74 results match your criteria: "Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center[Affiliation]"
Remote Sens (Basel)
May 2020
Hydrologic Remote Sensing Branch, U.S. Geological Survey, Leetown, WV 25430, USA.
Global trends in wetland degradation and loss have created an urgency to monitor wetland extent, as well as track the distribution and causes of wetland loss. Satellite imagery can be used to monitor wetlands over time, but few efforts have attempted to distinguish anthropogenic wetland loss from climate-driven variability in wetland extent. We present an approach to concurrently track land cover disturbance and inundation extent across the Mid-Atlantic region, United States, using the Landsat archive in Google Earth Engine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
April 2020
Department of Geophysics, Stanford University, 397 Panama Mall, Mitchell Bld. 3rd Flr., Stanford, CA, 94305, USA.
The Earth's crustal stress field controls active deformation and reflects the processes driving plate tectonics. Here we present the first quantitative synthesis of relative principal stress magnitudes throughout North America together with hundreds of new horizontal stress orientations, revealing coherent stress fields at various scales. A continent-scale transition from compression (strike-slip and/or reverse faulting) in eastern North America to strike-slip faulting in the mid-continent to predominantly extension in western intraplate North America is likely due (at least in part) to drag at the base of the lithosphere.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFISPRS J Photogramm Remote Sens
April 2020
Southern Research Station, United States Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Research Triangle Park 27709, USA.
The 2016 National Land Cover Database (NLCD) product suite (available on www.mrlc.gov), includes Landsat-based, 30 m resolution products over the conterminous (CONUS) United States (U.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
March 2020
School of Natural Resources and Environment, The University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, 85719, USA.
Land-use intensification on arable land is expanding and posing a threat to biodiversity and ecosystem services worldwide. We develop methods to link funding for avian breeding habitat conservation and management at landscape scales to equilibrium abundance of a migratory species at the continental scale. We apply this novel approach to a harvested bird valued by birders and hunters in North America, the northern pintail duck (Anas acuta), a species well below its population goal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Data
January 2020
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Electricity Markets and Policy Group, Berkeley, CA, 94720, USA.
Over 60,000 utility-scale wind turbines are installed in the United States as of October, 2019, representing over 97 gigawatts of electric power capacity; US wind turbine installations continue to grow at a rapid pace. Yet, until April 2018, no publicly-available, regularly updated data source existed to describe those turbines and their locations. Under a cooperative research and development agreement, analysts from three organizations collaborated to develop and release the United States Wind Turbine Database (USWTDB) - a publicly available, continuously updated, spatially rectified data source of locations and attributes of utility-scale wind turbines in the United States.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConserv Biol
February 2021
U.S. Geological Survey, Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center, 970 S. Lusk Street, Boise, ID, 83706, U.S.A.
Increasing global energy demand is fostering the development of renewable energy as an alternative to fossil fuels. However, renewable energy facilities may adversely affect wildlife. Facility siting guidelines recommend or require project developers complete pre- and postconstruction wildlife surveys to predict risk and estimate effects of proposed projects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScience
December 2019
Conservation Science Global, West Cape May, NJ 08204, USA.
Sci Total Environ
January 2020
Institute of Polar Sciences CNR, Via Torino 155, 30172 Mestre (VE), Italy; Department of Environmental Sciences, Informatics and Statistics, Ca' Foscari University of Venice, Via Torino 155, 30170 Mestre, VE, Italy.
Trace organic compounds in deep ice cores supply important paleoclimatic information. Untargeted analyses of dissolved organic matter provide an overview of molecular species in ice samples however, sample volumes usually required for these analyses are generally not available from deep ice cores. Here, we developed an analytical method using a nano-UPLC-nano-ESI-HRMS to detect major molecular species in ice cores.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHydrol Earth Syst Sci
October 2019
National Center for Environmental Assessment, Office of Research and Development, US Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave NW (8623-P), Washington, DC 20460, USA.
The Upper Missouri River headwaters (UMH) basin (36 400 km) depends on its river corridors to support irrigated agriculture and world-class trout fisheries. We evaluated trends (1984-2016) in riparian wetness, an indicator of the riparian condition, in peak irrigation months (June, July and August) for 158 km of riparian area across the basin using the Landsat normalized difference wetness index (NDWI). We found that 8 of the 19 riparian reaches across the basin showed a significant drying trend over this period, including all three basin outlet reaches along the Jefferson, Madison and Gallatin rivers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcosystem function and stability are highly affected by internal and external stressors. Utilizing paleobotanical data gives insight into the evolutionary processes an ecosystem undergoes across long periods of time, allowing for a more complete understanding of how plant and insect herbivore communities are affected by ecosystem imbalance. To study how plant and insect herbivore communities change during times of disturbance, we quantified community turnover across the Paleocene--Eocene boundary in the Hanna Basin, southeastern Wyoming.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeerJ
July 2019
Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center, United States Geological Survey, Lakewood, CO, United States of America.
Wind energy generation affects landscapes as new roads, pads, and transmission lines are constructed. Limiting the landscape change from these facilities likely minimizes impacts to biodiversity and sensitive wildlife species. We examined the effects of wind energy facilities' geographic context on changes in landscape patterns using three metrics: portion of undeveloped land, core area index, and connectance index.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Appl
September 2019
U.S. Geological Survey, Center for Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS), SiouxFalls, SD.
Multiple environmental stressors impact wildlife populations, but we often know little about their cumulative and combined influences on population outcomes. We generally know more about past effects than potential future impacts, and direct influences such as changes of habitat footprints than indirect, long-term responses in behavior, distribution, or abundance. Yet, an understanding of all these components is needed to plan for future landscapes that include human activities and wildlife.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Remote Sens
May 2019
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, National Exposure Research Laboratory, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
Aquatic features critical to watershed hydrology range widely in size from narrow, shallow streams to large, deep lakes. In this study we evaluated wetland, lake, and river systems across the Prairie Pothole Region to explore where pan-sharpened high-resolution (PSHR) imagery, relative to Landsat imagery, could pro-vide additional data on surface water distribution and movement, missed by Landsat. We used the monthly Global Surface Water (GSW) Landsat product as well as surface water derived from Landsat imagery using a matched filtering algorithm (MF Landsat) to help consider how including partially inundated Landsat pixels as water influenced our findings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Water Resour Assoc
April 2019
Department of Geography, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
In terrain analysis and hydrological modeling, surface depressions (or sinks) in a digital elevation model (DEM) are commonly treated as artifacts and thus filled and removed to create a depressionless DEM. Various algorithms have been developed to identify and fill depressions in DEMs during the past decades. However, few studies have attempted to delineate and quantify the nested hierarchy of actual depressions, which can provide crucial information for characterizing surface hydrologic connectivity and simulating the fill-merge-spill hydrological process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
February 2019
U.S. Geological Survey, Western Ecological Research Center, San Diego, California, United States of America.
In many parts of the world, the combined effects of habitat fragmentation and altered disturbance regimes pose a significant threat to biodiversity. This is particularly true in Mediterranean-type ecosystems (MTEs), which tend to be fire-prone, species rich, and heavily impacted by human land use. Given the spatial complexity of overlapping threats and species' vulnerability along with limited conservation budgets, methods are needed for prioritizing areas for monitoring and management in these regions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcosyst Serv
January 2018
Center for Geospatial Analytics, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695, USA.
Landscapes are increasingly recognized for providing valuable cultural ecosystem services with numerous non-material benefits by serving as places of rest, relaxation, and inspiration that ultimately improve overall mental health and physical well-being. Maintaining and enhancing these valuable benefits through targeted management and conservation measures requires understanding the spatial and temporal determinants of perceived landscape values. Content contributed through mobile technologies and the web are emerging globally, providing a promising data source for localizing and assessing these landscape benefits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2018
Department of Environmental Sciences, Informatics and Statistics, Ca' Foscari University of Venice, Via Torino 155, 30170, Venezia Mestre, VE, Italy.
Deforestation associated with the initial settlement of New Zealand is a dramatic example of how humans can alter landscapes through fire. However, evidence linking early human presence and land-cover change is inferential in most continental sites. We employed a multi-proxy approach to reconstruct anthropogenic land use in New Zealand's South Island over the last millennium using fecal and plant sterols as indicators of human activity and monosaccharide anhydrides, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, charcoal and pollen as tracers of fire and vegetation change in lake-sediment cores.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Water Resour Assoc
January 2018
Research Ecologist (Leibowitz) and formerly Research Hydrologist (Wigington), National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 200 SW 35 St, Corvallis, Oregon 97333; Ecologist (Schofield and Alexander), National Center for Environmental Assessment, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Arlington, Virginia 22202; Research Geographer (Vanderhoof), Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center, U.S. Geological Survey, Denver, Colorado 80225; and Research Physical Scientist (Golden), National Exposure Research Laboratory, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati, Ohio 45268 (Email/Leibowitz:
Interest in connectivity has increased in the aquatic sciences, partly because of its relevance to the Clean Water Act. This paper has two objectives: (1) provide a framework to understand hydrological, chemical, and biological connectivity, focusing on how headwater streams and wetlands connect to and contribute to rivers; and (2) review methods to quantify hydrological and chemical connectivity. Streams and wetlands affect river structure and function by altering material and biological fluxes to the river; this depends on two factors: (1) functions within streams and wetlands that affect material fluxes; and (2) connectivity (or isolation) from streams and wetlands to rivers that allows (or prevents) material transport between systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Manage
August 2018
Udall Center for Studies in Public Policy, The University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, 85719, USA.
We estimated U.S. and Mexican citizens' willingness to pay (WTP) for protecting habitat for a transborder migratory species, the Mexican free-tailed bat (Tadarida brasiliensis mexicana), using the contingent valuation method.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHydrol Process
January 2018
USEPA Office of Research and Development, National Center for Environmental Assessment, William Jefferson Clinton Building, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, N. W., Mail Code: 8623P, Washington, DC 20460, USA.
Globally, hydrologic modifications such as ditching and subsurface drainage have significantly reduced wetland water storage capacity (i.e., volume of surface water a wetland can retain) and consequent wetland functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWater Resour Res
March 2018
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Center for Environmental Assessment, Arlington, VA, USA.
Understanding hydrologic connectivity between wetlands and perennial streams is critical to understanding the reliance of stream flow on inputs from wetlands. We used the isotopic evaporation signal in water and remote sensing to examine wetland-stream hydrologic connectivity within the Pipestem Creek watershed, North Dakota, a watershed dominated by prairie-pothole wetlands. Pipestem Creek exhibited an evaporated-water signal that had approximately half the isotopic-enrichment signal found in most evaporatively enriched prairie-pothole wetlands.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHydrol Earth Syst Sci
March 2018
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, National Exposure Research Laboratory, Environmental Science Division, 944 E. Harmon Ave., Las Vegas, NV 89119.
Effective monitoring and prediction of flood and drought events requires an improved understanding of how and why surface-water expansion and contraction in response to climate varies across space. This paper sought to (1) quantify how interannual patterns of surface-water expansion and contraction vary spatially across the Prairie Pothole Region (PPR) and adjacent Northern Prairie (NP) in the United States, and (2) explore how landscape characteristics influence the relationship between climate inputs and surface-water dynamics. Due to differences in glacial history, the PPR and NP show distinct patterns in regards to drainage development and wetland density, together providing a diversity of conditions to examine surface-water dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
March 2018
SILVIS Lab, Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706.
The wildland-urban interface (WUI) is the area where houses and wildland vegetation meet or intermingle, and where wildfire problems are most pronounced. Here we report that the WUI in the United States grew rapidly from 1990 to 2010 in terms of both number of new houses (from 30.8 to 43.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Technol
March 2018
Department of Ecosystem Science and Management , University of Wyoming, Laramie , Wyoming 82071 , United States.
Aeolian dust is a significant source of phosphorus (P) to alpine oligotrophic lakes, but P speciation in dust and source sediments and its release kinetics to lake water remain unknown. Phosphorus K-edge XANES spectroscopy shows that calcium-bound P (Ca-P) is dominant in 10 of 12 dust samples (41-74%) deposited on snow in the central Rocky Mountains and all 42 source sediment samples (the fine fraction) (68-80%), with a lower proportion in dust probably because acidic snowmelt dissolves some Ca-P in dust before collection. Iron-bound P (Fe-P, ∼54%) dominates in the remaining two dust samples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNature
February 2018
Department of Paleontology, San Diego Natural History Museum, San Diego, California, USA.