David J. Weary
United States Geological Survey
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Featured researches published by David J. Weary.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Mary C. Christman; Daniel H. Doctor; Matthew L. Niemiller; David J. Weary; John A. Young; Kirk S. Zigler; David C. Culver
One of the most challenging fauna to study in situ is the obligate cave fauna because of the difficulty of sampling. Cave-limited species display patchy and restricted distributions, but it is often unclear whether the observed distribution is a sampling artifact or a true restriction in range. Further, the drivers of the distribution could be local environmental conditions, such as cave humidity, or they could be associated with surface features that are surrogates for cave conditions. If surface features can be used to predict the distribution of important cave taxa, then conservation management is more easily obtained. We examined the hypothesis that the presence of major faunal groups of cave obligate species could be predicted based on features of the earth surface. Georeferenced records of cave obligate amphipods, crayfish, fish, isopods, beetles, millipedes, pseudoscorpions, spiders, and springtails within the area of Appalachian Landscape Conservation Cooperative in the eastern United States (Illinois to Virginia and New York to Alabama) were assigned to 20 x 20 km grid cells. Habitat suitability for these faunal groups was modeled using logistic regression with twenty predictor variables within each grid cell, such as percent karst, soil features, temperature, precipitation, and elevation. Models successfully predicted the presence of a group greater than 65% of the time (mean = 88%) for the presence of single grid cell endemics, and for all faunal groups except pseudoscorpions. The most common predictor variables were latitude, percent karst, and the standard deviation of the Topographic Position Index (TPI), a measure of landscape rugosity within each grid cell. The overall success of these models points to a number of important connections between the surface and cave environments, and some of these, especially soil features and topographic variability, suggest new research directions. These models should prove to be useful tools in predicting the presence of species in understudied areas.
Data Series | 2016
David J. Weary; Randall C. Orndorff; Richard W. Harrison; Robert E. Weems
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Open-File Report | 2014
David J. Weary; Daniel H. Doctor
11th Multidisciplinary Conference on Sinkholes and the Engineering and Environmental Impacts of Karst | 2008
Daniel H. Doctor; David J. Weary; Randall C. Orndorff; George E. Harlow; Mark D. Kozar; David L. Nelms
Scientific Investigations Report | 2005
George E. Harlow; Randall C. Orndorff; David L. Nelms; David J. Weary; Roger M. Moberg
Field Guides | 2010
Gary R. Lowell; Richard W. Harrison; David J. Weary; Randall C. Orndorff; John E. Repetski; Herbert A. Pierce
Scientific Investigations Map | 2008
David J. Weary
Open-File Report | 2008
Mark D. Kozar; Kurt J. McCoy; David J. Weary; Malcolm S. Field; Herbert A. Pierce; William Bane Schill; John A. Young
Special Paper of the Geological Society of America | 2006
Randall C. Orndorff; David J. Weary; Richard W. Harrison
Scientific Investigations Map | 2006
David J. Weary; Robert C. McDowell