Publications
For more than a century, USGS scientists have conducted research in California’s Bay-Delta region. Informing natural-resource management decisions on the region’s issues, this research has been published in thousands of documents, some highlighted below.
Filter Total Items: 307
Mercury bioaccumulation and effects on birds in San Francisco Bay Mercury bioaccumulation and effects on birds in San Francisco Bay
Highlights San Francisco Bay is an important wintering and breeding ground for more than 1 million waterbirds annually Mercury concentrations are highest in birds that eat fish and that reside in the Lower South Bay When Forster’s terns arrive in the Bay in spring to breed, mercury concentrations in their blood increase by four-fold in a six week period Based on mercury concentrations in...
Authors
Collin A. Eagles-Smith, Joshua T. Ackerman
Probabilistic Methodology for Estimation of Number and Economic Loss (Cost) of Future Landslides in the San Francisco Bay Region, California Probabilistic Methodology for Estimation of Number and Economic Loss (Cost) of Future Landslides in the San Francisco Bay Region, California
The Probabilistic Landslide Assessment Cost Estimation System (PLACES) presented in this report estimates the number and economic loss (cost) of landslides during a specified future time in individual areas, and then calculates the sum of those estimates. The analytic probabilistic methodology is based upon conditional probability theory and laws of expectation and variance. The...
Authors
Robert A. Crovelli, Jeffrey A. Coe
Temporal downscaling of decadal sediment load estimates to a daily interval for use in hindcast simulations Temporal downscaling of decadal sediment load estimates to a daily interval for use in hindcast simulations
In this study we used hydrologic proxies to develop a daily sediment load time-series, which agrees with decadal sediment load estimates, when integrated. Hindcast simulations of bathymetric change in estuaries require daily sediment loads from major tributary rivers, to capture the episodic delivery of sediment during multi-day freshwater flow pulses. Two independent decadal sediment...
Authors
N. K. Ganju, N. Knowles, D. H. Schoellhamer
Complex seasonal patterns of primary producers at the land-sea interface Complex seasonal patterns of primary producers at the land-sea interface
Seasonal fluctuations of plant biomass and photosynthesis are key features of the Earth system because they drive variability of atmospheric CO2, water and nutrient cycling, and food supply to consumers. There is no inventory of phytoplankton seasonal cycles in nearshore coastal ecosystems where forcings from ocean, land and atmosphere intersect. We compiled time series of phytoplankton...
Authors
J. E. Cloern, A.D. Jassby
Predicted surface displacements for scenario earthquakes in the San Francisco Bay region Predicted surface displacements for scenario earthquakes in the San Francisco Bay region
In the immediate aftermath of a major earthquake, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) will be called upon to provide information on the characteristics of the event to emergency responders and the media. One such piece of information is the expected surface displacement due to the earthquake. In conducting probabilistic hazard analyses for the San Francisco Bay Region, the Working Group on
Authors
Jessica R. Murray-Moraleda
Landslide risk in the San Francisco Bay region Landslide risk in the San Francisco Bay region
We have used historical records of damaging landslides triggered by rainstorms, and a newly developed Probabilistic Landslide Assessment Cost Estimation System (PLACES), to estimate the numbers and direct costs of future landslides in the San Francisco Bay region. The estimated annual cost of future landslides in the entire region is about US $15 million (year 2000 $). The estimated...
Authors
J. A. Coe, R. A. Crovelli
The California Clapper Rail and multispecies recovery planning The California Clapper Rail and multispecies recovery planning
The California clapper rail (Rallus longirostris obsoletus) lives in remnant tidal marshes of San Francisco Bay, where less than 20 percent of the historic tidal wetlands remain. Listed as an endangered species in 1970 by the Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), this enigmatic bird faces a myriad of threats, including habitat loss due to urban encroachment, sea-level rise caused by climate...
Authors
Michael L. Casazza, Cory T. Overton, Melissa A. Farinha, John Y. Takekawa, Tobias M. Rohmer
Mercury correlations among six tissues for four waterbird species breeding in San Francisco Bay, California, USA Mercury correlations among six tissues for four waterbird species breeding in San Francisco Bay, California, USA
Despite a large body of research concerning mercury (Hg) in birds, no single tissue has been used consistently to assess Hg exposure, and this has hampered comparisons across studies. We evaluated the relationships of Hg concentrations among tissues in four species of waterbirds (American avocets [Recurvirostra americana], black-necked stilts [Himantopus mexicanus], Caspian terns...
Authors
Collin A. Eagles-Smith, Joshua T. Ackerman, T.L. Adelsbach, John Y. Takekawa, A.K. Miles, R.A. Keister
2005 hydrographic survey of south San Francisco Bay, California 2005 hydrographic survey of south San Francisco Bay, California
An acoustic hydrographic survey of South San Francisco Bay (South Bay) was conducted in 2005. Over 20 million soundings were collected within an area of approximately 250 sq km (97 sq mi) of the bay extending south of Coyote Point on the west shore, to the San Leandro marina on the east, including Coyote Creek and Ravenswood, Alviso, Artesian, and Mud Sloughs. This is the first survey of...
Authors
Amy C. Foxgrover, Bruce E. Jaffe, Gerald T. Hovis, Craig A. Martin, James R. Hubbard, Manoj R. Samant, Steve M. Sullivan
Western ground water and climate change—pivotal to supply sustainability or vulnerable in its own right? Western ground water and climate change—pivotal to supply sustainability or vulnerable in its own right?
No abstract available.
Authors
M. D. Dettinger, S. Earman
Mercury in sediments, Alviso and Eden Landing salt ponds, south San Francisco Bay, California Mercury in sediments, Alviso and Eden Landing salt ponds, south San Francisco Bay, California
No abstract available.
Authors
A.K. Miles, M.A. Ricca, S.E. Spring, C. Morris, C. Wilcox, T. Maurer
Habitat connectivity and ecosystem productivity: implications from a simple model. Habitat connectivity and ecosystem productivity: implications from a simple model.
The import of resources (food, nutrients) sustains biological production and food webs in resource-limited habitats. Resource export from donor habitats subsidizes production in recipient habitats, but the ecosystem-scale consequences of resource translocation are generally unknown. Here, I use a nutrient-phytoplankton-zooplankton model to show how dispersive connectivity between a...
Authors
James E. Cloern