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Publications

Publications from USGS science centers throughout the Southeast Region.

Filter Total Items: 10392

Research plan and preliminary results: A field research site for emerging contaminants in Iowa Research plan and preliminary results: A field research site for emerging contaminants in Iowa

Research has recently documented the prevalence of a wide variety of pharmaceuticals and other emerging contaminants (ECs) in streams across the United States. Wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) have been found to be an important source and collection point of ECs to streams as many ECs are incompletely removed during treatment. To investigate the complex in-stream processes (e.g...
Authors
Douglas J. Schnoebelen, Dana W. Kolpin, Larry B. Barber, Edward T. Furlong, Michael Meyer, M. Skopec

Multimodeling: new approaches for linking ecological models Multimodeling: new approaches for linking ecological models

The Everglades region of South Florida presents one of the major natural system management challenges facing the United States. With its assortment of alligators, crocodiles, manatees, panthers, large mixed flocks of wading birds, highly diverse subtropical flora, and sea of sawgrass, the ecosystem is unique in this country (Davis and Ogden 1994). The region is also perhaps the largest...
Authors
Louis J. Gross, Donald L. DeAngelis

Constraining rates and trends of historical wetland loss, Mississippi River Delta Plain, south-central Louisiana Constraining rates and trends of historical wetland loss, Mississippi River Delta Plain, south-central Louisiana

The timing, magnitude, and rate of wetland loss were described for five wetland-loss hotspots in the Terrebonne Basin of the Mississippi River delta plain. Land and water areas were mapped for 34 dates between 1956 and 2004 from historical National Wetlands Inventory (NWI) datasets, aerial photographs, and Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) satellite images. Since 1956, the emergent land area...
Authors
Julie Bernier, Robert A. Morton, John A. Barras

Diffuse-flow conceptualization and simulation of the Edwards aquifer, San Antonio region, Texas Diffuse-flow conceptualization and simulation of the Edwards aquifer, San Antonio region, Texas

A numerical ground-water-flow model (hereinafter, the conduit-flow Edwards aquifer model) of the karstic Edwards aquifer in south-central Texas was developed for a previous study on the basis of a conceptualization emphasizing conduit development and conduit flow, and included simulating conduits as one-cell-wide, continuously connected features. Uncertainties regarding the degree to...
Authors
R. J. Lindgren

Triazines Triazines

Abstract not supplied at this time
Authors
Timothy S. Gross, R. Heath Rauschenberger

Sand mining impacts on long-term dune erosion in southern Monterey Bay Sand mining impacts on long-term dune erosion in southern Monterey Bay

Southern Monterey Bay was the most intensively mined shoreline (with sand removed directly from the surf zone) in the U.S. during the period from 1906 until 1990, when the mines were closed following hypotheses that the mining caused coastal erosion. It is estimated that the yearly averaged amount of mined sand between 1940 and 1984 was 128,000 m3/yr, which is approximately 50% of the...
Authors
E.B. Thornton, Abby Sallenger, Juan Conforto Sesto, L. Egley, Timothy McGee, Rost Parsons

Regional and local species richness in an insular environment: Serpentine plants in California Regional and local species richness in an insular environment: Serpentine plants in California

We asked how the richness of the specialized (endemic) flora of serpentine rock outcrops in California varies at both the regional and local scales. Our study had two goals: first, to test whether endemic richness is affected by spatial habitat structure (e.g., regional serpentine area, local serpentine outcrop area, regional and local measures of outcrop isolation), and second, to...
Authors
S. Harrison, H.D. Safford, J.B. Grace, J.H. Viers, K.F. Davies

Genetic structure of natural and restored shoalgrass Halodule wrightii populations in the NW Gulf of Mexico Genetic structure of natural and restored shoalgrass Halodule wrightii populations in the NW Gulf of Mexico

The decline of seagrass communities worldwide has sparked an urgent need for effective restoration strategies, which require a working knowledge of population genetic structure. Halodule wrighti is a common seagrass of the Caribbean region that is being restored to areas of the Gulf of Mexico, yet little is known of its population genetics. This study provides an assessment of individual...
Authors
S.E. Travis, P. Sheridan

Phylogeography, phylogeny and hybridization in trichechid sirenians: Implications for manatee conservation Phylogeography, phylogeny and hybridization in trichechid sirenians: Implications for manatee conservation

The three living species of manatees, West Indian (Trichechus manatus), Amazonian (Trichechus inunguis) and West African (Trichechus senegalensis), are distributed across the shallow tropical and subtropical waters of America and the western coast of Africa. We have sequenced the mitochondrial DNA control region in 330 Trichechus to compare their phylogeographic patterns. In T. manatus...
Authors
J. A. Vianna, Robert K. Bonde, S. Caballero, J. P. Giraldo, R. P. Lima, A. Clark, M. Marmontel, B. Morales-Vela, M. J. De Souza, L. Parr, M. A. Rodriguez-Lopez, A. A. Mignucci-Giannoni, J. A. Powell, F. R. Santos
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