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Dive into the research topics where Hilary A. Dugan is active.

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Featured researches published by Hilary A. Dugan.


Nature Communications | 2015

Deep groundwater and potential subsurface habitats beneath an Antarctic dry valley

Jill A. Mikucki; Esben Auken; Slawek Tulaczyk; Ross A. Virginia; Cyril Schamper; Kurt Sørensen; Peter T. Doran; Hilary A. Dugan; Neil Foley

The occurrence of groundwater in Antarctica, particularly in the ice-free regions and along the coastal margins is poorly understood. Here we use an airborne transient electromagnetic (AEM) sensor to produce extensive imagery of resistivity beneath Taylor Valley. Regional-scale zones of low subsurface resistivity were detected that are inconsistent with the high resistivity of glacier ice or dry permafrost in this region. We interpret these results as an indication that liquid, with sufficiently high solute content, exists at temperatures well below freezing and considered within the range suitable for microbial life. These inferred brines are widespread within permafrost and extend below glaciers and lakes. One system emanates from below Taylor Glacier into Lake Bonney and a second system connects the ocean with the eastern 18 km of the valley. A connection between these two basins was not detected to the depth limitation of the AEM survey (∼350 m).


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Salting our freshwater lakes

Hilary A. Dugan; Sarah L. Bartlett; Samantha M. Burke; Jonathan P. Doubek; Flora E. Krivak-Tetley; Nicholas K. Skaff; Jamie C. Summers; Kaitlin J. Farrell; Ian M. McCullough; Ana M. Morales-Williams; Derek Roberts; Zutao Ouyang; Facundo Scordo; Paul C. Hanson; Kathleen C. Weathers

Significance In lakes, chloride is a relatively benign ion at low concentrations but begins to have ecological impacts as concentrations rise into the 100s and 1,000s of mg L−1. In this study, we investigate long-term chloride trends in 371 freshwater lakes in North America. We find that in Midwest and Northeast North America, most urban lakes and rural lakes that are surrounded by >1% impervious land cover show increasing chloride trends. Expanding on this finding, thousands of lakes in these regions are at risk of long-term salinization. Keeping lakes “fresh” is critically important for protecting the ecosystem services freshwater lakes provide, such as drinking water, fisheries, recreation, irrigation, and aquatic habitat. The highest densities of lakes on Earth are in north temperate ecosystems, where increasing urbanization and associated chloride runoff can salinize freshwaters and threaten lake water quality and the many ecosystem services lakes provide. However, the extent to which lake salinity may be changing at broad spatial scales remains unknown, leading us to first identify spatial patterns and then investigate the drivers of these patterns. Significant decadal trends in lake salinization were identified using a dataset of long-term chloride concentrations from 371 North American lakes. Landscape and climate metrics calculated for each site demonstrated that impervious land cover was a strong predictor of chloride trends in Northeast and Midwest North American lakes. As little as 1% impervious land cover surrounding a lake increased the likelihood of long-term salinization. Considering that 27% of large lakes in the United States have >1% impervious land cover around their perimeters, the potential for steady and long-term salinization of these aquatic systems is high. This study predicts that many lakes will exceed the aquatic life threshold criterion for chronic chloride exposure (230 mg L−1), stipulated by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), in the next 50 y if current trends continue.


Ecological Applications | 2015

The importance of lake-specific characteristics for water quality across the continental United States.

Emily K. Read; Vijay P. Patil; Samantha K. Oliver; Amy L. Hetherington; Jennifer A. Brentrup; Jacob A. Zwart; Kirsten M. Winters; Jessica R. Corman; Emily R. Nodine; R. Iestyn Woolway; Hilary A. Dugan; Aline Jaimes; Arianto B. Santoso; Grace S. Hong; Luke A. Winslow; Paul C. Hanson; Kathleen C. Weathers

Lake water quality is affected by local and regional drivers, including lake physical characteristics, hydrology, landscape position, land cover, land use, geology, and climate. Here, we demonstrate the utility of hypothesis testing within the landscape limnology framework using a random forest algorithm on a national-scale, spatially explicit data set, the United States Environmental Protection Agencys 2007 National Lakes Assessment. For 1026 lakes, we tested the relative importance of water quality drivers across spatial scales, the importance of hydrologic connectivity in mediating water quality drivers, and how the importance of both spatial scale and connectivity differ across response variables for five important in-lake water quality metrics (total phosphorus, total nitrogen, dissolved organic carbon, turbidity, and conductivity). By modeling the effect of water quality predictors at different spatial scales, we found that lake-specific characteristics (e.g., depth, sediment area-to-volume ratio) were important for explaining water quality (54-60% variance explained), and that regionalization schemes were much less effective than lake specific metrics (28-39% variance explained). Basin-scale land use and land cover explained between 45-62% of variance, and forest cover and agricultural land uses were among the most important basin-scale predictors. Water quality drivers did not operate independently; in some cases, hydrologic connectivity (the presence of upstream surface water features) mediated the effect of regional-scale drivers. For example, for water quality in lakes with upstream lakes, regional classification schemes were much less effective predictors than lake-specific variables, in contrast to lakes with no upstream lakes or with no surface inflows. At the scale of the continental United States, conductivity was explained by drivers operating at larger spatial scales than for other water quality responses. The current regulatory practice of using regionalization schemes to guide water quality criteria could be improved by consideration of lake-specific characteristics, which were the most important predictors of water quality at the scale of the continental United States. The spatial extent and high quality of contextual data available for this analysis makes this work an unprecedented application of landscape limnology theory to water quality data. Further, the demonstrated importance of lake morphology over other controls on water quality is relevant to both aquatic scientists and managers.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Subsurface imaging reveals a confined aquifer beneath an ice‐sealed Antarctic lake

Hilary A. Dugan; Peter T. Doran; Slawek Tulaczyk; J. A. Mikucki; S. A. Arcone; Esben Auken; Cyril Schamper; Ross A. Virginia

Liquid water oases are rare under extreme cold desert conditions found in the Antarctic McMurdo Dry Valleys. Here we report geophysical results that indicate that Lake Vida, one of the largest lakes in the region, is nearly frozen and underlain by widespread cryoconcentrated brine. A ground penetrating radar survey profiled 20 m into lake ice and facilitated bathymetric mapping of the upper lake basin. An airborne transient electromagnetic survey revealed a low-resistivity zone 30–100 m beneath the lake surface. Based on previous knowledge of brine chemistry and local geology, we interpret this zone to be a confined aquifer situated in sediments with a porosity of 23–42%. Discovery of this aquifer suggests that subsurface liquid water may be more pervasive in regions of continuous permafrost than previously thought and may represent an extensive habitat for microbial populations.


Water Resources Research | 2017

Water quality data for national‐scale aquatic research: The Water Quality Portal

Emily K. Read; Lindsay Carr; Laura A. De Cicco; Hilary A. Dugan; Paul C. Hanson; Julia A. Hart; James Kreft; Jordan S. Read; Luke A. Winslow

Aquatic systems are critical to food, security, and society. But, water data are collected by hundreds of research groups and organizations, many of which use nonstandard or inconsistent data descriptions and dissemination, and disparities across different types of water observation systems represent a major challenge for freshwater research. To address this issue, the Water Quality Portal (WQP) was developed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Geological Survey, and the National Water Quality Monitoring Council to be a single point of access for water quality data dating back more than a century. The WQP is the largest standardized water quality data set available at the time of this writing, with more than 290 million records from more than 2.7 million sites in groundwater, inland, and coastal waters. The number of data contributors, data consumers, and third-party application developers making use of the WQP is growing rapidly. Here we introduce the WQP, including an overview of data, the standardized data model, and data access and services; and we describe challenges and opportunities associated with using WQP data. We also demonstrate through an example the value of the WQP data by characterizing seasonal variation in lake water clarity for regions of the continental U.S. The code used to access, download, analyze, and display these WQP data as shown in the figures is included as supporting information.


Marine Technology Society Journal | 2014

Autonomous year-round sampling and sensing to explore the physical and biological habitability of permanently ice-covered antarctic lakes

Luke A. Winslow; Hilary A. Dugan; Heather N. Buelow; Kyle D. Cronin; John C. Priscu; Cristina Takacs-Vesbach; Peter T. Doran

The lakes of the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica, are some of the only systems on this planet that are perennially ice-covered and support year-round metabolism. As such, these ecosystems can provide important information on conditions and life in polar regions on Earth and on other icy worlds in the solar system. Working in these extreme environments of the Dry Valleys poses many challenges, particularly with respect to data collection during dark winter months when logistical constraints make fieldwork difficult. In this paper, the authors describe the motivation, design, and challenges for this recently deployed instrumentation in Lake Bonney, a lake that has been the subject of summer research efforts for more than 40 years. The instrumentation deployed includes autonomous water, phytoplankton, and sediment samplers as well as cable-mounted profiling platforms with dissolved gas and fluorometry sensors. Data obtained from these instruments will allow us, for the first time, to define the habitability of this environment during the polar night. The authors include lessons learned during deployment and recommendations for effective instrument operation in these extreme conditions.


european semantic web conference | 2015

Supporting Open Collaboration in Science Through Explicit and Linked Semantic Description of Processes

Yolanda Gil; Felix Michel; Varun Ratnakar; Jordan S. Read; Matheus Hauder; Christopher J. Duffy; Paul C. Hanson; Hilary A. Dugan

The Web was originally developed to support collaboration in science. Although scientists benefit from many forms of collaboration on the Web e.g., blogs, wikis, forums, code sharing, etc., most collaborative projects are coordinated over email, phone calls, and in-person meetings. Our goal is to develop a collaborative infrastructure for scientists to work on complex science questions that require multi-disciplinary contributions to gather and analyze data, that cannot occur without significant coordination to synthesize findings, and that grow organically to accommodate new contributors as needed as the work evolves over time. Our approach is to develop an organic data science framework based on a task-centered organization of the collaboration, includes principles from social sciences for successful on-line communities, and exposes an open science process. Our approach is implemented as an extension of a semantic wiki platform, and captures formal representations of task decomposition structures, relations between tasks and users, and other properties of tasks, data, and other relevant science objects. All these entities are captured through the semantic wiki user interface, represented as semantic web objects, and exported as linked data.


Scientific Data | 2017

Long-term chloride concentrations in North American and European freshwater lakes

Hilary A. Dugan; Jamie C. Summers; Nicholas K. Skaff; Flora E. Krivak-Tetley; Jonathan P. Doubek; Samantha M. Burke; Sarah L. Bartlett; Lauri Arvola; Hamdi Jarjanazi; János Korponai; Andreas Kleeberg; Ghislaine Monet; Dt Monteith; Karen Moore; Michela Rogora; Paul C. Hanson; Kathleen C. Weathers

Anthropogenic sources of chloride in a lake catchment, including road salt, fertilizer, and wastewater, can elevate the chloride concentration in freshwater lakes above background levels. Rising chloride concentrations can impact lake ecology and ecosystem services such as fisheries and the use of lakes as drinking water sources. To analyze the spatial extent and magnitude of increasing chloride concentrations in freshwater lakes, we amassed a database of 529 lakes in Europe and North America that had greater than or equal to ten years of chloride data. For each lake, we calculated climate statistics of mean annual total precipitation and mean monthly air temperatures from gridded global datasets. We also quantified land cover metrics, including road density and impervious surface, in buffer zones of 100 to 1,500 m surrounding the perimeter of each lake. This database represents the largest global collection of lake chloride data. We hope that long-term water quality measurements in areas outside Europe and North America can be added to the database as they become available in the future.


international conference on e-science | 2015

A Task-Centered Framework for Computationally-Grounded Science Collaborations

Yolanda Gil; Felix Michel; Varun Ratnakar; Matheus Hauder; Christopher J. Duffy; Hilary A. Dugan; Paul C. Hanson

Collaboration is ubiquitous in todays science, yet there is limited support for coordinating scientific work. The general-purpose tools that are typically used (e.g., email, shared document editing, social coding sites), have still not replaced in-person meetings, phone calls, and extensive emails needed to coordinate and track collaborative activities. Scientists with diverse knowledge and skills around the globe could collaborate by opening scientific processes that expose all tasks and activities publicly to achieve a shared scientific question. This paper describes the Organic Data Science framework to support scientific collaborations that revolve around complex science questions that require significant coordination, entice contributors to remain engaged for extended periods of time, and enable continuous growth to accommodate new contributors as the work evolves over time. We discuss how the design of this framework incorporates principles followed by successful on-line communities. We present initial results to date of several communities that are collaborating using this framework.


The Science of Nature: Naturwissenschaften | 2018

A lake classification concept for a more accurate global estimate of the dissolved inorganic carbon export from terrestrial ecosystems to inland waters

Fabian Engel; Kaitlin J. Farrell; Ian M. McCullough; Facundo Scordo; Blaize A. Denfeld; Hilary A. Dugan; Elvira de Eyto; Paul C. Hanson; Ryan P. McClure; Peeter Nõges; Tiina Nõges; Elizabeth Ryder; Kathleen C. Weathers; Gesa A. Weyhenmeyer

The magnitude of lateral dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) export from terrestrial ecosystems to inland waters strongly influences the estimate of the global terrestrial carbon dioxide (CO2) sink. At present, no reliable number of this export is available, and the few studies estimating the lateral DIC export assume that all lakes on Earth function similarly. However, lakes can function along a continuum from passive carbon transporters (passive open channels) to highly active carbon transformers with efficient in-lake CO2 production and loss. We developed and applied a conceptual model to demonstrate how the assumed function of lakes in carbon cycling can affect calculations of the global lateral DIC export from terrestrial ecosystems to inland waters. Using global data on in-lake CO2 production by mineralization as well as CO2 loss by emission, primary production, and carbonate precipitation in lakes, we estimated that the global lateral DIC export can lie within the range of 0.70−0.31+0.27

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Paul C. Hanson

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Peter T. Doran

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Jordan S. Read

United States Geological Survey

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Luke A. Winslow

United States Geological Survey

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Christopher J. Duffy

Pennsylvania State University

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Emily K. Read

United States Geological Survey

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