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Invasive Brook Stickleback Culaea inconstans occurrence, habitat drivers, and spatial overlap with native fishes in Wyoming, USA Invasive Brook Stickleback Culaea inconstans occurrence, habitat drivers, and spatial overlap with native fishes in Wyoming, USA
A central focus of modern fisheries management is eradicating invaders that threaten imperiled native fishes. However, vast landscapes and limited funding and personnel resources demand a prioritized approach to management. Brook Stickleback Culaea inconstans (Kirtland, 1840) is an aquatic invasive species in Wyoming, USA, that may pose a risk to native biodiversity. Our aim was to...
Authors
Jacob S. Ruthvena, Josh Leonard, Annika W. Walters
Wetland management practices and secretive marsh bird habitat in the Mississippi Flyway: A review Wetland management practices and secretive marsh bird habitat in the Mississippi Flyway: A review
Management regimes on publicly owned freshwater wetlands in the Mississippi Flyway of North America (i.e., Flyway) have historically emphasized waterfowl, but there is limited information on how waterfowl-focused wetland management affects other wetland-dependent wildlife. Secretive marsh birds (SMBs) depend on wetlands with emergent vegetation throughout their migratory life cycle and...
Authors
Kristen M. Malone, Elisabeth B. Webb, Doreen C. Mengel, Laura Kearns, Ann E. McKellar, Sumner W. Matteson, Benjamin R. Williams
Pollinator conservation and climate science at the U.S. Geological Survey Pollinator conservation and climate science at the U.S. Geological Survey
Introduction Ecosystems—whether agricultural, urban, or natural—depend on pollinators, great and small. Pollinators in the form of bees, birds, butterflies, bats, and even moths provide vital, but often invisible services, from contributing to biodiverse terrestrial wildlife and plant communities to supporting healthy watersheds. Pollinator declines worldwide have been noted as land-use...
Authors
Elise R. Irwin, Jonathan R. Mawdsley
Turkey Vulture survival is reduced in areas of greater road density Turkey Vulture survival is reduced in areas of greater road density
The demography of, and factors that influence these metrics, are largely unknown for most vultures in the Americas. Survivorship of Turkey Vultures (Cathartes aura) may be influenced by landscape heterogeneity and human disturbance. We quantified the effects of landscape composition (Shannon’s diversity index) and configuration (contagion, edge density, and largest patch index), and...
Authors
Adrian Naveda-Rodriguez, Keith L. Bildstein, David R. Barber, Jean-Francois Therrien, Michael L. Avery, Bryan M. Kluever, Scott A. Rush, Francisco Vilella
China, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and artisanal cobalt mining from 2000 through 2020 China, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and artisanal cobalt mining from 2000 through 2020
From 2000 through 2020, demand for cobalt to manufacture batteries grew 26-fold. Eighty-two percent of this growth occurred in China and China’s cobalt refinery production increased 78-fold. Diminished industrial cobalt mine production in the early-to-mid 2000s led many Chinese companies to purchase ores from artisanal cobalt miners in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), many of...
Authors
Andrew L. Gulley
A body composition model with multiple storage compartments for polar bears (Ursus maritimus) A body composition model with multiple storage compartments for polar bears (Ursus maritimus)
Climate warming is rapidly altering Arctic ecosystems. Polar bears (Ursus maritimus) need sea ice as a platform from which to hunt seals, but increased sea-ice loss is lengthening periods when bears are without access to primary hunting habitat. During periods of food scarcity, survival depends on the energy that a bear has stored in body reserves, termed storage energy, making this a...
Authors
Stephanie R. Penk, Pranav Sadana, Louise C. Archer, Anthony M. Pagano, Marc R. L. Cattet, Nicholas J. Lunn, Gregory W. Thiemann, Peter K. Molnar
Ensemble estimation of historical evapotranspiration for the conterminous U.S. Ensemble estimation of historical evapotranspiration for the conterminous U.S.
Evapotranspiration (ET) is the largest component of the water budget, accounting for the majority of the water available from precipitation. ET is challenging to quantify because of the uncertainties associated with the many ET equations currently in use, and because observations of ET are uncertain and sparse. In this study, we combine information provided by available ET data and...
Authors
Meredith Reitz, Ward E. Sanford, Samuel Saxe
The influence of vegetated marshes on wave transformation in sheltered estuaries The influence of vegetated marshes on wave transformation in sheltered estuaries
Assessing the influence of marshes on mitigating flooding along estuarine shorelines under the pressures of sea level rise requires understanding wave transformation across the marsh. A numerical model was applied to investigate how vegetated marshes influence wave transformation. XBeach non-hydrostatic (XB-NH) was calibrated and validated with high frequency pressure data from the marsh...
Authors
Rae M. Taylor-Burns, Cornelis M. Nederhoff, Jessica R. Lacy, Patrick L. Barnard
Lightning rings and gravity waves: Insights into the giant eruption plumefrom Tonga’s Hunga Volcano on 15 January 2022 Lightning rings and gravity waves: Insights into the giant eruption plumefrom Tonga’s Hunga Volcano on 15 January 2022
On 15 January 2022, Hunga Volcano in Tonga produced the most violent eruption in the modern satellite era, sending a water-rich plume at least 58 km high. Using a combination of satellite- and ground-based sensors, we investigate the astonishing rate of volcanic lightning (>2,600 flashes min−1) and what it reveals about the dynamics of the submarine eruption. In map view, lightning...
Authors
Alexa R. Van Eaton, Jeff Lapierre, Sonja A. Behnke, Chris Vagasky, Christopher J. Schultz, Michael J. Pavolonis, Kristopher Bedka, Konstantin Khlopenkov
Hydrogeomorphic changes along mid-Atlantic coastal plain rivers transitioning from non-tidal to tidal: Implications for a rising sea level Hydrogeomorphic changes along mid-Atlantic coastal plain rivers transitioning from non-tidal to tidal: Implications for a rising sea level
Sea level rise is affecting reaches of coastal rivers by increasing water levels and propagating tides inland. The transition of river systems into tidal estuaries has been neglected in hydrogeomorphic studies. A better understanding of transitioning reaches is critical to understanding ecosystem dynamics, services, and developing predictive capabilities of change as sea levels rise. We
Authors
Daniel Kroes, Gregory E. Noe, Cliff R. Hupp, Thomas Rossiter Doody, P.A. Bukaveckas
The nitty-gritty forces that shape planetary surfaces The nitty-gritty forces that shape planetary surfaces
No abstract available.
Authors
Brian Jackson, Serina Diniega, Timothy N. Titus, Alejandro Soto, Edgard Rivera-Valentin
High-resolution InSAR reveals localized pre-eruptive deformation inside the crater of Agung Volcano, Indonesia High-resolution InSAR reveals localized pre-eruptive deformation inside the crater of Agung Volcano, Indonesia
During a volcanic crisis, high-rate, localized deformation can indicate magma close to the surface, with important implications for eruption forecasting. However, only a few such examples have been reported, because frequent, dense monitoring is needed. High-resolution Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) is capable of achieving 15 cm of line-of-sight shortening occurred over a 400-by-400 m...
Authors
Mark Bemelmans, Juliet Biggs, Michael P. Poland, James Wookey, Susanna Ebmeier, Angela K. Diefenbach, Devy Damil Syahbana