74 results match your criteria: "Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center[Affiliation]"
Sci Rep
July 2024
School of Natural Resources and the Environment, The University of Arizona, 1064 East Lowell Street, Tucson, AZ, 85721, USA.
Global expansion in wind energy development is a notable achievement of the international community's effort to reduce carbon emissions during energy production. However, the increasing number of wind turbines have unintended consequences for migratory birds and bats. Wind turbine curtailment and other mitigation strategies can reduce fatalities, but improved spatial and temporal data are needed to identify the most effective way for wind energy development and volant migratory species to coexist.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
October 2024
National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO, USA.
Projections for deep decarbonization require large amounts of solar energy, which may compete with other land uses such as agriculture, urbanization, and conservation of natural lands. Existing capacity expansion models do not integrate land use land cover change (LULC) dynamics into projections. We explored the interaction between projected LULC, solar photovoltaic (PV) deployment, and solar impacts on natural lands and croplands by integrating projections of LULC with a model that can project future deployment of solar PV with high spatial resolution for the conterminous United States.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurology
February 2024
From the Brown University (S.F.B.), Providence, RI; Family Medicine (S.F.B.), Mountain Area Health Education Center, Asheville, NC; Department of Epidemiology (J.M.C., K.M.A., S.-A.M.L., J.D.S., R.G., E.A.W.), Gillings School of Global Public Health, and Department of Neurology (D.Y.H.), School of Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Department of Medicine (J.E.M.), Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Division of Public Health Sciences (A.P.R.), Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and Department of Epidemiology, University of Washington, Seattle; Department of Population Health (G.G.S.), School of Medicine & Health Sciences, University of North Dakota, Grand Forks; Department of Epidemiology and Prevention (M.Z.V.), Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC; Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center (R.R.S.), U.S. Geological Survey, U.S. Department of the Interior, Denver, CO; Department of Statistics & Operations Research and Department of Biostatistics (R.L.S.), Gillings School of Global Public Health, and Department of Medicine (E.A.W.), School of Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Sci Rep
March 2024
Departamento de Zoología, Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico City, Mexico.
The decline of the iconic monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) in North America has motivated research on the impacts of land use and land cover (LULC) change and climate variability on monarch habitat and population dynamics. We investigated spring and fall trends in LULC, milkweed and nectar resources over a 20-year period, and ~ 30 years of climate variables in Mexico and Texas, U.S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Data
January 2024
U.S. Geological Survey, Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center, Box 25046, Mail Stop 980, Denver Federal Center, Denver, Colorado, 80225, USA.
Plant macrofossils from packrat (Neotoma spp.) middens provide direct evidence of past vegetation changes in arid regions of North America. Here we describe the newest version (version 5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConserv Biol
April 2024
Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center, U.S. Geological Survey, Boise, Idaho, USA.
Bird populations are declining globally. Wind and solar energy can reduce emissions of fossil fuels that drive anthropogenic climate change, yet renewable-energy production represents a potential threat to bird species. Surveys to assess potential effects at renewable-energy facilities are exclusively local, and the geographic extent encompassed by birds killed at these facilities is largely unknown, which creates challenges for minimizing and mitigating the population-level and cumulative effects of these fatalities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWetlands (Wilmington)
November 2023
Key Laboratory of Songliao Aquatic Environment, Ministry of Education, Jilin Jianzhu University, Changchun, China.
Unlabelled: Wetlands cover a small portion of the world, but have disproportionate influence on global carbon (C) sequestration, carbon dioxide and methane emissions, and aquatic C fluxes. However, the underlying biogeochemical processes that affect wetland C pools and fluxes are complex and dynamic, making measurements of wetland C challenging. Over decades of research, many observational, experimental, and analytical approaches have been developed to understand and quantify pools and fluxes of wetland C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScience
November 2023
SILVIS Lab, Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Nature
September 2023
SILVIS Lab, Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA.
Environ Sci Technol
June 2023
Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Science, Florida State University, 1011 Academic Way, Tallahassee, Florida 32304, United States.
Redox-active functional groups in dissolved organic matter (DOM) are crucial for microbial electron transfer and methane emissions. However, the extent of aquatic DOM redox properties across northern high-latitude lakes and their relationships with DOM composition have not been thoroughly described. We quantified electron donating capacity (EDC) and electron accepting capacity (EAC) in lake DOM from Canada to Alaska and assessed their relationships with parameters from absorbance, fluorescence, and ultrahigh resolution mass spectrometry (FT-ICR MS) analyses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Data
May 2023
Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, 53706, USA.
River networks play a critical role in the global carbon cycle. Although global/continental scale riverine carbon cycle studies demonstrate the significance of rivers and streams for linking land and coastal regions, the lack of spatially distributed riverine carbon load data represents a gap for quantifying riverine carbon net gain or net loss in different regions, understanding mechanisms and factors that influence the riverine carbon cycle, and testing simulations of aquatic carbon cycle models at fine scales. Here, we (1) derive the riverine load of particulate organic carbon (POC) and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) for over 1,000 hydrologic stations across the Conterminous United States (CONUS) and (2) use the river network connectivity information for over 80,000 catchment units within the National Hydrography Dataset Plus (NHDPlus) to estimate riverine POC and DOC net gain or net loss for watersheds controlled between upstream-downstream hydrologic stations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
March 2023
Department of Geophysics, Stanford University, 397 Panama Mall, Mitchell Bld. 3rd Flr., Stanford, CA, 94305, USA.
Biol Lett
January 2023
Department of Botany and Plant Sciences, University of California Riverside, Riverside, CA 92521, USA.
Urbanization creates novel ecosystems comprised of species assemblages and environments with no natural analogue. Moreover, irrigation can alter plant function compared to non-irrigated systems. However, the capacity of irrigation to alter functional trait patterns across multiple species is unknown but may be important for the dynamics of urban ecosystems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Adv
June 2022
U.S. Geological Survey, Natural Hazards Science Center, Golden, CO 80401, USA.
Paleoearthquake studies that inform seismic hazard rely on assumptions of sediment transport that remain largely untested. Here, we test a widespread conceptual model and a new numerical model on the formation of colluvial wedges, a key deposit used to constrain the timing of paleoearthquakes. We perform this test by applying luminescence, a sunlight-sensitive sediment tracer, at a field site displaying classic colluvial wedge morphostratigraphy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFR Soc Open Sci
March 2022
U.S. Geological Survey, Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center, Boise, ID 87648, USA.
Renewable energy production can kill individual birds, but little is known about how it affects avian populations. We assessed the vulnerability of populations for 23 priority bird species killed at wind and solar facilities in California, USA. Bayesian hierarchical models suggested that 48% of these species were vulnerable to population-level effects from added fatalities caused by renewables and other sources.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Appl
July 2022
SILVIS Lab, Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
The wildland-urban interface (WUI) is the focus of many important land management issues, such as wildfire, habitat fragmentation, invasive species, and human-wildlife conflicts. Wildfire is an especially critical issue, because housing growth in the WUI increases wildfire ignitions and the number of homes at risk. Identifying the WUI is important for assessing and mitigating impacts of development on wildlands and for protecting homes from natural hazards, but data on housing development for large areas are often coarse.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Evid
February 2022
Basque Centre for Climate Change (BC3), Scientific Campus of the University of the Basque Country, Sede Building 1, 1st floor, Barrio Sarriena S/N, 48940, Leioa, Bizkaia, Spain.
Progress in key social-ecological challenges of the global environmental agenda (e.g., climate change, biodiversity conservation, Sustainable Development Goals) is hampered by a lack of integration and synthesis of existing scientific evidence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcosystems
February 2022
Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center, U.S. Geological Survey, MS 980, PO Box 25046, Denver, Colorado 80225, USA.
Watershed resilience is the ability of a watershed to maintain its characteristic system state while concurrently resisting, adapting to, and reorganizing after hydrological (for example, drought, flooding) or biogeochemical (for example, excessive nutrient) disturbances. Vulnerable waters include non-floodplain wetlands and headwater streams, abundant watershed components representing the most distal extent of the freshwater aquatic network. Vulnerable waters are hydrologically dynamic and biogeochemically reactive aquatic systems, storing, processing, and releasing water and entrained (that is, dissolved and particulate) materials along expanding and contracting aquatic networks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlob Chang Biol
February 2022
Institute for Agro-Environmental Sciences, National Agriculture and Food Research Organization, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan.
Understanding the controls on the amount and persistence of soil organic carbon (C) is essential for predicting its sensitivity to global change. The response may depend on whether C is unprotected, isolated within aggregates, or protected from decomposition by mineral associations. Here, we present a global synthesis of the relative influence of environmental factors on soil organic C partitioning among pools, abundance in each pool (mg C g soil), and persistence (as approximated by radiocarbon abundance) in relatively unprotected particulate and protected mineral-bound pools.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVeg Hist Archaeobot
April 2021
Institute of Plant Sciences and Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research, University of Bern, Altenbergrain 21, 3013 Bern, Switzerland.
Knowledge about the vegetation history of Sardinia, the second largest island of the Mediterranean, is scanty. Here, we present a new sedimentary record covering the past ~ 8,000 years from Lago di Baratz, north-west Sardinia. Vegetation and fire history are reconstructed by pollen, spores, macrofossils and charcoal analyses and environmental dynamics by high-resolution element geochemistry together with pigment analyses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRano Raraku, the crater lake constrained by basaltic tuff that served as the primary quarry used to construct the moai statues on Rapa Nui (Easter Island), has experienced fluctuations in lake level over the past centuries. As one of the only freshwater sources on the island, understanding the present and past geochemical characteristics of the lake water is critical to understand if the lake could have been a viable freshwater source for Rapa Nui. At the time of sampling in September 2017, the maximum lake depth was ~1 m.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
June 2021
School of Natural Resources and Environment, The University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, 85719, USA.
Environ Sci Technol
January 2021
Department of Chemistry, New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology, Socorro, New Mexico 87801, United States.
Iron (Fe) is a growth-limiting micronutrient for phytoplankton in major areas of oceans and deposited wind-blown desert dust is a primary Fe source to these regions. Simulated atmospheric processing of four mineral dust proxies and two natural dust samples followed by subsequent growth studies of the marine planktic diatom in artificial sea-water (ASW) demonstrated higher growth response to ilmenite (FeTiO) and hematite (α-FeO) mixed with TiO than hematite alone. The processed dust treatment enhanced diatom growth owing to dissolved Fe (DFe) content.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Appl
March 2021
Human-Environment Systems, Boise State University, Boise, Idaho, 83706, USA.
Postfire shifts in vegetation composition will have broad ecological impacts. However, information characterizing postfire recovery patterns and their drivers are lacking over large spatial extents. In this analysis, we used Landsat imagery collected when snow cover (SCS) was present, in combination with growing season (GS) imagery, to distinguish evergreen vegetation from deciduous vegetation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
June 2020
Institute of Polar Sciences (ISP-CNR), Via Torino 155, Venezia-Mestre, 30172, Venice, Italy.
The Great Acceleration of the anthropogenic impact on the Earth system is marked by the ubiquitous distribution of anthropogenic materials throughout the global environment, including technofossils, radionuclides and the exponential increases of methane and carbon dioxide concentrations. However, personal care products as direct tracers of human domestic habits are often overlooked. Here, we present the first research combining fragrances, as novel personal care products, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) as combustion and industrial markers, across the onset of the Great Acceleration in the Elbrus, Caucasus, ice core.
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