved inorganic nutrient fluxes via runoff to the ocean. The regression uses the logarithms of runoff and human population as the independent variables and estimates the logarithms of dissolved inorganic nitrogen and phosphorus...
Effects of Hurricane Georges on habitat use by captive-reared Hispaniolan Parrots (Amazona ventralis) released in the Dominican Republic
T.H. White Jr., J.A. Collazo, F. J. Vilella, S.A. Guerrero
2005, Ornitologia Neotropical (16) 405-417
We radio-tagged and released 49 captive-reared Hispaniolan Parrots (Amazona ventralis) in Parque Nacional del Este (PNE), Dominican Republic, during 1997 and 1998. Our primary objective was to develop a restoration program centered on using aviary-reared birds to further the recovery of the critically endangered Puerto Rican Parrot (A. vittata). Hurricane...
Mapping NEHRP VS30 site classes
T.L. Holzer, A.C. Padovani, M.J. Bennett, T.E. Noce, J. C. Tinsley III
2005, Earthquake Spectra (21) 353-370
Site-amplification potential in a 140-km2 area on the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay, California, was mapped with data from 210 seismic cone penetration test (SCPT) soundings. NEHRP VS30 values were computed on a 50-m grid by both taking into account the thickness and using mean values of locally measured...
Soil organic carbon dynamics as related to land use history in the northwestern Great Plains
Z. Tan, S. Liu, C.A. Johnston, Thomas R. Loveland, L.L. Tieszen, J. Liu, R. Kurtz
2005, Global Biogeochemical Cycles (19) 1-10
Strategies for mitigating the global greenhouse effect must account for soil organic carbon (SOC) dynamics at both spatial and temporal scales, which is usually challenging owing to limitations in data and approach. This study was conducted to characterize the SOC dynamics associated with land use change history in the northwestern...
U-Pb zircon geochronology of Mesoproterozoic postorogenic rocks and implications for post-Ottawan magmatism and metallogenesis, New Jersey Highlands and contiguous areas, USA
R.A. Volkert, R. E. Zartman, P.B. Moore
2005, Precambrian Research (139) 1-19
Postorogenic rocks are widespread in Grenville terranes of the north-central Appalachians where they form small, discordant, largely pegmatitic felsic intrusive bodies, veins, and dikes, and also metasomatic calcic skarns that are unfoliated and postdate the regional 1090 to 1030 Ma upper amphibolite- to granulite-facies metamorphism related to the Grenville (Ottawan)...
Yellowstone bison fetal development and phenology of parturition
P.J.P. Gogan, K.M. Podruzny, E.M. Olexa, H.I. Pac, K.L. Frey
2005, Journal of Wildlife Management (69) 1716-1730
Knowledge of Yellowstone bison (Bison bison) parturition patterns allows managers to refine risk assessments and manage to reduce the potential for transmission of brucellosis between bison and cattle. We used historical (1941) and contemporary (1989–2002) weights and morphometric measurements of Yellowstone bison fetuses to describe fetal growth and to predict...
Solute transport and storage mechanisms in wetlands of the Everglades, south Florida
Judson W. Harvey, James E. Saiers, Jessica T. Newlin
2005, Water Resources Research (41)
Solute transport and storage processes in wetlands play an important role in biogeochemical cycling and in wetland water quality functions. In the wetlands of the Everglades, there are few data or guidelines to characterize transport through the heterogeneous flow environment. Our goal was to conduct a tracer study to help...
Movement patterns of rural and suburban white-tailed deer in Massachusetts
C.R. Gaughan, S. DeStefano
2005, Urban Ecosystems (8) 191-202
We used satellite land cover data and the program FRAGSTATS toquantify land cover types and calculate the amount of forest edge available in suburban and rural regions of northeastern and northwestern Massachusetts. Cover categories included forest cover, open canopy vegetation, and non-deer habitat. We calculated all edge segments where forest...
Regional landslide-hazard assessment for Seattle, Washington, USA
R.L. Baum, J. A. Coe, J. W. Godt, E. L. Harp, M.E. Reid, W. Z. Savage, W.H. Schulz, D.L. Brien, A.F. Chleborad, J.P. McKenna, J. A. Michael
2005, Landslides (2) 266-279
Landslides are a widespread, frequent, and costly hazard in Seattle and the Puget Sound area of Washington State, USA. Shallow earth slides triggered by heavy rainfall are the most common type of landslide in the area; many transform into debris flows and cause significant property damage or disrupt transportation. Large...
Reproduction and mating behavior of the atlantic flyingfish, Cheilopogon melanurus (Exocoetidae), off North Carolina
Tara L. Casazza, Steve W. Ross, Ann Marie Necaise, Kenneth J. Sulak
2005, Bulletin of Marine Science (77) 363-375
The reproductive biology of Cheilopogon melanurus (Valenciennes, 1847) was examined off North Carolina during the summers of 1991–1992 and 1999–2003. Specimens were collected using a small mesh neuston net and dip nets. A spawning event, the first observation of mating behavior for this species, was recorded off Cape Fear, North...
Geospatial decision support systems for societal decision making
R. L. Bernknopf
2005, Boletin Geologico y Minero (116) 325-330
While science provides reliable information to describe and understand the earth and its natural processes, it can contribute more. There are many important societal issues in which scientific information can play a critical role. Science can add greatly to policy and management decisions to minimize loss of life and property...
Unusually low rates of slip on the Santa Rosa Range fault zone, northern Nevada
S. F. Personius, S. A. Mahan
2005, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (95) 319-333
The Santa Rosa Range fault zone (SRRFZ) is one of the most topographically prominent normal fault systems in the northern Basin and Range province of the western United States. It has been assigned high rates of vertical slip by others and has been identified as a possible site of the...
Sub-seafloor acoustic characterization of seamounts near the Ogasawara Fracture Zone in the western Pacific using chirp (3-7 kHz) subbottom profiles
T.-G. Lee, J.R. Hein, Kenneth Lee, J.-W. Moon, Y.-T. Ko
2005, Deep-Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers (52) 1932-1956
A detailed analysis of chirp (3-7 kHz) subbottom profiles and bathymetry was performed on data collected from seamounts near the Ogasawara Fracture Zone (OFZ) in the western Pacific. The OFZ, which is a 150 km wide rift zone showing 600 km of right-lateral movement in a NW-SE direction, is unique...
Digital elevation model of King Edward VII Peninsula, West Antarctica, from SAR interferometry and ICESat laser altimetry
S. Baek, Oh-Ig Kwoun, Andreas Braun, Z. Lu, C. K. Shum
2005, IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Letters (2) 413-417
We present a digital elevation model (DEM) of King Edward VII Peninsula, Sulzberger Bay, West Antarctica, developed using 12 European Remote Sensing (ERS) synthetic aperture radar (SAR) scenes and 24 Ice, Cloud, and land Elevation Satellite (ICESat) laser altimetry profiles. We employ differential interferograms from the ERS tandem mission SAR...
Operation and performance of the mars exploration rover imaging system on the martian surface
J.N. Maki, T. Litwin, M. Schwochert, K. Herkenhoff
2005, Conference Paper, Conference Proceedings - IEEE International Conference on Systems, Man and Cybernetics
The Imaging System on the Mars Exploration Rovers has successfully operated on the surface of Mars for over one Earth year. The acquisition of hundreds of panoramas and tens of thousands of stereo pairs has enabled the rovers to explore Mars at a level of detail unprecedented in the history...
Broad-scale predictors of canada lynx occurrence in eastern North America
C.L. Hoving, D.J. Harrison, W.B. Krohn, R.A. Joseph, M. O'Brien
2005, Journal of Wildlife Management (69) 739-751
The Canada lynx (Lynx canadensis) is listed as a threatened species throughout the southern extent of its geographic range in the United States. Most research on lynx has been conducted in the western United States and Canada; little is known about the ecology of lynx in eastern North America. To...
Watershed-based survey designs
N.E. Detenbeck, D. Cincotta, J. M. Denver, S.K. Greenlee, A.R. Olsen, A.M. Pitchford
2005, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (103) 59-81
Watershed-based sampling design and assessment tools help serve the multiple goals for water quality monitoring required under the Clean Water Act, including assessment of regional conditions to meet Section 305(b), identification of impaired water bodies or watersheds to meet Section 303(d), and development of empirical relationships between causes or sources...
Preliminary evaluation of a lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis) bioenergetics model
Charles P. Madenjian, Steven A. Pothoven, Philip J. Schneeberger, Daniel V. O’Connor, Stephen B. Brandt
2005, Conference Paper, Proceedings of a workshop on the dynamics of lake whitefish (<i>Coregonus clupeaformis</i>) and the amphipod Diporeia spp. in the Great Lakes
We conducted a preliminary evaluation of a lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis) bioenergetics model by applying the model to size-at-age data for lake whitefish from northern Lake Michigan. We then compared estimates of gross growth efficiency (GGE) from our bioenergetis model with previously published estimates of GGE for bloater (C. hoyi)...