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Sources and temporal dynamics of arsenic in a New Jersey watershed, USA
J. L. Barringer, J.L. Bonin, M.J. DeLuca, T. Romagna, K. Cenno, M. Alebus, T. Kratzer, B. Hirst
2007, Science of the Total Environment (379) 56-74
We examined potential sources and the temporal dynamics of arsenic (As) in the slightly alkaline waters of the Wallkill River, northwestern New Jersey, where violations of water-quality standards have occurred. The study design included synoptic sampling of stream water and bed sediments in...
Prey resources before spawning influence gonadal investment of female, but not male, white crappie
D.B. Bunnell, S.E. Thomas, R.A. Stein
2007, Journal of Fish Biology (70) 1838-1854
In this study, an outdoor pool experiment was used to evaluate the effect of prey resources during 4 months before spawning on the gonadal investments of male and female white crappie Pomoxis annularis, a popular freshwater sportfish that exhibits erratic recruitment. Fish were assigned one of three feeding treatments: starved, fed...
Large-scale causes of variation in the serpentine vegetation of California
J.B. Grace, H.D. Safford, S. Harrison
2007, Conference Paper, Plant and Soil
Serpentine vegetation in California ranges from forest to shrubland and grassland, harbors many rare and endemic species, and is only moderately altered by invasive exotic species at the present time. To better understand the factors regulating the distribution of common/representative species, endemic/rare species, and the threat of exotics in this...
Territoriality, prospecting, and dispersal in cooperatively breeding Micronesian Kingfishers (Todiramphus cinnamominus reichenbachii)
D.C. Kesler, S. M. Haig
2007, The Auk (124) 381-395
We investigated territoriality, prospecting, and dispersal behavior in cooperatively breeding Pohnpei Micronesian Kingfishers (Todiramphus cinnamominus reichenbachii) throughout the annual cycle using radiotelemetry and color-band resights. Mean home-range size was 6.3 ha and territories were 8.1 ha. Within territories, Micronesian Kingfishers shared 63% of their home-range space with coterritorial occupants, and...
Multiple-species analysis of point count data: A more parsimonious modelling framework
M.W. Alldredge, K. H. Pollock, T.R. Simons, S.A. Shriner
2007, Journal of Applied Ecology (44) 281-290
1. Although population surveys often provide information on multiple species, these data are rarely analysed within a multiple-species framework despite the potential for more efficient estimation of population parameters. 2. We have developed a multiple-species modelling framework that uses similarities in capture/detection processes among species to model multiple species data...
Lateral variation in geochemistry, petrology, and palynology in the Elswick coal bed, Pike County, Kentucky
J.C. Hower, L.F. Ruppert, C.F. Eble
2007, International Journal of Coal Geology (69) 165-178
The Middle Pennsylvanian/Langsettian (Westphalian A) Elswick coal bed, correlative to the Upper Banner of Virginia, is a rare example of a mined high-sulfur (> 2%) coal in Eastern Kentucky, a region known for low-sulfur coals. To characterize lateral variation in the geochemistry, petrography, and palynology of the Elswick coal bed,...
A low diversity, seasonal tropical landscape dominated by conifers and peltasperms: Early Permian Abo Formation, New Mexico
William A. DiMichele, D.S. Chaney, W.J. Nelson, S. G. Lucas, C.V. Looy, K. Quick, W. Jun
2007, Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology (145) 249-273
Walchian conifers (Walchia piniformis Sternberg, 1825) and peltasperms similar to Supaia thinnfeldioides White and cf. Supaia anomala White dominate floodplain deposits of a narrow stratigraphic interval of the middle Abo Formation, Lower Permian of central New Mexico. The plant fossils occur in thinly bedded units up to two meters thick,...
Chinook salmon use of spawning patches: Relative roles of habitat quality, size, and connectivity
D.J. Isaak, R.F. Thurow, B.E. Rieman, J. B. Dunham
2007, Ecological Applications (17) 352-364
Declines in many native fish populations have led to reassessments of management goals and shifted priorities from consumptive uses to species preservation. As management has shifted, relevant environmental characteristics have evolved from traditional metrics that described local habitat quality to characterizations of habitat size and connectivity. Despite the implications this...
Sand deposition in shoreline eddies along five Wild and Scenic Rivers, Idaho
E.D. Andrews, K.R. Vincent
2007, River Research and Applications (23) 7-20
Sand bars deposited along the lateral margin of a river channel are frequently a focus of recreational activities. Sand bars are appealing sites on which to camp, picnic, fish and relax because they are relatively flat, soft, non-cohesive sand, free of vegetation and near the water's edge. The lack of...
On the formation and structure of rare-earth element complexes in aqueous solutions under hydrothermal conditions with new data on gadolinium aqua and chloro complexes
Robert A. Mayanovic, Alan J. Anderson, William A. Bassett, I.-M. Chou
2007, Chemical Geology (239) 266-283
Synchrotron X-ray spectroscopy experiments were made on the Gd(III) aqua and chloro complexes in low pH aqueous solutions at temperatures ranging from 25 to 500????C and at pressures up to 480??MPa using a hydrothermal diamond anvil cell. Analysis of fluorescence Gd L3-edge X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) spectra measured from...
A proposed ethogram of large-carnivore predatory behavior, exemplified by the wolf
D.R. MacNulty, L.D. Mech, D.W. Smith
2007, Journal of Mammalogy (88) 595-605
Although predatory behavior is traditionally described by a basic ethogram composed of 3 phases (search, pursue, and capture), behavioral studies of large terrestrial carnivores generally use the concept of a "hunt" to classify and measure foraging. This approach is problematic because there is no consensus on what behaviors constitute a...
Stream ecosystem response to limestone treatment in acid impacted watersheds of the allegheny plateau
S.E. McClurg, J.T. Petty, P. M. Mazik, J.L. Clayton
2007, Ecological Applications (17) 1087-1104
Restoration programs are expanding worldwide, but assessments of restoration effectiveness are rare. The objectives of our study were to assess current acid-precipitation remediation programs in streams of the Allegheny Plateau ecoregion of West Virginia (USA), identify specific attributes that could and could not be fully restored, and quantify temporal trends...
Testing a Mahalanobis distance model of black bear habitat use in the Ouachita Mountains of Oklahoma
E. C. Hellgren, S.L. Bales, M.S. Gregory, David M. Leslie Jr., J. D. Clark
2007, Journal of Wildlife Management (71) 924-928
Regional wildlife–habitat models are commonly developed but rarely tested with truly independent data. We tested a published habitat model for black bears (Ursus americanus) with new data collected in a different site in the same ecological region (i.e., Ouachita Mountains of Arkansas and Oklahoma, USA). We used a Mahalanobis distance...
The restricted gemuk group: A triassic to lower cretaceous succession in southwestern Alaska
Marti L. Miller, D. C. Bradley, T. K. Bundtzen, R. B. Blodgett, E.A. Pessagno Jr., R. D. Tucker, A. G. Harris
2007, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 273-305
New data from an Upper Triassic to Lower Cretaceous deep marine succession-the herein reinstated and restricted Gemuk Group-provide a vital piece of the puzzle for unraveling southwestern Alaska's tectonic history. First defined by Cady et al. in 1955, the Gemuk Group soon became a regional catchall unit that ended up...
Status and habitat use of the California black rail in the Southwestern USA
C.J. Conway, C. Sulzman
2007, Wetlands (27) 987-998
California black rails (Laterallus jamaicensis coturniculus) occur in two disjunct regions: the southwestern USA (western Arizona and southern California) and northern California (Sacramento Valley and the San Francisco Bay area). We examined current status of black rails in the southwestern USA by repeating survey efforts first conducted in 1973–1974 and...
Physical criteria for distinguishing sandy tsunami and storm deposits using modern examples
Robert A. Morton, Guy Gelfenbaum, Bruce E. Jaffe
2007, Sedimentary Geology (200) 184-207
Modern subaerial sand beds deposited by major tsunamis and hurricanes were compared at trench, transect, and sub-regional spatial scales to evaluate which attributes are most useful for distinguishing the two types of deposits. Physical criteria that may be diagnostic include: sediment composition,...
The impact of floods and storms on the acoustic reflectivity of the inner continental shelf: A modeling assessment
Lincoln F. Pratson, E. W. H. Hutton, A.J. Kettner, J.P.M. Syvitski, P.S. Hill, D.A. George, T.G. Milligan
2007, Continental Shelf Research (27) 542-559
Flood deposition and storm reworking of sediments on the inner shelf can change the mixture of grain sizes on the seabed and thus its porosity, bulk density, bulk compressional velocity and reflectivity. Whether these changes are significant enough to be detectable by...
Distinctiveness, use, and value of midwestern oak savannas and woodlands as avian habitats
R. Grundel, N.B. Pavlovic
2007, The Auk (124) 969-985
Oak savannas and woodlands historically covered millions of hectares in the midwestern United States but are rare today. We evaluated the ecological distinctiveness and conservation value of savannas and woodlands by examining bird distributions across a fire-maintained woody-vegetation gradient in northwest Indiana encompassing five habitats—open habitats with low canopy cover,...
Diverse dinosaur-dominated ichnofaunas from the Potomac Group (Lower Cretaceous) Maryland
Ray Stanford, Martin G. Lockley, Robert E. Weems
2007, Ichnos: An International Journal for Plant and Animal Traces (14) 155-173
Until recently fossil footprints were virtually unknown from the Cretaceous of the eastern United States. The discovery of about 300 footprints in iron-rich siliciclastic facies of the Patuxent Formation (Potomac Group) of Aptian age is undoubtedly one of the most significant Early Cretaceous track discoveries since the Paluxy track discoveries...
Environmental geochemistry at Red Mountain, an unmined volcanogenic massive sulphide deposit in the Bonnifield district, Alaska Range, east-central Alaska
Robert G. Eppinger, Paul H. Briggs, Cynthia Dusel-Bacon, Stuart A. Giles, Larry P. Gough, Jane M. Hammarstrom, Bernard E. Hubbard
2007, Geochemistry: Exploration, Environment, Analysis (7) 207-223
The unmined, pyrite-rich Red Mountain (Dry Creek) deposit displays a remarkable environmental footprint of natural acid generation, high metal and exceedingly high rare earth element (REE) concentrations in surface waters. The volcanogenic massive sulphide deposit exhibits well-constrained examples of acid-generating, metal-leaching, metal-precipitation and self-mitigation (via co-precipitation, dilution and neutralization) processes...
Do soil characteristics or microhabitat determine field emergence and success of Bromus tectorum?
B.A. Newingham, P. Vidiella, J. Belnap
2007, Journal of Arid Environments (70) 389-402
In southeastern Utah, Bromus tectorum occurs where Hilaria jamesii is dominant and rarely where Stipa hymenoides/S. comata dominate. To determine whether this distribution is due to soil characteristics or microhabitat, we transplanted H. jamesii soil to a Stipa site and vice versa during a severe drought (2001) and a wetter...
Larval feeding behavior and ant association in frosted elfin, Callophrys irus (Lycaenidae)
G. Albanese, M.W. Nelson, P.D. Vickery, P.R. Sievert
2007, Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society (61) 61-66
Callophrys irus is a rare and declining lycaenid found in the eastern U.S., inhabiting xeric and open habitats maintained by disturbance. Populations are localized and monophagous. We document a previously undescribed larval feeding behavior in both field and lab reared larvae in which late instar larvae girdled the main stem...
Geochemical evidence for African dust inputs to soils of western Atlantic islands: Barbados, the Bahamas, and Florida
D.R. Muhs, J. R. Budahn, J.M. Prospero, S.N. Carey
2007, Journal of Geophysical Research F: Earth Surface (112)
We studied soils on high-purity limestones of Quaternary age on the western Atlantic Ocean islands of Barbados, the Florida Keys, and the Bahamas. Potential soil parent materials in this region, external to the carbonate substrate, include volcanic ash from the island of St. Vincent (near Barbados), volcanic ash from the...
Dynamics of newly established elk populations
G.A. Sargeant, M.W. Oehler Sr.
2007, Journal of Wildlife Management (71) 1141-1148
The dynamics of newly established elk (Cervus elaphus) populations can provide insights about maximum sustainable rates of reproduction, survival, and increase. However, data used to estimate rates of increase typically have been limited to counts and rarely have included complementary estimates of vital rates. Complexities of population dynamics cannot be...
Deglacial climate variability in central Florida, USA
Debra A. Willard, C.E. Bernhardt, G. R. Brooks, T. M. Cronin, T. Edgar, R. Larson
2007, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (251) 366-382
Pollen and ostracode evidence from lacustrine sediments underlying modern Tampa Bay, Florida, document frequent and abrupt climatic and hydrological events superimposed on deglacial warming in the subtropics. Radiocarbon chronology on well-preserved mollusk shells and pollen residue from core MD02-2579 documents continuous sedimentation in a variety of non-marine habitats in a...