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Publications

Below is a list of WERC's peer-reviewed publications. If you are searching for a specific publication and cannot find it in this list, please contact werc_web@usgs.gov

Filter Total Items: 3617

Protecting the wildland-urban interface in California: Greenbelts vs thinning for wildfire threats to homes

This study utilized native chaparral and sage scrub shrubs to evaluate the impact of light summer irrigation on live fuel moisture content (LFMC) and predicted fire behavior. As to be expected LFMC varied markedly throughout the year being over 100% in winter in all species and treatments but differed markedly by treatment in the summer and fall. For most species lightly irrigated plants had the h
Authors
Jon Keeley, Greg Rubin, Teresa J. Brennan, Bernadette Piffard

Mitigation ponds offer drought resiliency for western spadefoot (Spea hammondii) populations

Synergistic effects of habitat loss, drought, and climate change exacerbate amphibian declines. In southern California urbanization continues to convert natural habitat, while prolonged drought reduces surface water availability. Protection of biodiversity may be provided through mitigation; however, the long-term effectiveness of different strategies is often unreported. As a mitigation measure f
Authors
Katherine L. Baumberger, Adam R. Backlin, Elizabeth Gallegos, Cynthia Joan Hitchcock, Robert N. Fisher

Emergence of a zoonotic pathogen in a coastal marine sentinel: Capillaria hepatica (syn. Calodium hepaticum)-associated hepatitis in southern sea otters (Enhydra lutris nereis)

Capillaria hepatica is a globally distributed zoonotic nematode parasite that most commonly infects feral and native rats. Soil contact, pica, and living in close proximity to rat populations are risk factors for human infection. Larval nematodes and eggs that were morphologically consistent with C. hepatica were observed microscopically in livers of stranded southern sea otters (Enhydra lutris ne
Authors
Melissa A. Miller, Padraig J Duignan, Erin Dodd, Francesca Batac, Michelle M. Staedler, Joseph A. Tomoleoni, Michael J. Murray, Heather Harris, Chris Gardiner

Looking where it’s hard to see: A case study documenting rare Eucyclogobius newberryi presence in a California lagoon

Environmental DNA (eDNA) analysis is increasingly used for biomonitoring and research of fish populations and communities by environmental resource managers and academic researchers. Although managers are much interested in expanding the use of eDNA as a survey technique, they are sceptical about both its utility (given that information is often limited to presence/absence of a species) and feasib
Authors
Terra L Dressler, Kevin D. Lafferty, Christopher L. Jerde, Tom L. Dudley

At Palmyra Atoll, the fish‐community environmental DNA signal changes across habitats but not with tides

At Palmyra Atoll, the environmental DNA (eDNA) signal on tidal sand flats was associated with fish biomass density and captured 98%–100% of the expected species diversity there. Although eDNA spilled over across habitats, species associated with reef habitat contributed more eDNA to reef sites than to sand‐flat sites, and species associated with sand‐flat habitat contributed more eDNA to sand‐flat
Authors
Kevin D. Lafferty, Ana E Garcia-Vedrenne, John P. McLaughlin, Jasmine N. Childress, Marisa F Morse, Christopher L. Jerde

Using remotely sensed data to map Joshua Tree distributions at Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake, California, 2018

Species distribution models (SDMs) that are derived through inference have been used to provide important insights toward species distributions. Their inferences can be robust in relation to known presences, but SDMs have error rates that cannot be quantified with certainty. For large plant species with unique signatures and in sparsely vegetated habitats, object-oriented satellite image interpret
Authors
Todd C. Esque, Patrick E. Baird, Felicia C. Chen, David C. Housman, Tom J. Holton

Good prospects: High-resolution telemetry data suggests novel brood-site selection behavior in waterfowl

Breeding success should increase with prior knowledge of the surrounding environment, which is dependent upon an animal’s ability to evaluate habitat. Prospecting for nesting locations and migratory stop-over sites are well-established behaviors among bird species. We assessed whether ducks in Suisun Marsh, California, USA, a brackish marsh, prospect for suitable wetlands in the week prior to broo
Authors
Michael L. Casazza, Fiona McDuie, Austen Lorenz, David A. Keiter, Julie L. Yee, Cory T. Overton, Sarah H. Peterson, Cliff L. Feldheim, Joshua T. Ackerman

Black abalone surveys at Naval Base Ventura County, San Nicolas Island, California: 2019, annual report

The U.S. Geological Survey Western Ecological Research Center’s Santa Cruz Field Station, Santa Cruz, California, has been funded by the U.S. Navy to continue monitoring a suite of intertidal black abalone sites at San Nicolas Island, California. The nine rocky intertidal sites were established in 1980 by Glenn VanBlaricom (then of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service) to study the potential impact
Authors
Michael C. Kenner

Tree-ring evidence of forest management moderating drought responses: Implications for dry, coniferous forests in the southwestern United States

Drought, coupled with rising temperatures, is an emerging threat to many forest types across the globe. At least to a degree, we expect management actions that reduce competition (e.g., thinning, prescribed fire, or both) to improve growth of residual trees during drought. The influences of management actions and drought on individual tree growth may be measured with high precision using tree-ring
Authors
Phillip J. van Mantgem, Lucy P Kerhoulas, Rosemary L. Sherriff, Zachary James Wenderott

Dietary patterns in black abalone (Haliotis cracherodii Leach, 1814) as indicated by observation of drift algal and seagrass capture at San Nicolas Island, California USA, 1982‒2019

Black abalone Haliotis cracherodii Leach, 1814 are known to feed on drift plant macrodetritus moved about in the intertidal zone by waves and currents. Drift capture is a trait shared by at least several other abalone species. Drift materials are entrapped beneath the anterior foot and held for ingestion. The quantitative significance of feeding on entrapped drift macrodetritus for black abalone i
Authors
Michael C. Kenner, Glenn Van Blaricom

Establishment of brown anoles (Anolis sagrei) across a southern California county and potential interactions with a native lizard species

The brown anole, Anolis sagrei, is a native species to the Caribbean; however, A. sagrei has invaded multiple parts of the USA, including Florida, Louisiana, Hawai’i and more recently California. The biological impacts of A. sagrei invading California are currently unknown. Evidence from the invasion in Taiwan shows that they spread quickly and when immediate action is not taken eradication stops
Authors
Samuel R Fisher, Lelani A Del Pinto, Robert N. Fisher

Models with environmental drivers offer a plausible mechanism for the rapid spread of infectious disease outbreaks in marine organisms

The first signs of sea star wasting disease (SSWD) epidemic occurred in just few months in 2013 along the entire North American Pacific coast. Disease dynamics did not manifest as the typical travelling wave of reaction-diffusion epidemiological model, suggesting that other environmental factors might have played some role. To help explore how external factors might trigger disease, we built a cou
Authors
E. A. Aalto, Kevin D. Lafferty, S. H. Sokolow, R. E. Grewelle, Tal Ben-Horin, C. A. Boch, P. T. Raimondi, S. J. Bograd, E. L. Hazen, M. G. Jacox, F. Micheli, G. A. De Leo