Simulating the influences of various fire regimes on caribou winter habitat
T. Scott Rupp, Mark Olson, Layne G. Adams, Bruce W. Dale, Kyle Joly, Jonathan Henkelman, William B. Collins, Anthony M. Starfield
2006, Ecological Applications (16) 1730-1743
Caribou are an integral component of high‐latitude ecosystems and represent a major subsistence food source for many northern people. The availability and quality of winter habitat is critical to sustain these caribou populations. Caribou commonly use older spruce woodlands with adequate terrestrial lichen, a preferred winter forage, in the understory....
Effect of dispersal at range edges on the structure of species ranges
V. Bahn, R.J. O’Connor, W.B. Krohn
2006, Oikos (115) 89-96
Range edges are of particular interest to ecology because they hold key insights into the limits of the realized niche and associated population dynamics. A recent feature of Oikos summarized the state of the art on range edge ecology. While the typical question is what causes range edges, another important...
Influence of deflection on a fold-to-fault progression: field evidence from near Marietta, South Carolina
C.W. Clendenin, J.M. Garihan
2006, Journal of Structural Geology (28) 1316-1326
Four periods of deformation (D1-D4) are recognized in the Lion Park Road borrow pit near Marietta, South Carolina. Although each period is characterized by distinct structures, D3 produced two structural styles (D3a, D3b) resulting from layer-parallel shortening. D3a is characterized by detachment folding at the tip of an underlying thrust....
New insights into Arctic paleogeography and tectonics from U-Pb detrital zircon geochronology
E. L. Miller, J. Toro, G. Gehrels, J.M. Amato, A. Prokopiev, M.I. Tuchkova, V.V. Akinin, T.A. Dumitru, Thomas E. Moore, M.P. Cecile
2006, Tectonics (25)
To test existing models for the formation of the Amerasian Basin, detrital zircon suites from 12 samples of Triassic sandstone from the circum-Arctic region were dated by laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). The northern Verkhoyansk (NE Russia) has Permo-Carboniferous (265-320 Ma) and Cambro-Silurian (410-505 Ma) zircon populations derived via...
Cenozoic tectonic evolution of the basin and range province in northwestern Nevada
J.P. Colgan, T.A. Dumitru, P.W. Reiners, J. L. Wooden, E. L. Miller
2006, American Journal of Science (306) 616-654
A regional synthesis of new and existing geologic and thermochronologic data document late Cretaceous - early Cenozoic regional erosion, Oligocene - Miocene volcanism, and subsequent late Miocene extension of the Basin and Range Province in northwestern Nevada and northeastern California. Across an ???220-km-wide region between the Santa Rosa and Warner...
Adequacy of selected evapotranspiration approximations for hydrologic simulation
D. M. Sumner
2006, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (42) 699-711
Evapotranspiration (ET) approximations, usually based on computed potential ET (PET) and diverse PET-to-ET conceptualizations, are routinely used in hydrologic analyses. This study presents an approach to incorporate measured (actual) ET data, increasingly available using micrometeorological methods, to define the adequacy of ET approximations for hydrologic simulation. The approach is demonstrated...
Evaluating the relative contributions of hydroperiod and soil fertility on growth of south Florida mangroves
K. W. Krauss, T.W. Doyle, R.R. Twilley, V. H. Rivera-Monroy, J.K. Sullivan
2006, Hydrobiologia (569) 311-324
Low and high water periods create contrasting challenges for trees inhabiting periodically flooded wetlands. Low to moderate flood durations and frequencies may bring nutrient subsidies, while greater hydroperiods can be energetically stressful because of oxygen deficiency. We tested the hypothesis that hydroperiod affects the growth of mangrove seedlings and saplings...
Bluff evolution along coastal drumlins: Boston Harbor Islands, Massachusetts
E. A. Himmelstoss, D. M. FitzGerald, P.S. Rosen, J.R. Allen
2006, Journal of Coastal Research (22) 1230-1240
A series of partially drowned drumlins forms the backbone of the inner islands within Boston Harbor. The shoreline of these rounded glacial deposits is composed of actively retreating bluffs formed by continual wave attack. Comparisons of bluffs reveal variability in their height and lateral extent, as well as in the...
Modeling the probability of arsenic in groundwater in New England as a tool for exposure assessment
J. D. Ayotte, B. T. Nolan, J.R. Nuckols, K.P. Cantor, G.R. Robinson Jr., D. Baris, L. Hayes, M. Karagas, W. Bress, D.T. Silverman, J.H. Lubin
2006, Environmental Science & Technology (40) 3578-3585
We developed a process-based model to predict the probability of arsenic exceeding 5 ??g/L in drinking water wells in New England bedrock aquifers. The model is being used for exposure assessment in an epidemiologic study of bladder cancer. One important study hypothesis that may explain increased bladder cancer risk is...
Homogeneity of small-scale earthquake faulting, stress, and fault strength
J.L. Hardebeck
2006, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (96) 1675-1688
Small-scale faulting at seismogenic depths in the crust appears to be more homogeneous than previously thought. I study three new high-quality focal-mechanism datasets of small (M < ??? 3) earthquakes in southern California, the east San Francisco Bay, and the aftershock sequence of the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake. I quantify...
Prediction failure of a wolf landscape model
L.D. Mech
2006, Wildlife Society Bulletin (34) 874-877
I compared 101 wolf (Canis lupus) pack territories formed in Wisconsin during 1993-2004 to the logistic regression predictive model of Mladenoff et al. (1995, 1997, 1999). Of these, 60% were located in putative habitat suitabilities <50%, including 22% in suitabilities of 0-9%. About a third of the area with putative...
Airborne lidar sensing of massive stony coral colonies on patch reefs in the northern Florida reef tract
J. C. Brock, C. W. Wright, I. B. Kuffner, R. Hernandez, P. Thompson
2006, Remote Sensing of Environment (104) 31-42
In this study we examined the ability of the NASA Experimental Advanced Airborne Research Lidar (EAARL) to discriminate cluster zones of massive stony coral colonies on northern Florida reef tract (NFRT) patch reefs based on their topographic complexity (rugosity). Spatially dense EAARL laser submarine topographic soundings acquired in August 2002...
Modeling regional initiation of rainfall-induced shallow landslides in the eastern Umbria Region of central Italy
D. Salciarini, J. W. Godt, W. Z. Savage, P. Conversini, R.L. Baum, J. A. Michael
2006, Landslides (3) 181-194
We model the rainfall-induced initiation of shallow landslides over a broad region using a deterministic approach, the Transient Rainfall Infiltration and Grid-based Slope-stability (TRIGRS) model that couples an infinite-slope stability analysis with a one-dimensional analytical solution for transient pore pressure response to rainfall infiltration. This model permits the evaluation of...
Modeling and validation of a 3D velocity structure for the Santa Clara Valley, California, for seismic-wave simulations
S. Hartzell, S. Harmsen, R. A. Williams, D. Carver, A. Frankel, G. Choy, P.-C. Liu, R.C. Jachens, T.M. Brocher, C. M. Wentworth
2006, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (96) 1851-1881
A 3D seismic velocity and attenuation model is developed for Santa Clara Valley, California, and its surrounding uplands to predict ground motions from scenario earthquakes. The model is developed using a variety of geologic and geophysical data. Our starting point is a 3D geologic model developed primarily from geologic mapping...
A landscape-scale model of yellow-billed loon (Gavia adamsii) habitat preferences in northern alaska
Susan L. Earnst, Robert Platte, Laura Bond
2006, Hydrobiologia (567) 227-236
We modeled yellow-billed loon (Gavia adamsii) habitat preferences in a 23,500 km2 area of northern Alaska using intensive aerial surveys and landscape-scale habitat descriptors. Of the 757 lakes censused, yellow-billed loons occupied 15% and Pacific loons (G. pacifica) 42%. Lake area, depth, proportion of shoreline in aquatic vegetation,...
Modeling the effect of varying swim speeds on fish passage through velocity barriers
T. Castro-Santos
2006, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (135) 1230-1237
The distance fish can swim through zones of high-velocity flow is an important factor limiting the distribution and conservation of riverine and diadromous fishes. Often, these barriers are characterized by nonuniform flow conditions, and it is likely that fish will swim at varying speeds to traverse them. Existing models used...
Hibernating bears as a model for preventing disuse osteoporosis
S.W. Donahue, M.E. McGee, K.B. Harvey, M.R. Vaughan, C.T. Robbins
2006, Journal of Biomechanics (39) 1480-1488
The hibernating bear is an excellent model for disuse osteoporosis in humans because it is a naturally occurring large animal model. Furthermore, bears and humans have similar lower limb skeletal morphology, and bears walk plantigrade like humans. Black bears (Ursus americanus) may not develop disuse osteoporosis during long periods of...
Mussel dynamics model: A hydroinformatics tool for analyzing the effects of different stressors on the dynamics of freshwater mussel communities
Y. Morales, L.J. Weber, A.E. Mynett, T.J. Newton
2006, Ecological Modelling (197) 448-460
A model for simulating freshwater mussel population dynamics is presented. The model is a hydroinformatics tool that integrates principles from ecology, river hydraulics, fluid mechanics and sediment transport, and applies the individual-based modelling approach for simulating population dynamics. The general model layout, data requirements, and steps of the simulation process...
Platinum-group element, Gold, Silver and Base Metal distribution in compositionally zoned sulfide droplets from the Medvezky Creek Mine, Noril'sk, Russia
S.-J. Barnes, R.A. Cox, M. L. Zientek
2006, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (152) 187-200
Concentrations of Ag, Au, Cd, Co, Re, Zn and Platinum-group elements (PGE) have been determined in sulfide minerals from zoned sulfide droplets of the Noril'sk 1 Medvezky Creek Mine. The aims of the study were; to establish whether these elements are located in the major sulfide minerals (pentlandite, pyrrhotite, chalcopyrite...
Can basin-scale recharge be estimated reasonably with water-balance models?
A.E. Faust, T.P.A. Ferre, M.G. Schaap, A.C. Hinnell, Gordon E. Brown Jr.
2006, Vadose Zone Journal (5) 850-855
We examine in-place recharge as an example of the complex, basin-scale hydrologic processes that are being represented with simplified numerical models. The rate and distribution of recharge depend on local meteorological conditions and hydrogeologic properties. The pattern of recharge is defined predominantly by the distribution of net precipitation (precipitation less...
Assimilation of snow covered area information into hydrologic and land-surface models
M.P. Clark, A.G. Slater, A.P. Barrett, L.E. Hay, G.J. McCabe, B. Rajagopalan, G.H. Leavesley
2006, Advances in Water Resources (29) 1209-1221
This paper describes a data assimilation method that uses observations of snow covered area (SCA) to update hydrologic model states in a mountainous catchment in Colorado. The assimilation method uses SCA information as part of an ensemble Kalman filter to alter the sub-basin distribution of snow as well as the...
Nutritional condition of Pacific Black Brant wintering at the extremes of their range
D.D. Mason, P.S. Barboza, David H. Ward
2006, Condor (108) 678-690
Endogenous stores of energy allow birds to survive periods of severe weather and food shortage during winter. We documented changes in lipid, protein, moisture, and ash in body tissues of adult female Pacific Black Brant (Branta bernicla nigricans) and modeled the energetic costs of wintering. Birds were collected at the...
Numerical simulation of tsunami generation by cold volcanic mass flows at Augustine Volcano, Alaska
C. F. Waythomas, P. Watts, J. S. Walder
2006, Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences (6) 671-685
Many of the world's active volcanoes are situated on or near coastlines. During eruptions, diverse geophysical mass flows, including pyroclastic flows, debris avalanches, and lahars, can deliver large volumes of unconsolidated debris to the ocean in a short period of time and thereby generate tsunamis. Deposits of both hot and...
A static predictor of seismic demand on frames based on a post-elastic deflected shape
Y. Mori, T. Yamanaka, N. Luco, C.A. Cornell
2006, Earthquake Engineering and Structural Dynamics (35) 1295-1318
Predictors of seismic structural demands (such as inter-storey drift angles) that are less time-consuming than nonlinear dynamic analysis have proven useful for structural performance assessment and for design. Luco and Cornell previously proposed a simple predictor that extends the idea of modal superposition (of the first two modes) with the...
Flow-specific trends in river-water quality resulting from the effects of the clean air act in three mesoscale, forested river basins in the northeastern United States through 2002
Peter S. Murdoch, J. B. Shanley
2006, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (120) 1-25
Two new methods for assessing temporal trends in stream-solute concentrations at specific streamflow ranges were applied to long (40 to 50-year) but sparse (bi-weekly to quarterly sampling) stream-water quality data collected at three forested mesoscale basins along an atmospheric deposition gradient in the northeastern United States (one in north-central Pennsylvania,...