Publications
Publications from USGS science centers throughout the Southeast Region.
Filter Total Items: 10364
Hurricane impacts on coastal wetlands: A half-century record of storm-generated features from southern Louisiana Hurricane impacts on coastal wetlands: A half-century record of storm-generated features from southern Louisiana
Temporally and spatially repeated patterns of wetland erosion, deformation, and deposition are observed on remotely sensed images and in the field after hurricanes cross the coast of Louisiana. The diagnostic morphological wetland features are products of the coupling of high-velocity wind and storm-surge water and their interaction with the underlying, variably resistant, wetland...
Authors
Robert A. Morton, John A. Barras
The high life: Transport of microbes in the atmosphere The high life: Transport of microbes in the atmosphere
Microbes (bacteria, fungi, algae, and viruses) are the most successful types of life on Earth because of their ability to adapt to new environments, reproduce quickly, and disperse globally. Dispersal occurs through a number of vectors, such as migrating animals or the hydrological cycle, but transport by wind may be the most common way microbes spread. General awareness of airborne...
Authors
D.J. Smith, Dale W. Griffin, D.A. Jaffe
Microbial survival in the stratosphere and implications for global dispersal Microbial survival in the stratosphere and implications for global dispersal
Spores of Bacillus subtilis were exposed to a series of stratosphere simulations. In total, five distinct treatments measured the effect of reduced pressure, low temperature, high desiccation, and intense ultraviolet (UV) irradiation on stratosphereisolated and ground-isolated B. subtilis strains. Environmental conditions were based on springtime data from a mid-latitude region of the...
Authors
David J. Smith, Dale W. Griffin, Richard D. McPeters, Peter D. Ward, Andrew C. Schuerger
Scenarios for coastal vulnerability assessment Scenarios for coastal vulnerability assessment
Coastal vulnerability assessments tend to focus mainly on climate change and especially on sea-level rise. Assessment of the influence of nonclimatic environmental change or socioeconomic change is less well developed and these drivers are often completely ignored. Given that the most profound coastal changes of the twentieth century due to nonclimate drivers are likely to continue...
Authors
Robert J. Nicholls, Colin D. Woodroffe, Virginia Burkett, John Hay, Poh Poh Wong, Leonard Nurse
The Neosho madtom and the multifaceted nature of population limiting factors The Neosho madtom and the multifaceted nature of population limiting factors
No abstract available.
Authors
Mark L. Wildhaber
Natural radium and radon tracers to quantify water exchange and movement in reservoirs Natural radium and radon tracers to quantify water exchange and movement in reservoirs
Radon and radium isotopes are routinely used to quantify exchange rates between different hydrologic reservoirs. Since their recognition as oceanic tracers in the 1960s, both radon and radium have been used to examine processes such as air-sea exchange, deep oceanic mixing, benthic inputs, and many others. Recently, the application of radon-222 and the radium-quartet (223,224,226,228Ra)...
Authors
Christopher G. Smith
Seasonal dripwater Mg/Ca and Sr/Ca variations driven by cave ventilation: Implications for and modeling of speleothem paleoclimate records Seasonal dripwater Mg/Ca and Sr/Ca variations driven by cave ventilation: Implications for and modeling of speleothem paleoclimate records
A 4-year study in a central Texas cave quantifies multiple mechanisms that control dripwater composition and how these mechanisms vary at different drip sites. We monitored cave-air compositions, in situ calcite growth, dripwater composition and drip rate every 4–6 weeks. Three groups of drip sites are delineated (Groups 1–3) based on geochemical variations in dripwater composition...
Authors
C.I. Wong, J.L. Banner, MaryLynn Musgrove
Biophysical controls on accretion and elevation change in Caribbean mangrove ecosystems Biophysical controls on accretion and elevation change in Caribbean mangrove ecosystems
Habitat stability of coastal ecosystems, such as marshes and mangroves, depends on maintenance of soil elevations relative to sea level. Many such systems are characterized by limited mineral sedimentation and/or rapid subsidence and are consequently dependent upon accumulation of organic matter to maintain elevations. However, little field information exists regarding the contribution...
Authors
Karen L. McKee
Chemically mediated interactions between macroalgae Dictyota spp. and multiple life-history stages of the coral Porites astreoides Chemically mediated interactions between macroalgae Dictyota spp. and multiple life-history stages of the coral Porites astreoides
Competition between corals and macroalgae is often assumed to occur on reefs, especially those that have undergone shifts from coral to algal dominance; however, data examining these competitive interactions, especially during the early life-history stages of corals, are scarce. We conducted a series of field and outdoor seawater-table experiments to test the hypothesis that allelopathy...
Authors
V.J. Paul, Ilsa B. Kuffner, L.J. Walters, R. Ritson-Williams, K.S. Beach, M.A. Becerro
Abnormal alligators and organochlorine pesticides in Lake Apopka, Florida Abnormal alligators and organochlorine pesticides in Lake Apopka, Florida
No abstract available.
Authors
Allan R. Woodward, H. Franklin Percival, R. Heath Rauschenberger, Timothy S. Gross, Kenneth G. Rice, Roxanne Conrow
Verification of ploidy and reproductive potential in triploid black carp and grass carp Verification of ploidy and reproductive potential in triploid black carp and grass carp
No abstract available
Authors
Diana M. Papoulias, James S. Candrl, Jill A. Jenkins, Donald E. Tillitt
Concentrations and bioaccessibility of metals in vegetation and dust near a mining haul road, Cape Krusenstern National Monument, Alaska Concentrations and bioaccessibility of metals in vegetation and dust near a mining haul road, Cape Krusenstern National Monument, Alaska
Vegetation, sub-surface peat, and road dust were sampled near the Delong Mountain Transportation System (DMTS) haul road in northwest Alaska in 2005-2006 to document aluminum, barium, cadmium, lead, and zinc concentrations, and to evaluate bioaccessibility of these metals. The DMTS haul road is the transport corridor between Red Dog Mine (a large-scale, lead-zinc mine and mill) and the...
Authors
William G. Brumbaugh, Suzette A. Morman, Thomas W. May