Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Reports

Browse more than 82,000 reports authored by our scientists over the past 100+ year history of the USGS and refine search by topic, location, year, and advanced search.

Filter Total Items: 84799

Maintaining and restoring sustainable ecosystems in southern Nevada Maintaining and restoring sustainable ecosystems in southern Nevada

Managers in southern Nevada are challenge with determining appropriate goals and objectives and developing viable approaches for maintaining and restoring sustainable ecosystems in a time of rapid socio-ecological and environmental change. Sustainable or "healthy" ecosystems supply clean air, water and habitat for a diverse array of plants and animals. As described in Chapter 1...
Authors
Jeanne C. Chambers, Burton K. Pendleton, Donald W. Sada, Steven M. Ostoja, Matthew L. Brooks

Adaptive harvest management for the Svalbard population of pink-footed geese: cooperator report Adaptive harvest management for the Svalbard population of pink-footed geese: cooperator report

This document describes progress to date on the development of a harvest‐management strategy for maintaining pink‐footed goose abundance near their target level by providing for sustainable harvests in Norway and Denmark. Many goose populations in western Europe have increased dramatically in recent decades. The Svalbard population of pink‐footed geese (Anser brachyrhynchus) is a good...
Authors
Fred A. Johnson, Gitte H. Jensen, Jesper Madsen

Adaptive harvest management for the Svalbard population of pink-footed geese: a response to a review of the progress summary Adaptive harvest management for the Svalbard population of pink-footed geese: a response to a review of the progress summary

Herein we provide excerpts of the reviewers' comments and our response. We did not duplicate the portion of the reviewers' comments in which they summarized our findings.
Authors
Fred A. Johnson, Gitte H. Jensen, Jesper Madsen

Potential effects of climate change on inland glacial lakes and implications for lake-dependent biota in Wisconsin: final report April 2013 Potential effects of climate change on inland glacial lakes and implications for lake-dependent biota in Wisconsin: final report April 2013

The economic vitality and quality of life of many northern Wisconsin communities is closely associated with the ecological condition of the abundant water resources in the region. Climate change models predict warmer temperatures, changes to precipitation patterns, and increased evapotranspiration in the Great Lakes region. Recently (1950-2006), many regions of Wisconsin have experienced
Authors
Michael W. Meyer, John F. Walker, Kevin P. Kenow, Paul W. Rasmussen, Paul J. Garrison, Paul C. Hanson, Randall J. Hunt

Species of conservation concern and environmental stressors: Local regional and global effects Species of conservation concern and environmental stressors: Local regional and global effects

Species conservation has traditionally been based on individual species within the context of their requisite habitat, which is generally defined as the communities and ecosystems deemed necessary for their presence. Conservation decisions are hampered by the fact that environmental stressors that poetically threaten the persistence of species can operate at organizational levels larger...
Authors
Steven M. Ostoja, Matthew L. Brooks, Jeanne C. Chambers, Burton Pendleton

Juvenile i`iwi detected in lower elevations of Hawaii Volcanoes National Park Juvenile i`iwi detected in lower elevations of Hawaii Volcanoes National Park

The Hawaiian islands are home to a diverse array of plants and animals found nowhere else on Earth. Among the most famous of these are the spectacular Hawaiian honeycreepers, a group that evolved from a single flock of ancestral finches into at least 54 unique species. Unfortunately, the same isolation that fostered such dramatic adaptive radiation left Hawaiian species vulnerable. Un
Authors
Jacqueline M. Gaudioso, Angela T. Beck

NW CSC annual report fiscal year 2013 NW CSC annual report fiscal year 2013

The Northwest Climate Science Center (NW CSC) was established in 2010 as one of eight regional Climate Science Centers created by the Department of the Interior (DOI). The NW CSC encompasses Washing-ton, Oregon, Idaho, and western Montana and has overlapping boundaries with three Landscape Conservation Cooperatives (LCCs): the Great Northern, the Great Basin, and the North Pacific. With...
Authors
Gustavo A. Bisbal

Updating Maryland's sea-level rise projections Updating Maryland's sea-level rise projections

With its 3,100 miles of tidal shoreline and low-lying rural and urban lands, “The Free State” is one of the most vulnerable to sea-level rise. Historically, Marylanders have long had to contend with rising water levels along its Chesapeake Bay and Atlantic Ocean and coastal bay shores. Shorelines eroded and low-relief lands and islands, some previously inhabited, were inundated. Prior to...
Authors
Donald F. Boesch, Larry P. Atkinson, William C. Boicourt, John D. Boon, Donald R. Cahoon, Robert A. Dalrymple, Tal Ezer, Benjamin P. Horton, Zoe P. Johnson, Robert E. Kopp, Ming Li, Richard H. Moss, Adam Parris, Christopher K. Sommerfield

An overview of the Southern Nevada Agency Partnership science and research synthesis An overview of the Southern Nevada Agency Partnership science and research synthesis

Maintaining and restoring the diverse ecosystems and resources that occur in southern Nevada in the face of rapid socio-economic and ecological change presents numerous challenged to Federal land managers. Rapid population growth since the 1980s, the land uses associated with that growth, and the interactions of those uses with the generally dry and highly variable climate result in...
Authors
Jeanne C. Chambers, Matthew L. Brooks, Kent Turner, Carol B. Raish, Steven M. Ostoja

Invasive species in southern Nevada Invasive species in southern Nevada

Southern Nevada contains a wide range of topographies, elevations, and climactic zones emblematic of its position at the ecotone between the Mojave Desert, Great Basin, and Colorado Plateau ecoregions. These varied environmental conditions support a high degree of biological diversity (Chapter 1), but they also provide opportunities for a wide range of invasive species. In addition, the...
Authors
Matthew L. Brooks, Steven M. Ostoja, Jeanne Chambers

Table of standard atomic weights 2013 Table of standard atomic weights 2013

IUPAC Commission on Istopic Abundances and Atomic Weights' spreadsheet of Standard Atomic Weights.
Authors
Tyler B. Coplen, Willi A. Brand, Juris Meija, Manfred Gröning, Norman E. Holden, Michael Berglund, Paul De Bievre, Robert D. Loss, Thomas Prohaska, Thomas Walczyk

Fire history, effects and management in southern Nevada Fire history, effects and management in southern Nevada

Fire can be both an ecosystem stressor (Chapter 2) and a critical ecosystem process, depending on when, where, and under what conditions it occurs on the southern Nevada landscape. Fire can also pose hazards to human life and property, particularly in the wildland/urban interface (WUI). The challenge faced by land managers is to prevent fires from occurring where they are likely to...
Authors
Matthew L. Brooks, Jeanne Chambers, Randy McKinley
Was this page helpful?