Publications
Below is a list of available NOROCK peer reviewed and published science. If you are in search of a specific publication and cannot find it below or through a search, please contact twojtowicz@usgs.gov.
Filter Total Items: 1296
Glaciers in Western Canada-conterminous US and Switzerland experience unprecedented mass loss over the last four years (2021–2024) Glaciers in Western Canada-conterminous US and Switzerland experience unprecedented mass loss over the last four years (2021–2024)
Over the period 2021–2024, glaciers in Western Canada and the conterminous US (WCAN-US), and Switzerland respectively lost mass at rates of 22.2 ± 9.0 and 1.5 ± 0.3 Gt yr−1 representing a twofold increase in mass loss compared to the period 2010–2020. Since 2020, total ice volume was depleted by 12% (WCAN-US) and 13% (Switzerland). Meteorological conditions that favored high rates of...
Authors
Brian Menounos, Matthias Huss, Shawn Marshall, Mark Ednie, Caitlyn Florentine, Lea Hartl
Louisiana black bear monitoring report Louisiana black bear monitoring report
No abstract available.
Authors
Joseph Clark, John Hanks
U.S. Geological Survey Pollinator Science Strategy, 2025–35—A Review and Look Forward U.S. Geological Survey Pollinator Science Strategy, 2025–35—A Review and Look Forward
This “U.S. Geological Survey Pollinator Science Strategy, 2025–35—A Review and Look Forward” (“Pollinator Science Strategy”) describes the science vision of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) to support management, conservation, and policy decisions on animal pollinators and their habitats. As the science arm of the Department of the Interior, the USGS has a primary role in providing...
Authors
Clint Otto, Tabitha A. Graves, Desi Robertson-Thompson, Ian Pearse, Wayne Thogmartin, Caroline Murphy, Elisabeth Webb, Sam Droege, Melanie Steinkamp, Ralph Grundel
By
Ecosystems Mission Area, Cooperative Research Units, Species Management Research Program, Eastern Ecological Science Center, Fort Collins Science Center, Great Lakes Science Center, Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center, Northern Rocky Mountain Science Center, Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center, National Geospatial Technical Operations Center
Applying the resist-accept-direct (RAD) framework to wildlife health management Applying the resist-accept-direct (RAD) framework to wildlife health management
Wildlife diseases can have substantial impacts on wildlife populations as well as on human and domestic animal health and well-being. Although many agencies and stakeholders share a goal of supporting wildlife health, reducing wildlife disease burden is complicated by a scarcity of effective interventions for wildlife, competition for funds, and conflicting priorities. As a result...
Authors
Wynne Moss, Gregor Schuurman, Emily Almberg, Danielle Buttke, Nathan Galloway, Samantha E.J. Gibbs, Anne Hubbs, Katherine Richgels, C. White, Paul C. Cross
Expanding national-scale wildlife disease surveillance systems with research networks Expanding national-scale wildlife disease surveillance systems with research networks
Efficient learning about disease dynamics in free-ranging wildlife systems can benefit from active surveillance that is standardized across different ecological contexts. For example, active surveillance that targets specific individuals and populations with standardized sampling across ecological contexts (landscape-scale targeted surveillance) is important for developing a mechanistic...
Authors
Kim Pepin, Matthew A. Combs, Guillaume Bastille-Rousseau, M.E. Craft, Paul C. Cross, M.A. Diuk-Wasser, R.B. Gagne, Travis Gallo, Tyler Garwood, J.D. Heale, J. Hewitt, J. Hoy-Petersen, Jennifer L. Malmberg, Jennifer Mullinax, L. Plimpton, Lauren Smith, M.C. VanAcker, J.C. Chandler, W. David Walter, Grete WIlson-Henjum, George Wittemyer, Kezia Manlove
Estimating disease prevalence from preferentially sampled, pooled data Estimating disease prevalence from preferentially sampled, pooled data
After the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, scientific interest in coronaviruses endemic in animal populations has increased dramatically. However, investigating the prevalence of disease in animal populations across the landscape, which requires finding and capturing animals can be difficult. Spatial random sampling over a grid could be extremely inefficient because animals can be hard to...
Authors
Clinton P. Pollock, Andrew Hoegh, Kathryn Irvine, Luz de Wit, Brian Reichert
Expanding barriers: Impassable gaps interior to distribution of an isolated mountain-dwelling species Expanding barriers: Impassable gaps interior to distribution of an isolated mountain-dwelling species
Global change is expected to expand and shrink species' distributions in complex ways beyond just retraction at warm edges and expansion at cool ones. Detecting these changes is complicated by the need for robust baseline data for comparison. For instance, gaps in species' distributions may reflect long-standing patterns, recent shifts, or merely insufficient sampling effort. We...
Authors
Erik Beever, Adam B. Smith, David Wright, Tom Rickman, Francis Gerraty, Joseph A.E. Stewart, Alisha Gill, Kelly Klingler, Megan Robinson
Appendix B: Patterns of bull trout Salvelinus confluentus demography, life history, abundance, and trends in the Lewis River Appendix B: Patterns of bull trout Salvelinus confluentus demography, life history, abundance, and trends in the Lewis River
Declines in the distribution and abundance of bull trout (Salvelinus confluentus) across much of the historical range in the Pacific Northwest region of Canada and the United States have been well documented (Post and Johnston 2002; Rieman et al. 1997). Recent estimates of population trends appear to vary considerably across regions with large numbers of migratory and resident...
Authors
Robert Al-Chokhachy, Jeremiah Doyle, Jason Shappart
Integrated distribution modeling resolves asynchrony between bat population impacts and occupancy trends through latent abundance Integrated distribution modeling resolves asynchrony between bat population impacts and occupancy trends through latent abundance
Monitoring populations is challenging for cryptic species with seasonal life cycles, where data from multiple field techniques are commonly collected and analyzed as multiple lines of evidence. Data integration can provide comprehensive inferences while improving accuracy, precision, and scope but faces challenges in modeling misaligned resolutions and observational uncertainties. We...
Authors
Bradley Udell, Christian Stratton, Kathryn Irvine, Bethany Straw, Jonathan Reichard, Sarah M. Gaulke, Jeremy. T.H. Coleman, Frank C Tousley, Andrea Schuhmann, Rich Inman, Melinda Turner, Sarah Nystrom, Brian Reichert
Ecological scenarios: Embracing ecological uncertainty in an era of global change Ecological scenarios: Embracing ecological uncertainty in an era of global change
Scenarios, or plausible characterizations of the future, can help natural resource stewards plan and act under uncertainty. Current methods for developing scenarios for climate change adaptation planning are often focused on exploring uncertainties in future climate, but new approaches are needed to better represent uncertainties in ecological responses. Scenarios that characterize how...
Authors
Kyra Clark-Wolf, Wynne Moss, Brian Miller, Imtiaz Rangwala, Helen Sofaer, Gregor Schuurman, Dawn Magness, Amy Symstad, Jonathan Coop, Dominique M. Bachelet, Joseph Barsugli, A. Ciocco, Shelley Crausbay, Tyler Hoecker, Jena Lewinsohn, Meagan Oldfather, Orien Richmond, Renee Rondeau, Amber Runyon, Robin Russell, Jennifer Wilkening
Native Yellowstone cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus virginalis bouvieri growth and survival in a headwater stream primarily driven by warming stream temperatures, with non-native brown trout Salmo trutta posing an additional threat to survival Native Yellowstone cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus virginalis bouvieri growth and survival in a headwater stream primarily driven by warming stream temperatures, with non-native brown trout Salmo trutta posing an additional threat to survival
Warming rivers and interactions with non-native species impact salmonid species globally. Understanding how hydroclimatic conditions synergistically and independently interact with non-native species is critical for effectively managing salmonids into the future. We used a 10-year mark–recapture dataset to assess how native Yellowstone cutthroat trout (YCT) Oncorhynchus virginalis...
Authors
Kadie B. Heinle, Robert Al-Chokhachy, Adam Sepulveda, Christine Verhille
Failure to meet the exchangeability assumption in Bayesian multispecies occupancy models: Implications for study design Failure to meet the exchangeability assumption in Bayesian multispecies occupancy models: Implications for study design
Bayesian hierarchical models are ubiquitous in ecology. Random effect model structures are often employed that treat individual effects as deviations from larger population-level effects. In this way individuals are assumed to be "exchangeable" samples. Ecologists may address this exchangeability assumption intuitively, but might in certain modeling contexts ignore it altogether...
Authors
Gavin Cotterill, Douglas Keinath, Tabitha A. Graves