5,931 results on '"pacific northwest"'
Search Results
2. Mapping Ixodes pacificus and Borrelia burgdorferi Habitat Suitability Under Current and Mid-Century Climate in the Pacific Northwest (BC and WA).
- Author
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Couloigner, Isabelle, Dizon, Carl, Mak, Sunny, Dykstra, Elizabeth, Fraser, Erin, Morshed, Muhammad, Iwasawa, Stefan, Checkley, Sylvia, and Cork, Susan
- Subjects
- *
IXODES scapularis , *LYME disease , *BORRELIA burgdorferi , *CURRENT distribution , *WATCHFUL waiting - Abstract
Introduction: Lyme disease is the most common vector-borne disease in the United States and Canada. The primary vector for the causative agent of Lyme disease, Borrelia burgdorferi, in the Pacific Northwest is the western blacklegged tick, Ixodes pacificus. Materials and Methods: Using active tick surveillance data from British Columbia, Canada, and Washington State, USA, habitat suitability models using MaxEnt (maximum entropy) were developed for I. pacificus to predict its current and mid-century geographic distributions. Passive surveillance data both from BC and WA were also visualized. Results: According to the constructed models, the number of frost-free days during the winter is the most relevant predictor of its habitat suitability, followed by summer climate moisture, ecoregion, and mean minimum fall temperature. The ensemble geographic distribution map predicts that the coastal regions and inland valleys of British Columbia and the Puget Lowlands of Washington State provide the most suitable habitats for I. pacificus. The density map of ticks submitted from passive surveillance data was overlaid on the current distribution map and demonstrates the correlation between numbers of submissions and habitat suitability. Mid-century projections, based on current climate change predictions, indicate a range expansion, especially of low and moderate suitability, from current distribution. Regarding Lyme disease risk, I. pacificus identified from both active and passive surveillance and tested positive for B. burgdorferi were found to be in areas of moderate to very high suitability for I. pacificus. Conclusion: According to developed models, the total suitable habitat area for I. pacificus will expand in the interior regions of British Columbia and Washington State. However, the risk remains small given relatively low infection rates among I. pacificus. Further studies are required to better understand how this might change in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Fog in western coastal ecosystems: inter-disciplinary challenges and opportunities with example concepts from the Pacific Northwest, USA.
- Author
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Dye, Alex, Rauschenbach, Sonya, de Szoeke, Simon, Igel, Adele L., Jin, Yufang, Kim, John B., Krawchuk, Meg A., Maes, Kenneth, O'Neill, Larry, Paw U, Kyaw Tha, Samelson, Roger, Shaw, David C., and Still, Christopher
- Subjects
ATMOSPHERIC sciences ,TRADITIONAL knowledge ,PUBLIC safety ,COOPERATIVE research ,ECOPHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Coastal fog occurs along many of the world's west coast continental environments. It is particularly consequential during summer when an increased frequency of fog co-occurs with the seasonal dryness characteristic of most west coast climate systems, for example, in the Pacific coast of North and South America, the southwestern African coast, and southern coastal Europe. Understanding coastal fog formation and effects has consequences for many disciplines, including the physical (e.g., atmospheric science, oceanography), biological (e.g., biogeography, ecophysiology), and socio-ecological realms (e.g., Indigenous cultural knowledge, public safety, economics). Although research practices differ across disciplines, they share many of the challenges needed to advance fog science. For example, coastal fog remains difficult to reliably monitor when, where, and why it occurs, which adds difficulty to understanding fog's effects on all facets of the integrated coastal system. These shared challenges provide ripe opportunities for interdisciplinary collaboration, a template with past success in advancing fog-related science that can continue to have success in the future. In this perspectives review, we summarize the current status and frontiers of fog-related science from multiple disciplines, leveraging examples primarily drawn from the Pacific Northwest coastal region of the United States to show how interdisciplinary collaboration is needed to continue to advance our collective understanding of coastal fog formation and effects on west coast environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Assessing the value of harmful algal bloom forecasts in the Pacific Northwest.
- Author
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Jin, Di, Kourantidou, Melina, Weir, Michael J, and Horstmann, Isabella
- Abstract
Over the past three decades, fisheries and livelihoods on the coasts of Washington and Oregon have been severely impacted by the presence of harmful algal blooms (HABs) that produce domoic acid, a neurotoxin that accumulates in shellfish and endangers public health. Among others, recreational razor clams and commercial Dungeness crab fisheries along the Pacific Northwest (PNW) have been negatively affected, jeopardizing the economies of coastal communities that depend on tourist revenues and income generated through visits of harvesters in the region. The PNW HAB Bulletin, launched in 2008, publishes forecasts on incoming HAB events, which has enabled managers to increase toxin monitoring in high-risk locations and proceed with selected harvesting at safe beaches and delays or closures of fishing seasons, as required. In light of the value of the HAB Bulletin to local managers and communities and the occasional challenges of securing sufficient resources to ensure its continuation, this study attempts to assess the value of information (VOI) for the predictions provided by the Bulletin. Results of the study show that ongoing financial support of the Bulletin is economically justifiable. The value of HAB forecast is positively related to three primary factors: the frequency of HAB events, the precision of forecast, and the number of social and economic sectors benefiting from the forecast. The expected increase in HAB frequency and intensity due to climate change, coupled with advancements in forecasting accuracy through technological development, is anticipated to enhance the value of the forecast program. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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5. 5 towns that Light Up the Holidays.
- Author
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SHERLOCK, MARIE
- Subjects
HOLIDAYS ,LIGHTING ,FESTIVALS ,SPECIAL effects in lighting - Abstract
The article focuses on towns in the Pacific Northwest that transform into winter wonderlands with spectacular holiday light displays. Topics include Glow Langley, a massive family-friendly light festival in British Columbia; Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, with its on-water light show and North Pole cruise; and Ashland's festive offerings.
- Published
- 2024
6. Spatiotemporal variability and foraging behavior of bee visitors to a rare long-lived iteroparous forb, Silene spaldingii (Caryophyllaceae)
- Author
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Timothy D. Hatten, Terry Griswold, and Jason Gibbs
- Subjects
Pollination ,Bombus ,Halictidae ,Silene spaldingii ,Spalding’s catchfly ,Pacific Northwest ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Silene spaldingii S Watson is a rare long-lived forb (Caryophyllaceae) found primarily in open native grasslands of the Inland Pacific Northwest and is putatively pollinated by one key bumble bee pollinator, Bombus fervidus (Fabricius). However, populations of bumble bees and their visitation patterns can vary dramatically, and some species are in decline including B. fervidus. Understanding the role of co-pollinators such as sweat bees (Halictidae) could be crucial as the plight of rare plants and pollinators intensifies. We collected data across three seasons (2015–2017) on the Bombus-S. spaldingii pollination system, focusing on three Key Conservation Areas in the Channeled Scablands of eastern Washington. Bee visitors to S. spaldingii were monitored and the pool-of-pollinators was surveyed with blue vane traps. Nine species of bees were observed foraging on the plant, while 2211 bees comprised of five families, 22 genera and 81 taxa were captured in blue vane traps, meaning only 11.1% of species in the pollinator pool visited S. spaldingii. Halictus tripartitus Cockerell, a sweat bee, was a common visitor to the plant, but this was the first record of visitation for several other species, including Lasioglossum buccale (Pérez) which has never before been recorded in the Americas. These sweat bees appear to vector S. spaldingii pollen, suggesting they are co-pollinators of the plant. Weather and patch characteristics affected visitation patterns and the pool-of-pollinators. We conclude that sweat bees are likely co-pollinators of S. spaldingii and that they could become increasingly important if B. fervidus populations continue to decline.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Annual migratory movement, apparent molt-migration, migration schedule, and diffuse migratory connectivity of Hermit Warblers.
- Author
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Hankyu Kim, Siegel, Rodney B., Stephens, Jaime L., Hagar, Joan C., Furnas, Brett J., Min-Su Jeong, McComb, Brenda C., and Betts, Matthew G.
- Abstract
Copyright of Avian Conservation & Ecology is the property of Resilience Alliance and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Quantifying the Variability of "Fixed-Width" Buffers on Harvested Lands in Western Oregon and Washington.
- Author
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Swartz, Allison G, Coble, Ashley A, Thaler, Evan A, and Warren, Dana R
- Subjects
HABITAT conservation ,FOREST management ,AQUATIC biodiversity ,DIGITAL elevation models ,AQUATIC habitats ,FOREST biodiversity - Abstract
In contemporary forest management, buffers of unharvested trees are left along streams to protect riparian and aquatic ecosystems. Buffer regulations often focus on specific minimum width requirements, which aid in straightforward regulation and application, but minimum widths also suggest buffered edges are uniform and contain little variability. Conceptual papers suggest that alternative buffer configurations may offer greater flexibility in landscape-level protection, increase forest complexity, and enhance aquatic and riparian biodiversity. However, before considering alternatives to fixed-width buffers, it is necessary to quantify the inherent variability in current buffer practices present on the landscape. In this study, we used aerial imagery to quantify variability of buffer widths in two hundred randomly selected recently harvested units on managed land in Oregon and Washington with both fish-bearing and non-fish-bearing sections of stream. Wider buffers on larger streams had a greater magnitude of variability, but when normalized by stream size, variation was greater in smaller streams, and overall, variation ranged from 25% to 50% of the mean width. Despite local variability, buffer widths rarely fell below 9.14 m (30 ft). The variation quantified here provides an initial measure of variability to inform future management, given emerging interest in variable retention buffers. Study Implications : In contemporary forest management, riparian and aquatic habitat protection usually relies on minimum buffer width regulations. Minimum requirements create the perception that buffered edges are uniform distances from streams containing little variability, so conceptual papers have suggested alternative buffer configurations with variable retention edges to enhance ecological benefits. However, there are several reasons why, in practice, buffer widths may vary substantially from minimum sizes within and across harvest units under current forest management, but this potential variation has not been quantified. Before considering alternative riparian management options, it is necessary to quantify and understand the inherent variability in current practices. By utilizing high-resolution aerial imagery and digital elevation models, we quantified buffer width variation. Using a set of two hundred recently harvested units, we demonstrate notable buffer width variation across managed Pacific Northwest forests. We attribute the variation in buffer widths to the presence of road crossings, tributary junctions, underlying valley slope and slope variation, and flexibility in regulations that may be overlooked in broad evaluations of strict minimum widths. Understanding fundamental information about buffer width variability provides information about current practices and provides a standard against which proposed increases in variability may be compared. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Fog in western coastal ecosystems: inter-disciplinary challenges and opportunities with example concepts from the Pacific Northwest, USA
- Author
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Alex Dye, Sonya Rauschenbach, Simon de Szoeke, Adele L. Igel, Yufang Jin, John B. Kim, Meg A. Krawchuk, Kenneth Maes, Larry O’Neill, Kyaw Tha Paw U, Roger Samelson, David C. Shaw, and Christopher Still
- Subjects
atmosphere ,biogeography ,collaboration ,FOG ,interdisciplinary science ,Pacific Northwest ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Coastal fog occurs along many of the world’s west coast continental environments. It is particularly consequential during summer when an increased frequency of fog co-occurs with the seasonal dryness characteristic of most west coast climate systems, for example, in the Pacific coast of North and South America, the southwestern African coast, and southern coastal Europe. Understanding coastal fog formation and effects has consequences for many disciplines, including the physical (e.g., atmospheric science, oceanography), biological (e.g., biogeography, ecophysiology), and socio-ecological realms (e.g., Indigenous cultural knowledge, public safety, economics). Although research practices differ across disciplines, they share many of the challenges needed to advance fog science. For example, coastal fog remains difficult to reliably monitor when, where, and why it occurs, which adds difficulty to understanding fog’s effects on all facets of the integrated coastal system. These shared challenges provide ripe opportunities for interdisciplinary collaboration, a template with past success in advancing fog-related science that can continue to have success in the future. In this perspectives review, we summarize the current status and frontiers of fog-related science from multiple disciplines, leveraging examples primarily drawn from the Pacific Northwest coastal region of the United States to show how interdisciplinary collaboration is needed to continue to advance our collective understanding of coastal fog formation and effects on west coast environments.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Fathoming Empire: Marine Knowledge and Colonial Navigation in an Indigenous Seascape, 1825–1907.
- Author
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Robertson, Jesse
- Subjects
IMPERIALISM ,POLITICAL doctrines ,ECONOMIC history ,NAVIGATION ,ARCHIVAL research - Abstract
Copyright of International Journal of Canadian Studies is the property of University of Toronto Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Late-Season Irrigation Influences French Fry Color.
- Author
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T., Francisco Gonzalez, Pavek, Mark J., Knowles, N. Richard, and Holden, Zachary
- Subjects
- *
POTATO growers , *WATER shortages , *POTATO quality , *POTATO growing , *FRENCH fries - Abstract
Given the increasing challenges of water scarcity and the stringent quality requirements of the frozen potato-processing industry, this multi-year research trial aimed to determine whether reduced late-season irrigation on potatoes could improve French fry color. The study was conducted near Othello, WA, and was comprised of five irrigation levels: 40%, 60%, 80%, 100%, and 120% of modeled evapotranspiration (ET), and five potato cultivars: Alturas, Clearwater Russet, Ranger Russet, Russet Burbank, and Umatilla Russet. Irrigation treatments started 100 to 105 days after planting (DAP), approximately 1500 day degrees (at or near peak canopy growth), and ended at vine kill, 150 to 155 DAP. Fry color was assessed following storage durations of 45 and 90 days after harvest from three storage temperatures of 4.4 °C, 6.7 °C, and 8.9 °C, using a photovolt reflectometer, measuring percent light reflectance, in which higher values represented lighter fries. The study found that reducing late-season irrigation generally improved overall fry color. Fry color improvements were observed in four potato cultivars grown with 20% to 40% less irrigation than the control (100% ET); Ranger Russet exhibited no improvement. Reducing late-season irrigation by more than 40% resulted in darker fries for Clearwater Russet, Russet Burbank, and Umatilla Russet when tubers were stored at 4.4 °C and 6.7 °C. Excess irrigation, greater than 100% ET, generally darkened fries in Alturas, Clearwater Russet, Russet Burbank, and Umatilla Russet. These findings provide valuable guidelines for potato growers, indicating that while reducing late-season irrigation can enhance fry color, the effects may depend on a combination of cultivar, irrigation level, and storage temperature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Placing Stakeholder Formation in Central Oregon's Deschutes Basin.
- Author
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Vineyard, Noel and Cantor, Alida
- Subjects
- *
WATER management , *WATER supply , *HABITAT conservation - Abstract
This paper examines the processes by which "stakeholder" status is constructed, and the importance of sense of place to that construction in collaborative water resource governance processes. Water management often involves collaborative governance, but there can be differences between who has an interest in the outcome, and who is formally invited to participate as a "stakeholder." We examine a case study of a collaborative water governance process in Central Oregon, and found that existing models of stakeholder formation present in scholarly literature did not fully explain the dynamics of stakeholder participation. We propose a two-step "Interest-Participation" model of stakeholder formation: to be considered stakeholders, a group must not only have an interest in the outcome but must actively navigate barriers to participation. We moreover argue that collaborative engagement is an embodiment of sense of place, emphasizing the importance of competing place meanings in resource governance processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Lichen diversity in serpentine habitats of the North Coast Range, California.
- Author
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Conway, Sarah Norvell, McCune, Bruce, and Henkel, Terry W.
- Subjects
- *
SERPENTINE , *LICHENS , *MULTIDIMENSIONAL scaling , *SPECIES diversity , *HABITATS - Abstract
Macrolichen diversity and community composition were determined for an area of high botanical interest in the Coast Ranges of Northern California – the Horse Mountain Botanical Area (HMBA) in Six Rivers National Forest. The Coast Ranges have been suggested to have high lichen diversity, yet detailed site-specific macrolichen surveys are lacking for the area. The HMBA is characterized by the presence of ultramafic (serpentine) soils, contributing to its diverse assemblage of conifers. Here we present comprehensive data on macrolichens of the HMBA integrated with environmental variables at the landscape level. Twenty 0.4 ha sampling plots were positioned across the varying habitats of the HMBA and macrolichens were intensively sampled from all substrata. Out of 888 total collections, 119 macrolichen species in 52 genera were identified, 63 species were sequenced for the mycobiont internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region, and all species were vouchered. Microenvironmental influences on lichen community composition were ordinated with nonmetric multidimensional scaling (NMS). Within-plot measured environmental variables with strongest correlations to ordination Axis 1 were 1) total tree basal area, 2) proportion of conifer basal area relative to hardwoods, and 3) distance between plot center and nearest stream. Distinct macrolichen communities were found in plots containing primarily conifers versus mixed hardwood-conifer plots. All plots contained both nitrogen-fixing and pendulous forage macrolichens; in each of the three hardwood-dominated plots, nitrogen-fixing lichens composed nearly a third of the species total. When epiphytic macrolichen species richness and dominance within the HMBA were compared to data from other regional forests, the HMBA showed comparable community composition but averaged 39% higher species richness. Results from this study can help inform management of the HMBA as well as future taxonomic and ecological research on regional macrolichens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Near-term fire weather forecasting in the Pacific Northwest using 500-hPa map types.
- Author
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Humphrey, Reed, Saltenberger, John, Abatzoglou, John T., and Cullen, Alison
- Subjects
WILDFIRES ,FIRE weather ,WEATHER forecasting ,FIRE risk assessment ,WILDFIRE prevention ,GEOPOTENTIAL height ,WILDFIRE risk ,FLOOD warning systems - Abstract
Background: Near-term forecasts of fire danger based on predicted surface weather and fuel dryness are widely used to support the decisions of wildfire managers. The incorporation of synoptic-scale upper-air patterns into predictive models may provide additional value in operational forecasting. Aims: In this study, we assess the impact of synoptic-scale upper-air patterns on the occurrence of large wildfires and widespread fire outbreaks in the US Pacific Northwest. Additionally, we examine how discrete upper-air map types can augment subregional models of wildfire risk. Methods: We assess the statistical relationship between synoptic map types, surface weather and wildfire occurrence. Additionally, we compare subregional fire danger models to identify the predictive value contributed by upper-air map types. Key results: We find that these map types explain variation in wildfire occurrence not captured by fire danger indices based on surface weather alone, with specific map types associated with significantly higher expected daily ignition counts in half of the subregions. Conclusions: We observe that incorporating upper-air map types enhances the explanatory power of subregional fire danger models. Implications: Our approach provides value to operational wildfire management and provides a template for how these methods may be implemented in other regions. This study assesses the predictive value of synoptic-scale upper-air map types in near-term fire weather forecasting in the US Pacific Northwest. A set of 13 patterns of 500-hPa geopotential heights are associated with spatially heterogeneous variation in wildfire activity within the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Dam removal politics and unlikely alliances in the lower Snake River Basin
- Author
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Krista Harrington and Alida Cantor
- Subjects
water governance ,collaborative governance ,unlikely alliances ,salmon ,dam removal ,snake river ,pacific northwest ,usa ,Hydraulic engineering ,TC1-978 - Abstract
Dams, once considered catalysts for economic development in the Western US, are now being targeted for removal due to their adverse ecological and social outcomes. However, dam removal often remains controversial. In the Pacific Northwest, four dams on the Lower Snake River have long been criticized for their negative impacts on salmon. In 2021, the Columbia Basin Initiative was proposed, seeking to dismantle the dams in order to simultaneously improve salmon health, redesign Idaho’s energy landscape, change transportation pathways, and protect other dams. Response to the initiative has been polarized. In this paper, we build upon political ecology and ‘unlikely alliance’ scholarship by examining the reactions to and points of tension around the initiative. We specifically focus on the viewpoints of key stakeholders who have shifted from their historically rooted alliances and views. We found that being in favour of dam removal in general was not necessarily enough to cause someone to support the Columbia Basin Initiative (and vice versa). In particular, stakeholders were split on views around legal provisions in the initiative that would limit the future utility of current environmental law. We contribute to political ecology and unlikely alliance scholarship by demonstrating that dam removal is a complex issue that can bring actors together in unanticipated ways.
- Published
- 2024
16. Exploring restoration efforts from a social lens: statistical models reveal relationships between salmon habitat restoration efforts and ecological and social characteristics of the Puget Sound basin, USA
- Author
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Brittany D King and Robert Fonner
- Subjects
habitat restoration ,salmon ,puget sound ,environmental justice ,equity ,pacific northwest ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Habitat restoration is an important tool for promoting the conservation and recovery of imperiled species and is motivated by both environmental and social factors. As new restoration efforts are considered, it is important to look back and see what can be learned from past efforts, including how restoration benefits are distributed across communities through an equity lens. Focusing primarily on the Puget Sound basin in the state of Washington, this study investigates correlations between environmental and social factors and the spatial distributions of past restoration efforts. We specified statistical models to explain the variation in the number of restoration worksites undertaken in subwatersheds as a function of environmental and social variables. Using a common set of explanatory variables, we fit four models to examine the distribution of worksites associated with particular types of restoration actions (instream, riparian, land acquisition, and fish passage) and a fifth model to examine the distribution of all aquatic-based restoration worksites across action types. The results reveal statistically significant relationships between the number of worksites and several environmental characteristics, including elevation and species richness number of the Salmon Evolutionary Significant Units. Among the social explanatory variables, the percentage of non-Hispanic white residents in a subwatershed was the most prominent predictor of the number of restoration worksites across models, producing positive and statistically significant estimated coefficients in the instream, riparian, and total worksite models. We also estimated the specified models using data from other populated drainage basins in the region and found corroborating results for some patterns revealed in the Puget Sound basin. Our results provide insight for consideration when planning future restoration effects. With the knowledge of potential past social inequalities and inequities, restoration managers can, moving forward, take appropriate steps to account for these disparities.
- Published
- 2024
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17. How Unexpected Was the 2021 Pacific Northwest Heatwave?
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McKinnon, Karen A and Simpson, Isla R
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Climate Action ,heatwaves ,climate change ,non-normality ,extreme events ,Pacific Northwest ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Published
- 2022
18. TOP REMODELERS SHINED BRIGHT AT 38TH ANNUAL REX/T-REX AWARDS: The Master Builders Association of King and Snohomish Counties Highlights the Best Projects of 2024.
- Subjects
HOME remodeling ,AWARDS - Abstract
The article offers information on the 38th annual REX/T-REX Awards, which took place on May 4, 2024, at Seattle's Victory Hall in Washington, recognizing outstanding remodeling projects in the Pacific Northwest.
- Published
- 2024
19. Curating Cool Outdoor Spaces.
- Subjects
CONSTRUCTION materials ,OUTDOOR furniture ,INVESTMENTS - Abstract
The article presents an interview with Jake Cross, general manager at Summer House, Furniture for Outdoor Living, which has locations in Tacoma and Bellevue, Washington. He shares his views on the top construction material choices for the Pacific Northwest, how to maintain outdoor furnishings throughout the year, and investing in quality outdoor furnishings.
- Published
- 2024
20. Spatiotemporal variability and foraging behavior of bee visitors to a rare long-lived iteroparous forb, Silene spaldingii (Caryophyllaceae)
- Author
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Hatten, Timothy D., Griswold, Terry, and Gibbs, Jason
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Trade‐offs among management objectives in mature Douglas‐fir forests of the Pacific Northwest.
- Author
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Williams, Neil G. and Powers, Matthew D.
- Subjects
CARBON sequestration in forests ,CLIMATE change mitigation ,FOREST conservation ,FOREST biodiversity ,DROUGHTS ,CONSERVATION projects (Natural resources) ,BIODIVERSITY conservation - Abstract
Mature conifer‐dominated forests are an important component of the Pacific Northwest landscape, and the conservation of species associated with late‐successional forests has been a primary management focus in these forests for decades. Increasingly, these forests are also valued as carbon stores, with considerable climate change mitigation potential. However, there are also increasing concerns about the effects of climate change, particularly drought, on late‐successional forests. Despite the complexity of balancing these diverse management concerns, few studies have examined the compatibility of biodiversity conservation, carbon storage, and drought adaptation. We used a spatially and temporally synchronous empirical dataset from mature Douglas‐fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) stands representing three alternative management strategies, passive management ("unmanaged"), thinning, and retention harvest, to examine trade‐offs among management objectives related to drought adaptation, carbon storage, and the conservation of early‐successional and late‐successional forest songbirds. Although previous studies have evaluated drought adaptation in Douglas‐fir, none have focused on mature stands. Therefore, we also examined tree resistance and resilience to the 2001 drought. Trees in retention harvest stands displayed significantly higher drought resistance and resilience than trees in thinned or unmanaged stands, but no differences were observed between trees in the latter two management conditions, potentially due to the long (average of 22 years) period between treatment and drought in our thinned stands. Despite this, thinned stands provided a better multiobjective compromise than unmanaged or retention harvest stands in our trade‐off analysis. Across all mature stands, trade‐offs were largest for objective combinations that involved early‐ or late‐successional forest birds. While our analysis supports the consistency of managing late‐successional forest birds and carbon storage, trade‐offs between early‐successional birds and carbon storage were much larger. Given projected changes in climate, the substantial trade‐offs that we observed between drought adaptation and late‐successional forest birds are notable and imply that achieving these two objectives will be challenging at the stand scale. Our results suggest that a diversity of management approaches, incorporating both active management and reserve‐based strategies, may be necessary to foster a combination of drought adaptation, carbon storage, and biodiversity conservation goals in these forests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Evaluating variations in the barriers to colorectal cancer screening associated with telehealth use in rural U.S. Pacific Northwest.
- Author
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Peng, Wei, Huang, Qian, and Mao, Bingjing
- Subjects
EARLY detection of cancer ,DISCRIMINATION in medical care ,COLORECTAL cancer ,TELEMEDICINE ,MEDICAL screening ,RURAL population - Abstract
Purpose: The incidence and mortality rates of colorectal cancer (CRC) remain consistently high in rural populations. Telehealth can improve screening uptake by overcoming individual and environmental disadvantages in rural communities. The present study aimed to characterize varying barriers to CRC screening between rural individuals with and without experience in using telehealth. Method: The cross-sectional study surveyed 250 adults aged 45–75 residing in rural U.S. states of Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington from June to September 2022. The associations between CRC screening and four sets of individual and environmental factors specific to rural populations (i.e., demographic characteristics, accessibility, patient–provider factors, and psychological factors) were assessed among respondents with and without past telehealth adoption. Result: Respondents with past telehealth use were more likely to screen if they were married, had a better health status, had experienced discrimination in health care, and had perceived susceptibility, screening efficacy, and cancer fear, but less likely to screen when they worried about privacy or had feelings of embarrassment, pain, and discomfort. Among respondents without past telehealth use, the odds of CRC screening decreased with busy schedules, travel burden, discrimination in health care, and lower perceived needs. Conclusion: Rural individuals with and without previous telehealth experience face different barriers to CRC screening. The finding suggests the potential efficacy of telehealth in mitigating critical barriers to CRC screening associated with social, health care, and built environments of rural communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. A comparison of two snapshot studies half a century apart suggests stability in a Pacific Northwest winter forest bird community.
- Author
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Clements, Nolan M. and Robinson, W. Douglas
- Subjects
BIRD communities ,WINTERING of birds ,FOREST birds ,BIRD populations ,WINTER ,COMMUNITY forests ,AERIAL photography - Abstract
Populations of many North American bird species have declined throughout the past half century. The majority of studies quantifying these declines have analyzed counts of birds taken during spring and summer, not during the season of scarcity, winter. We re-surveyed seven large study plots in Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) forests initially surveyed in winter during the late 1960s in the Oregon Coast Range, USA. We compared density estimates, observed species richness and vegetation structure within plots, and inspected aerial photography to describe changes in landscape-level landcover. To assess potential drivers of change, we reviewed historical climate data and explored patterns of abundance associated with forest age. Observed species richness was greater in the modern surveys. Abundances of four of the six most common bird species appeared to be similar to or slightly lower than 50 years ago as the historical point estimates usually fell within or above 95% confidence intervals generated from our analyses. We found no clear associations with changes in bird communities and forest structure, climate, or forest age. The historical data are unique in providing point estimates of abundance for the entire bird community on each study plot. Yet, some uncertainties in accuracy of the historic counting methods could still influence interpretation of multi-decadal changes in apparent abundance. We conclude that this Pacific Northwest bird community was relatively stable in its abundances of the most common forestdwelling species and that largely the communities are still intact. Additional production of precisely repeatable surveys of winter bird communities are needed in all habitats to adequately characterize long-term population dynamics during the season of scarcity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Multicultural exceptionalism: Race and gender in the Sikh diaspora of the transnational Pacific Northwest.
- Author
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Sabherwal, Sasha
- Subjects
- *
RACE , *SIKHS , *DIASPORA , *RACE discrimination , *GENDER , *MASCULINITY - Abstract
Multiculturalism discourse simultaneously produces, celebrates, and erases differences. This paper explores racial violence within the Sikh diaspora of the transnational Pacific Northwest (PNW) to understand how multicultural discourse has obfuscated the criminalization, incarceration, and surveillance of the Sikh diaspora. I draw from an analysis of Deepa Mehta's film Beeba Boys as well as ethnographic fieldwork to analyze the tropes of the 'Surrey Jack' and the 'Kent Boy,' two pervasive stereotypes attached to young Punjabi men in the PNW. I show that these caricatured masculinities reveal the limits of racial inclusion by reproducing stereotypes that characterize Punjabi Sikh men as 'dangerous.' [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Opera by Telephone in the Pacific Northwest, circa 1895.
- Author
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Tomkinson, Matthew
- Subjects
- *
TELEPHONES , *TELECOMMUNICATION , *TELEPHONE calls , *SCRAPBOOKS , *LOCAL history , *ACOUSTICS , *OPERA - Abstract
This article traces the phenomenon of opera by telephone in late nineteenth-century British Columbia, with a focus on a local 1895 production of Gilbert and Sullivan's The Pirates of Penzance (1879). Examining the scrapbooks of prominent New Westminster figure, William Andrew DeWolf-Smith, this research centres on an "ingenious telephone arrangement" that allowed remote audience members to listen to live theatrical performances via telephone (or "theatre phone"). This study considers the historical, technological, and theoretical aspects of the theatre phone, including its impact on theatre reception. With reference to sound studies scholar Adrian Curtin's work, this study investigates how the theatre phone created a novel listening experience, enabling a new form of private audio theatre among a network of synchronous "shadow audiences." The theatre phone represents a significant turning point in local media history, which is linked to broader developments in communications technologies during the period. In addition to examining its role as an emerging business venture, the author also explores its significance as an accessibility tool that enabled remote audiences to access theatrical performances from a distance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Tree Species Classification Based on Upper Crown Morphology Captured by Uncrewed Aircraft System Lidar Data.
- Author
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McGaughey, Robert J., Kruper, Ally, Bobsin, Courtney R., and Bormann, Bernard T.
- Subjects
- *
LIDAR , *RANDOM forest algorithms , *FOREST surveys , *SPECIES , *POINT cloud , *DEAD trees - Abstract
The application of lidar data to assist with forest inventory is common around the world. However, the determination of tree species is still somewhat elusive. Lidar data collected using UAS (uncrewed aircraft systems) platforms offer high density point cloud data for areas from a few to several hundred hectares. General point cloud metrics computed using these data captured differences in the crown structure that proved useful for species classification. For our study, we manually adjusted plot and tree locations to align field trees and UAS lidar point data and computed common descriptive metrics using a small cylindrical sample of points designed to capture the top three meters and leader of each tree. These metrics were used to train a random forest classifier to differentiate between two conifer species, Douglas fir and western hemlock, common in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. Our UAS lidar data had a single swath pulse density of 90 pulses/m2 and an aggregate pulse density of 556 pulses/m2. We trained classification models using both height and intensity metrics, height metrics alone, intensity metrics alone, and a small subset of five metrics, and achieved overall accuracies of 91.8%, 88.7%, 78.6%, and 91.5%, respectively. Overall, we showed that UAS lidar data captured morphological differences between the upper crowns of our two target species and produced a classification model that could be applied over large areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Dam Removal Politics and Unlikely Alliances in the Lower Snake River Basin.
- Author
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Harrington, Krista and Cantor, Alida
- Abstract
Dams, once considered catalysts for economic development in the Western US, are now being targeted for removal due to their adverse ecological and social outcomes. However, dam removal often remains controversial. In the Pacific Northwest, four dams on the Lower Snake River have long been criticized for their negative impacts on salmon. In 2021, the Columbia Basin Initiative was proposed, seeking to dismantle the dams in order to simultaneously improve salmon health, redesign Idaho's energy landscape, change transportation pathways, and protect other dams. Response to the initiative has been polarized. In this paper, we build upon political ecology and 'unlikely alliance' scholarship by examining the reactions to and points of tension around the initiative. We specifically focus on the viewpoints of key stakeholders who have shifted from their historically rooted alliances and views. We found that being in favour of dam removal in general was not necessarily enough to cause someone to support the Columbia Basin Initiative (and vice versa). In particular, stakeholders were split on views around legal provisions in the initiative that would limit the future utility of current environmental law. We contribute to political ecology and unlikely alliance scholarship by demonstrating that dam removal is a complex issue that can bring actors together in unanticipated ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
28. DNA barcoding aids in generating a preliminary checklist of the lichens and allied fungi of Calvert Island, British Columbia: Results from the 2018 Hakai Terrestrial BioBlitz.
- Author
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McMullin, Richard Troy, Simon, Andrew D. F., Brodo, Irwin M., Wickham, Sara B., Bell-Doyon, Philip, Kuzmina, Maria, and Starzomski, Brian M.
- Subjects
LICHEN ecology ,GENETIC barcoding ,BIOGEOGRAPHY ,RAIN forests - Abstract
Background: Bioblitzes are a tool for the rapid appraisal of biodiversity and are particularly useful in remote and understudied regions and for understudied taxa. Lichens are an example of an often overlooked group, despite being widespread in virtually all terrestrial ecosystems and having many important ecological functions. New information: We report the lichens and allied fungi collected during the 2018 terrestrial bioblitz conducted on Calvert Island on the Central Coast of British Columbia, Canada. We identified 449 specimens belonging to 189 species in 85 genera, increasing the total number of species known from Calvert Island to 194, and generated Internal Transcribed Spacer (ITS) sequences for 215 specimens from 121 species. Bryoria furcellata, Chaenothecopsis lecanactidis and C. nigripunctata were collected for the first time in British Columbia. We also found Pseudocyphellaria rainierensis, which is listed as Special Concern on the federal Species at Risk Act, and other rarely reported species in British Columbia including Opegrapha sphaerophoricola, Protomicarea limosa, Raesaenenia huuskonenii and Sarea difformis. We demonstrate that DNA barcoding improves the scope and accuracy of expert-led bioblitzes by facilitating the detection of cryptic species and allowing for consistent identification of chemically and morphologically overlapping taxa. Despite the spatial and temporal limitations of our study, the results highlight the value of intact forest ecosystems on the Central Coast of British Columbia for lichen biodiversity, education and conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Simulated Future Shifts in Wildfire Regimes in Moist Forests of Pacific Northwest, USA.
- Author
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Dye, Alex W., Reilly, Matt J., McEvoy, Andy, Lemons, Rebecca, Riley, Karin L., Kim, John B., and Kerns, Becky K.
- Subjects
FOREST fires ,CLIMATE change models ,EXTREME weather ,TEMPERATE forests ,COASTAL changes ,ATMOSPHERIC models - Abstract
Fire is an integral natural disturbance in the moist temperate forests of the Pacific Northwest of the United States, but future changes remain uncertain. Fire regimes in this climatically and biophysically diverse region are complex, but typically climate limited. One challenge for interpreting potential changes is conveying projection uncertainty. Using projections of Energy Release Component (ERC) derived from 12 global climate models (GCM) that vary in performance relative to the region's contemporary climate, we simulated thousands of plausible fire seasons with the stochastic spatial fire spread model FSim for mid‐21st century (2035–2064) under RCP8.5 emissions scenario for five northwestern pyromes. The magnitude of projected changes to burn probability, fire size, and number of fires varied among pyromes and GCMs. We projected the largest increases in burn probability and fire size in the cooler and wetter northern parts of the region (North Cascades, Olympics & Puget Lowlands) and Oregon West Cascades, with more moderate changes projected for the Washington West Cascades and Oregon Coast Range. We provide new insights into changing fire regimes characterized by the possibility of shifts toward more frequent and large fires (especially >40,000 ha), as well as shifts in seasonality, including more fires burning at the beginning of fall when extreme synoptic weather events have the potential to increase fire spread. Our work highlights the potential geographic variability in climate change effects in some of the most productive moist temperate forests of the world and points to a rapid acceleration of fire in the coming decades. Plain Language Summary: The moist temperate forests of the Pacific Northwest are among the world's most productive. Fire has always existed in these ecosystems, but throughout much of recorded history has occurred infrequently [80–800 years] relative to a human timescale. Future climate change will likely introduce more frequent warm and dry weather, which increases opportunities for fire ignition and spread. However, not all climate models project the same magnitude of changes, so there is uncertainty on when and where fire regimes will be impacted. Using a fire spread model, we investigate how several different plausible projections of mid‐21st century climate could alter fire regimes for the moist temperate forests of the Pacific Northwest and bracket the range of possible fire regime shifts that could be expected in the region. The largest increases to burn probability and fire size are likely to occur in the cooler, wetter northern forests (the Olympic Peninsula and Washington North Cascades) and the Oregon West Cascades, with more moderate changes for the Oregon Coast Range and Washington West Cascades. Overall, our work highlights the potential geographic variability of climate change effects in the region and points to a rapid acceleration of fire in the coming decades. Key Points: Climate change may drive shifts to fire regimes with more frequent and larger fires in the moist temperate forests of the Pacific NorthwestDescribing uncertainties of how, when, and where climate change may alter fire regimes helps bracket expectations for the futureThe largest increases to burn probability, fire size, and number of fires are projected to occur in the cooler, wetter parts of the region [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Braiding frameworks for collaborative stewardship scholarship
- Author
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Molly Carney
- Subjects
braided knowledges ,plant management ,kinship ,Pacific Northwest ,collaborative archaeologies ,relationality ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
Human-environment relationships are most frequently viewed from evolutionary perspectives, despite the vast body of literature which highlights how many Indigenous peoples engage with and understand place, plants, and animals as kinship relations. My goals in this essay are twofold: first, to suggest we adopt the phrase stewardship to recognize and uphold notions of respect, reciprocity, and relationships that are common within many Indigenous worldviews, and secondly, to advocate for the use of pluralistic approaches to our collaborative scholarship. I offer examples from my own experiences in reconstructing stewardship histories across people, plants, and places in the Pacific Northwest.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Heterogeneity in post-fire thermal responses across Pacific Northwest streams: A multi-site study
- Author
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Mussie T. Beyene and Scott G. Leibowitz
- Subjects
Wildfires ,Stream water temperatures ,Spatial variability ,Pacific Northwest ,Environmental drivers ,Environmental engineering ,TA170-171 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Over the past century, water temperatures in many streams across the Pacific Northwest (PNW) have steadily risen, shrinking endangered salmonid habitats. The warming of PNW stream reaches can be further accelerated by wildfires burning forest stands that provide shade to streams. However, previous research on the effect of wildfires on stream water temperatures has focused on individual streams or burn events, limiting our understanding of the diversity in post-fire thermal responses across PNW streams. To bridge this knowledge gap, we assessed the impact of wildfires on daily summer water temperatures across 31 PNW stream sites, where 10–100% of their riparian area burned. To ensure robustness of our results, we employed multiple approaches to characterize and quantify fire effects on post-fire stream water temperature changes.Averaged across the 31 burned sites, wildfires corresponded to a 0.3 – 1°C increase in daily summer water temperatures over the subsequent three years. Nonetheless, post-fire summer thermal responses displayed extensive heterogeneity across burned sites where the likelihood and rate of a post-fire summer water temperature warming was higher for stream sites with greater proportion of their riparian area burned under high severity. Also, watershed features such as basin area, post-fire weather, bedrock permeability, pre-fire riparian forest cover, and winter snowpack depth were identified as strong predictors of the post-fire summer water temperature responses across burned sites. Our study offers a multi-site perspective on the effect of wildfires on summer stream temperatures in the PNW, providing insights that can inform freshwater management efforts beyond individual streams and basins.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Salish Archipelago
- Author
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Rapaport, Moshe
- Subjects
Salish Sea ,Salish Archipelago ,Pacific Northwest ,Environmental Management ,Indigenous Comanagement ,thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NK Archaeology::NKD Archaeology by period / region ,thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NH History::NHK History of the Americas ,thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RN The environment::RNF Environmental management - Abstract
The Salish Archipelago includes more than 400 islands in the Salish Sea, an amalgamation of Canada's Georgia Strait, the United States’ Puget Sound, and the shared Strait of Juan de Fuca. The Salish Sea and Islands are named for the Coast Salish Indigenous Peoples whose homelands extend across the region. Holiday homes and services have in many places displaced pristine ecosystems, Indigenous communities, and historic farms. Will age-old island environments and communities withstand the forces of commodity-driven economies? This new, major scholarly undertaking provides the geographical and historical background for exploring such questions. Salish Archipelago features sections on environment, history, society, and management, accompanied by numerous maps and other illustrations. This diverse collection offers an overview of an embattled, but resilient, region, providing knowledge and perspectives of interest to residents, educators, and policy makers.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. 'Changing stinking thinking' : a comparative case study of the enactment, embodiment, and emplacement of social citizenship in the Pacific Northwest
- Author
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Chamberlain, Shirley-pat, Henderson, Ailsa, and Kennedy, James
- Subjects
social citizenship ,citizenship ,indigenous methodology ,Indigenous Peoples ,Settler ,settler colonialism ,Canada ,Pacific Northwest ,British Columbia ,Yukon ,Tsilhqot'in ,Chilcotin ,Kwanlin Dun ,Whitehorse ,participation ,partnership ,power sharing ,power ,agency ,Indigenous women ,intersectionality ,Interdisciplinarity ,indigeneity ,decolonize ,abjection ,resilience ,uncolonize ,civil society ,civil society organizations ,Rotary International ,Headstart - Abstract
Throughout history the agency of social citizenship has resulted in actions that both include and exclude certain individuals and groups through political, economic, and civic interaction. This creates abject spaces of limited rights, inclusion and belonging. Divergent and nested lived experiences of how processes and practices of social citizenship are enacted, embodied, and emplaced necessitate a re-problematizing of the context from the hegemonic view of Canada as a pluralistic liberal multicultural state to one where multiple divergent epistemologies collide in a state of continued settler colonialism. This comparative case study in the Pacific Northwest of what is now called Canada explores how two civil society organizations (CSOs) facilitate or hinder Settler and Indigenous individuals', groups', and communities' agency through social action. CSOs are sites of social action that have the power to create spaces where all citizens have a voice in their own social well-being through participation, partnership, and power sharing. The re-problematizing allows for the exploration of how the reframing of political and civil space impacts interactions and relationships to investigate what these sites tell us about participants' perceptions and lived experiences of interlocking oppressions, power, and agency in the lived experience of processes and practices of social citizenship.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Improved thermal preferences and a stressor index derived from modeled stream temperatures and regional taxonomic standards for freshwater macroinvertebrates of the Pacific Northwest, USA
- Author
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Shannon Hubler, Jen Stamp, Sean P. Sullivan, Mark Fernandez, Chad Larson, Kate Macneale, Robert W. Wisseman, Rob Plotnikoff, and Britta Bierwagen
- Subjects
Temperature ,Stream ,Benthic macroinvertebrate ,Pacific Northwest ,Thermal preference ,Climate change ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Benthic macroinvertebrate taxa vary in their sensitivities to water quality and habitat conditions, contributing to their extensive use as ecological indicators. As climate change and landscape alteration increasingly impact stream temperatures, interest is growing in expanding our knowledge of how macroinvertebrates are affected by current and future thermal conditions. Using samples from 3501 sites, we evaluated relationships between macroinvertebrate taxa and modeled stream temperatures across Oregon and Washington, in the U.S. Pacific Northwest. We used Maximum Weekly Maximum Temperature (MWMT) values from the NorWeST temperature dataset, which is the same metric used for numeric water temperature standards in Oregon and Washington. MWMT captures peak thermal stress, when cold-water adapted aquatic biota are closest to their upper physiological limits. For each macroinvertebrate taxon, we characterized relationships between MWMT and their distributions with three measures: 1) central thermal tendency, based on weighted average (WA) optima calculations and relative abundance data; 2) lower and upper thermal limits, based on the 10th and 90th percentiles of taxon occurrence, using presence data; and 3) thermal sensitivity curve shape, based on Generalized Additive Model (GAM) plots. We assigned 521 taxa, from species to phyla, to seven thermal preference categories, ranging from cold and warm stenotherms (narrow range) to eurythermal (wide range). Thermal sensitivity and variability within each taxonomic group were identified for establishing taxonomic targets for regional monitoring programs. We also developed the Macroinvertebrate Thermal Tolerance Index (MTTI) to represent the assemblage-level response to available thermal habitats, using WA optima and relative abundances for 324 taxa. The MTTI model had a strong relationship with modeled temperatures (R2 = 0.68) and a root-mean-square-error of 2.5 °C. Our work builds on previous regional and national efforts to identify thermal indicator taxa by using modeled stream network temperatures and a thermal metric that corresponds directly to regional water temperature standards. Both the taxa thermal preferences and the MTTI can be used to help identify causes of biological impairment, prioritize restoration and protection actions, and monitor assemblage-wide changes in thermal tolerance over time.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. A comparison of two snapshot studies half a century apart suggests stability in a Pacific Northwest winter forest bird community
- Author
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Nolan M. Clements and W. Douglas Robinson
- Subjects
avian community change ,winter bird communities ,historical biodiversity data ,biodiversity benchmarks ,long-term change in bird abundance ,Pacific Northwest ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Populations of many North American bird species have declined throughout the past half century. The majority of studies quantifying these declines have analyzed counts of birds taken during spring and summer, not during the season of scarcity, winter. We re-surveyed seven large study plots in Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) forests initially surveyed in winter during the late 1960s in the Oregon Coast Range, USA. We compared density estimates, observed species richness and vegetation structure within plots, and inspected aerial photography to describe changes in landscape-level landcover. To assess potential drivers of change, we reviewed historical climate data and explored patterns of abundance associated with forest age. Observed species richness was greater in the modern surveys. Abundances of four of the six most common bird species appeared to be similar to or slightly lower than 50 years ago as the historical point estimates usually fell within or above 95% confidence intervals generated from our analyses. We found no clear associations with changes in bird communities and forest structure, climate, or forest age. The historical data are unique in providing point estimates of abundance for the entire bird community on each study plot. Yet, some uncertainties in accuracy of the historic counting methods could still influence interpretation of multi-decadal changes in apparent abundance. We conclude that this Pacific Northwest bird community was relatively stable in its abundances of the most common forest-dwelling species and that largely the communities are still intact. Additional production of precisely repeatable surveys of winter bird communities are needed in all habitats to adequately characterize long-term population dynamics during the season of scarcity.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Of Whales and Wandering.
- Author
-
HAUSER, ELYSE
- Subjects
WHALES ,DRAGONS - Published
- 2024
37. Polish Pioneer Communities in the Pacific Northwest: A Forgotten Chapter of Polish Diaspora.
- Author
-
Praszałowicz, Dorota
- Subjects
CATHOLICS ,UNITED States history ,SMALL cities ,COAL mining ,POLISH history - Abstract
The article explores four pioneer Polish American communities in Washington State: Pe Ell, Wilkeson, Aberdeen and Enumclaw. These small towns thrived on timber industry (Pe Ell, Aberdeen), coal mining (Wilkeson) and farming (Enumclaw). In each location, Poles established a lodge of the Polish National Alliance, and in three of these communities, they successfully opened a Polish Hall. In addition, they contributed to founding a Roman Catholic church in each town and successfully advocated for a Polish-speaking pastorate. In Pe Ell, they also established and maintain the Holy Cross parish of the schismatic Polish National Catholic Church for many decades (1916-1970). By presenting this information, the article aims to shed light on a lesser-known aspect of Polish diaspora history in the United States. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Host and floral communities shape parasite prevalence and reproduction in intensively managed forests.
- Author
-
Ponisio, Lauren C., Cohen, Hamutahl, Galbraith, Sara M., Zorn, Jocelyn, Zitomer, Rachel A., and Rivers, James W.
- Subjects
POLLINATORS ,BEE colonies ,POLLINATION ,CONIFEROUS forests ,ANIMAL populations ,PARASITES ,FLOWERING of plants ,HONEY plants - Abstract
Understanding how working landscapes can maintain viable wildlife populations is key to evaluating their conservation potential. We assessed the potential of intensively managed conifer forests for supporting healthy, productive bee populations in one of the major timber‐growing regions of the world, the Pacific Northwest. We examined the direct effect of the number of years post‐harvest and other forest characteristics on flowering plant and bee communities and their indirect effect on parasite prevalence (Apicystis spp., Ascosphaera spp., and Crithidia spp.) and reproduction of a native, forest‐dwelling solitary bee (Osmia lignaria). Forest characteristics, including the time elapsed since harvest, influenced floral and bee community diversity and abundance and indirectly impacted parasite prevalence and offspring production. We found that increased bee diversity was associated with reduced parasite prevalence—consistent with a dilution effect—but the strength of the relationship varied across the different parasites. Additionally, bee abundance was more consistently associated with increased parasite prevalence, providing evidence of amplification. Floral abundance was only associated with lower Apicystis spp. prevalence. Across all parasite models, however, the R2 values were <20%, indicating that additional factors shape bee communities beyond those we examined. Offspring production was positively related to floral diversity but not to parasite prevalence. Our results suggest that managing floral diversity is critical to enhancing the value of these landscapes for wild bee communities, both directly through promoting bee diversity and reproduction, and indirectly through facilitating parasite dilution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. MARINE MAMMAL AND MARINE BIRD SURVEYS DURING THE WINDFLOAT PACIFIC OFFSHORE WIND PROJECT NEAR COOS BAY, OREGON, 2014 AND 2015.
- Author
-
Bates, Olivia M, Cranmer, Elise S, Lane, Rebekah, Lomac-MacNair, Kate S, and Smultea, Mari A
- Subjects
- *
MARINE mammals , *WIND power , *SEA birds , *BIRD surveys , *KILLER whale , *HYDROGRAPHIC surveying - Abstract
Information on marine mammals and marine birds in US Pacific Northwest waters is limited but necessary to assess potential impacts from proposed and planned human activity (for example, cable installation, energy and port development) as required by regulatory permitting processes, particularly relative to recent plans for offshore wind development. We conducted daily opportunistic, non-systematic observations of marine mammals and marine birds in autumn 2014 and of marine mammals in summer 2015 to meet mitigation and monitoring requirements associated with a geophysical site characterization survey for a proposed offshore wind floating platform demonstration project off Coos Bay, Oregon. Two biologists completed observations during daylight with the naked eye and reticle binoculars from a 17-m vessel between Coos Bay and the proposed platform site 30 km offshore. In 2014, 1058 h (3244 km) of observation occurred during 3 October through 4 November, with 1182 h (4367 km) observations conducted from 10 July through 28 August 2015. In total, 543 groups (approximately 1389 individuals) representing at least 14 marine mammal species and 7444 groups (approximately 18322 individuals) representing at least 22 marine bird species were observed. Sighting rates (number of individuals observed per 100 km of observation) were higher for nearly every species of marine mammal in summer 2015 than autumn 2014. An extralimital sighting of 25 Bottlenose Dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) and 5 sightings of rare transient Killer Whales (Orcinus orca) were documented. Results address a gap in site-specific marine mammal and marine bird baseline occurrence data and information required to assess effects of proposed offshore wind development and other human-related activities near Coos Bay, Oregon, as well as climate and oceanographic changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Borderlands Dramatism: Pandemic Media Narratives of an American/Canadian Exclave.
- Author
-
Moscato, Derek
- Subjects
- *
BORDERLANDS , *PANDEMICS , *COVID-19 pandemic , *NARRATIVES , *COVID-19 - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic took a significant toll on borderlands communities in the United States and Canada. Point Roberts, Washington, a US exclave that exists geographically apart from the Washington State mainland, was no exception. During the US–Canada border lockdown that limited the movement of residents during the pandemic, media coverage oscillated between narratives of paradise and dystopia. National media outlets focused on the community's low COVID-19 transmission rate but also its isolation and jurisdictional dysfunction. Despite these larger narratives that served national audiences with otherwise fleeting interest, media coverage also reshaped the way communities in the US–Canada borderlands are understood at a more granular level. This dynamic emphasized the agency of civic institutions and individuals during a global crisis. Through the lens of Kenneth Burke's dramatistic pentad, an overview of Point Roberts' media coverage during the pandemic is provided to understand the saga's cross-border and binational implications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Lichens of Cypress Island, Washington – The Seen and the Unseen.
- Author
-
Beck, Kathryn, Glew, Katherine, Hardman, Amanda, Lavdovsky, Natasha, McCune, Bruce, Nelson, Nils, Ponzetti, Jeanne, Rhoades, Fred, Rosentreter, Roger, Stone, Daphne, Theden, Tiffany, Tønsberg, Tor, and Villella, John
- Abstract
A group of Northwest Lichenologists explored the lichen biodiversity on Cypress Island in the San Juan Islands on the Pacific coast north of Seattle, hosted by the Washington Department of Natural Resources. We compiled our observations separately by habitat: (1) uplands with serpentine bedrock, (2) uplands with basalt bedrock, and (3) rocky saltwater shorelines. Combining our results with previous efforts, we report 243 lichen species from Cypress Island. Despite the respectable species list, we were struck by the absence of numerous species that are regionally common. We report those here, but were unable to be convinced by various hypotheses for their absence. They fall in several functional groups, including nitrophiles, cyanolichens, oceanic species, and widespread green algal foliose species. In addition to a traditional species list, we present two artistic expressions of the lichen biota. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Climatic Damage Cause Variations of Agricultural Insurance Loss for the Pacific Northwest Region of the United States.
- Author
-
Seamon, Erich, Gessler, Paul E., Abatzoglou, John T., Mote, Philip W., and Lee, Stephen S.
- Subjects
AGRICULTURAL insurance ,INSURANCE claims ,CROP insurance ,PRINCIPAL components analysis ,CROP losses - Abstract
Agricultural crop insurance is an important component for mitigating farm risk, particularly given the potential for unexpected climatic events. Using a 2.8 million nationwide insurance claim dataset from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), this research study examines spatiotemporal variations of over 31,000 agricultural insurance loss claims across the 24-county region of the inland Pacific Northwest (iPNW) portion of the United States from 2001 to 2022. Wheat is the dominant insurance loss crop for the region, accounting for over USD 2.8 billion in indemnities, with over USD 1.5 billion resulting in claims due to drought (across the 22 year time period). While fruit production generates considerably lesser insurance losses (USD 400 million) as a primary result of freeze, frost, and hail, overall revenue ranks number one for the region, with USD 2 billion in sales, across the same time range. Principal components analysis of crop insurance claims showed distinct spatial and temporal differentiation in wheat and apples insurance losses using the range of damage causes as factor loadings. The first two factor loadings for wheat accounts for approximately 50 percent of total variance for the region, while a separate analysis of apples accounts for over 60 percent of total variance. These distinct orthogonal differences in losses by year and commodity in relationship to damage causes suggest that insurance loss analysis may serve as an effective barometer in gauging climatic influences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Pacific Northwest conifer forest stand carrying capacity under future climate scenarios.
- Author
-
Heiderman, Ryan R. and Kimsey, Mark J.
- Subjects
CONIFEROUS forests ,GENERAL circulation model ,SILVER fir ,FOREST management ,TREE size - Abstract
Maximum stand density index (SDIMAX) represents the carrying capacity of a forest stand based on the relationship between the number of trees and their size. Plot‐level inventory data provided through a collaborative network of federal, state, and private forest management groups were utilized to develop SDIMAX models for important Pacific Northwest conifers of western Washington and Oregon, USA. The influence of site‐specific climatic and environmental variables was explored within an ensemble learning model. Future climate projections based on global circulation models under different representative CO2 concentration pathways (RCP 4.5 and RCP 8.5) and timeframes (2050s and 2080s) were utilized in a space‐for‐time substitution to understand potential shifts in modeled SDIMAX. A majority of the region showed decreases in carrying capacity under future climate conditions. Modeled mean SDIMAX decreased 5.4% and 11.4% for Douglas‐fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco) dominated forests and decreased 6.6% and 8.9% for western hemlock (Tsuga heterophylla (Raf.) Sarg.) and Pacific silver fir (Abies amabilis), dominated forests under the RCP 4.5 in the 2050s and RCP 8.5 in the 2080s, respectively. Projected future conditions often fall outside the range of any contemporary climate profile, resulting in what may be referred to as extramural conditions. Within the study region, 45% and 46% of climate variables included in the final model were extramural for the Douglas‐fir and hemlock models, respectively, under RCP 8.5 in the 2080s. Although extrapolating beyond the range of input data is not appropriate and many unknowns remain regarding future climate projections, these results allow for general interpretations of the direction and magnitude of potential shifts in forest carrying capacity. Recommendations for Resource Managers: These results present forest managers and policy‐makers with the ability to make location‐specific interpretations of potential shifts in forest stand carrying capacity under potential future climate projection scenarios, which show forest communities of the Pacific Northwest may be facing a longer, warmer, droughtier growing season.Across the study region, a majority of the landscape is seeing a downward shift in the modeled maximum carrying capacity under future climate projections.The modeled carrying capacity of mixed species stands appear to be more resilient to projected changes in climate.Planting and thinning to lower densities may provide resilience and capture the projected increases in density‐related mortality.Across all projected future climate scenarios fall into extramural conditions, which are a combination of climatic conditions not currently experienced in the study area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. 6 Specialty Food Purveyors Redefining Culinary Excellence.
- Author
-
COX, ALLEN
- Subjects
LOCAL delivery services - Abstract
The article offers information on food delivery companies that provide culinary excellence, which includes Alaska Seafood, West Coast Wild Foods, and Acme Farms and Kitchen.
- Published
- 2024
45. Nitrogen-fixation in Acer macrophyllum canopy bryophytes in the Pacific Northwest, USA.
- Author
-
Bidwell, Amanda L., Tobin, Patrick C., and DeLuca, Thomas H.
- Subjects
- *
TEMPERATE rain forests , *BRYOPHYTES , *TRACE metals , *MAPLE , *URBAN pollution , *EPIPHYTIC lichens , *URBAN forestry , *URBAN plants - Abstract
Purpose: Old-growth forests in the Pacific Northwest host a variety of epiphytes on their branches and stem. Given the common and often large epiphytic biomass associated with Acer macrophyllum (Pursh) in this region, we evaluated how seasonal weather changes and urbanization (metal and nitrogen deposition), affect canopy epiphytic N2 fixation in the Hoh Rainforest of the Olympic Peninsula and in urban parks and forests in Seattle. Methods: We collected Isothecium stoloniferum (Brid.) samples from both the Hoh Rainforest and Seattle at four periods from April 2016 through January 2017. Moss-associated N2 fixation rates were measured in the laboratory using the acetylene reduction assay and trace metal concentrations in the moss were analyzed using NO3 + H2O2 digestion. Results: We found levels of N2 fixation were highest during the spring sampling period. Elevated levels of heavy metals were observed in I. stoloniferum samples collected in the urban canopies in Seattle where N2 fixation rates were low, suggesting N2 fixation is sensitive to the bioaccumulation of heavy metals. In A. macrophyllum canopies, I. stoloniferum was found to yield 0.1130 g N m−2 yr−1 in canopy branches within the Hoh Rainforest and only 0.0009 g N m−2 yr−1 on branches in Seattle. Conclusions: These results highlight a rarely explored source of biological N2-fixation in temperate rainforests and suggest that epiphytic N2-fixation may contribute bio-available nitrogen in A. macrophyllum stands. N2-fixation in canopy bryophytes was found to be highly sensitive to urban pollution, possibly due to bioaccumulation of heavy metals in bryophyte tissue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. History, survey, conservation and repair of the Royal Naval Magazine of Cole Island, Esquimalt Harbour, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
- Author
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Copsey, Nigel
- Subjects
- *
CANADIAN history , *BUILDING repair , *ISLANDS , *BUSINESS enterprises , *REPAIRING ,BRITISH colonies - Abstract
This paper is a brief summary of the history of the evolution of the magazine in Esquimalt Harbour that served the Royal Navy's Pacific Squadron, based in the same harbour after 1862 and which was intimately entwined with the development of the British colony of Vancouver Island after its foundation by the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) during the 1840s. It also chronicles the conservation, repair and informed restoration of the magazine site over the last ten years, in which latter endeavour the author became periodically involved after 2014, culminating in a five-month stay upon the island, as resident mason-conservator and default caretaker, between July and November 2021. The paper draws upon the author's original 2014 condition survey, and upon a paper 'Lime in Canada' written by the author for the Building Limes Forum Journal in 2020, while incorporating subsequent research and additional material and correcting some of the errors and omissions in both earlier accounts. The project was driven by the deployment of traditional skills and like-for-like materials within the modern western Canadian context, within which such skills and such an approach are scarce, seeking to demonstrate the benefits of these to the built heritage across the province of British Columbia and to encourage their widespread use for the conservation and repair of traditional buildings in the province. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The Influence of Socioeconomic Factors on Human Wildfire Ignitions in the Pacific Northwest, USA.
- Author
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Reilley, Caitlyn, Crandall, Mindy S., Kline, Jeffrey D., Kim, John B., and de Diego, Jaime
- Subjects
- *
WILDFIRE prevention , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *WILDFIRES , *FIRE management , *POPULATION density , *LAND management - Abstract
Historical land and fire management practices coupled with climate change and modern human development pressures are contributing to larger, more frequent, and more severe wildfires across Western U.S. forests. Human ignitions are the predominant cause of wildfire throughout the United States, necessitating wildfire management strategies that consider both the causes of human ignitions and the factors that influence them. Using a dataset of over 104,000 ignitions from 1992 to 2018 for Oregon and Washington (U.S), we examine the major causes of wildfire ignitions and build regression models to evaluate the potential influence of both biophysical and socioeconomic factors on human and natural ignitions across distinct fire regimes west and east of the Cascade Range. Our results corroborate prior findings that socioeconomic factors such as income, employment, population density, and age demographics are significantly correlated with human ignitions. In the Pacific Northwest, we found that the importance of socioeconomic factors on human ignitions differs significantly between the west and east sides of the Cascade Range. We also found that most human ignitions are linked to escaped fires from recreation or debris and open burning activities, highlighting opportunities to tailor wildfire prevention efforts to better control higher risk activities and reduce accidental ignitions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Spatial Patterns and Trends of Summertime Low Cloudiness for the Pacific Northwest, 1996–2017
- Author
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Dye, Alex W, Rastogi, Bharat, Clemesha, Rachel ES, Kim, John B, Samelson, Roger M, Still, Christopher J, and Williams, A Park
- Subjects
low clouds ,Pacific Northwest ,GOES ,Oregon ,Washington ,fog ,GOES ,Oregon ,Pacific Northwest ,Washington ,fog ,low clouds ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Abstract
Summertime low clouds are common in the Pacific Northwest (PNW), but spatiotemporal patterns have not been characterized. We show the first maps of low cloudiness for the western PNW and North Pacific Ocean using a 22-year satellite-derived record of monthly mean low cloudiness frequency for May through September and supplemented by airport cloud base height observations. Domain-wide cloudiness peaks in midsummer and is strongest over the Pacific. Empirical orthogonal function (EOF) analysis identified four distinct PNW spatiotemporal modes: oceanic, terrestrial highlands, coastal, and northern coastal. There is a statistically significant trend over the 22-year record toward reduced low cloudiness in the terrestrial highlands mode, with strongest declines in May and June; however, this decline is not matched in the corresponding airport records. The coastal mode is partly constrained from moving inland by topographic relief and migrates southward in late summer, retaining higher late-season low cloud frequency than the other areas.
- Published
- 2020
49. NATURE'S HEALING POWER.
- Author
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MULDOON, TAMARA
- Subjects
HEALING power of nature ,RESEARCH ,RELAXATION for health ,NATURE - Abstract
The article focuses on the healing power of nature and its various health benefits, highlighting stress reduction, improved mood, and better overall well-being. Topics include scientific research supporting these claims, the practice of "forest bathing," and the availability of natural spaces in the Pacific Northwest for outdoor activities and relaxation.
- Published
- 2023
50. Strong Winds and Widow Makers: Workers, Nature, and Environmental Conflict in Pacific Northwest Timber Country
- Author
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Beda, Steven C., author and Beda, Steven C.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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