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Page 4161, results 104001 - 104025

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
New species of Apoloniinae (Acari: Trombiculidae) from the Laysan albatross taken in the Midway Islands and key to the species of Apoloniinae of the world
M.L. Goff, P.R. Sievert, L. Sileo
1989, Journal of Medical Entomology (26) 484-486
Womersia midwayensis Goff, Sievert and Sileo is described as a new species from specimens taken off a Laysan albatross chick, Diomedea immutabilis (L.), collected on Sand Island, Midway Islands. A key to the genera and species of larval Apoloniinae of the world is given....
Movements of striped mullet, Mugil cephalus, tagged in Everglades National Park, Florida
N.A. Funicelli, D.A. Meineke, H.E. Bryant, M. R. Dewey, G.M. Ludwig, L.S. Mengel
1989, Bulletin of Marine Science (44) 171-178
The movements of striped mullet, Mugil cephalus, were studied from fish tagged in Everglades National Park. Florida. A total of 16,604 fish were tagged from March 1984 to September 1985. During the period December 1984 through February 1985 recaptured tagged fish moved significantly further and more northerly out of the...
The ecology of extinctions in kelp forest communities
J. A. Estes, D. O. Duggins, G. B. Rathbun
1989, Conservation Biology (3) 252-264
We recognize three levels of extinction–global, local, and ecological – and provide examples of each. The protection and recovery of sea otters (Enhydra lutris) has provided abundant evidence of the consequences of their local extinction from kelp forest communities in the North Pacifc Ocean. These consequences include release of benthic...
Presumed drowning of Aleutian Canada geese on the Pacific coast of California and Oregon
Paul F. Springer, Roy W. Lowe, Richard K. Stroud, Patricia A. Gullett
1989, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (25) 276-279
Carcasses of 42 and 17 Aleutian Canada geese (Branta canadensis leucopareia), a federally listed endangered species, were found on ocean beaches near Crescent City, California, and near Pacific City, Oregon, respectively, following severe storms. Necropsies and other information suggest that the birds were flushed during the storms and somehow entered...
Winter raptor use of the Platte and North Platte River Valleys in south central Nebraska
G.R. Lingle
1989, Prairie Naturalist (21) 1-16
Winter distribution and abundance of raptors were monitored within the Platte and North Platte river valleys. Data were collected along 265 km of census routes along the Platte and North Platte rivers during the winters of 1978-1979 and 1979-1980. Observations recorded during the second winter involved less observation time and...
Contaminants in foods of aquatic birds at Kesterson Reservoir, California, 1985
R. L. Hothem, H. M. Ohlendorf
1989, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (18) 773-786
Plants, aquatic insects, and mosquitofish (Gambusia affinis) were collected from Kesterson Reservoir, Merced County, California, and a nearby reference site (Volta Wildlife Area) to compare concentrations of three contaminants found in 1985 with those reported in 1983 and 1984. Mean selenium concentrations in food-chain organisms from sites at Kesterson in...
Movements, home range, and territories of male sea otters off central California
Ronald J. Jameson
1989, Marine Mammal Science (5) 159-172
Sixty male sea otters (Enhydra lutris) were tagged on the rear flippers with colored tags. Of these, 46 (77%) were resighted. Movements of 127 km were documented for adults and 187 km for subadults. Adults maintained breeding territories that averaged 40.3 ha (n= 10, SE = 4.0). They returned to...
Distribution, habitat, and future of Harter's water snake, Nerodia harteri, in Texas
N.J. Scott Jr., T.C. Maxwell, O.W. Thornton Jr., L.A. Fitzgerald, J.W. Flury
1989, Journal of Herpetology (23) 373-389
Detailed studies of the distribution and habitat use of the endemic Texas snake Nerodia harteri were conducted from 1979 to 1987. The Brazos water snake N. h. harteri is restricted to the upper Brazos River drainage; it is found in about 303 km of stream plus two reservoirs, Possum Kingdom...
Estimating carcass fat and protein in northern pintails during the nonbreeding season
Michael R. Miller
1989, Journal of Wildlife Management (53) 123-129
I used northern pintails (Anas acuta) collected from August through March 1979-82 in the Sacramento Valley, California to derive equations to predict ether-extracted carcass fat, carcass protein, and skeletal lean dry weight. Ether-extracted carcass fat was best predicted by total fat depot weight (wet skin, abdominal fat, and intestinal fat)...
Field test of a bioassay procedure for assessing habitat quality on fish spawning grounds
Bruce A. Manny, David J. Jude, Randy L. Eshenroder
1989, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (118) 175-182
A bioassay procedure to assess habitat quality was tested on Port Austin reef in southern Lake Huron, a spawning area of lake trout Salvelinus namaycush. In 1986, Plexiglas incubators filled with fertilized lake trout eggs were buried by scuba divers in rock rubble at two sites. The incubators then were attached...
ROV dives under Great Lakes ice
S. J. Bolsenga, John E. Gannon, Gregory Kennedy, D. C. North, Charles E. Herdendorf
1989, Cold Regions Science and Technology (16) 89-93
Observations of the underside of ice have a wide variety of applications. Severe under-ice roughness can affect ice movements, rough under-ice surfaces can scour the bottom disturbing biota and man-made structures such as pipelines, and the flow rate of rivers is often affected by under-ice roughness. A few...
Behavioural interaction between fish predators and their prey: effects of plant density
Jacqueline F. Savino, Roy A. Stein
1989, Animal Behaviour (37) 311-321
Prey-specific anti-predatory behaviour under different degrees of structural complexity determines foraging success of predators. The behaviour of piscivorous fish (largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides and northern pike, Esox lucius) and their prey (bluegills, Lepomis macrochirus, and fathead minnows, Pimephales promelas) were quantified in 60-min experiments in laboratory pools (2 multiplied by...
Effect of rearing density on poststocking survival of lake trout in Lake Ontario
Joseph H. Elrod, David E. Ostergaard, Clifford P. Schneider
1989, Progressive Fish-Culturist (51) 189-193
Six paired lots of yearling lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) reared at densities of 41,000 and 51,000 fish per raceway during their last 9 months in the hatchery were stocked in Lake Ontario. Poststocking survival of the high-density (HD) and low-density (LD) fish was not different for the 1982 year-class. However,...
Distribution of alewives in southeastern Lake Ontario in autumn and winter: a clue to winter mortalities
Roger A. Bergstedt, Robert O’Gorman
1989, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (118) 687-692
Alewives Alosa pseudoharengus in the Great Lakes are thought to avoid extreme cold in winter by moving to deep water where the temperature is usually highest because of inverse thermal stratification. Information collected in Lake Ontario during autumn and winter 1981–1984 with an echo sounder and bottom and midwater trawls indicated that...
Development of a benthic invertebrate objective for mesotrophic Great Lakes waters
Trefor B. Reynoldson, Donald W. Schloesser, Bruce A. Manny
1989, Journal of Great Lakes Research (15) 669-686
A biological indicator of mesotrophic conditions should (1) provide an appropriate and interpretable objective; (2) be achievable if corrective measures are taken (i.e., it should be within the expected environmental range of the system); and (3) allow measurement of progress toward the objective. Historical data from the Great Lakes suggest...
Side-scan sonar mapping of lake trout spawning habitat in northern Lake Michigan
Thomas A. Edsall, Thomas P. Poe, Robert T. Nester, Charles L. Brown
1989, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (9) 269-279
Native stocks of lake trout Salvelinus namaycush were virtually or completely extirpated from the lower four Great Lakes by the early 1960s. The failure of early attempts to reestablish self-sustaining populations of lake trout was attributed partly to the practice of stocking hatcheryreared juveniles at locations and over substrates that had...
Submersed macrophyte communities before and after an episodic ice jam in the St. Clair and Detroit rivers
S. Jerrine Nichols, Donald W. Schloesser, Patrick L. Hudson
1989, Canadian Journal of Botany (67) 2364-2370
We conducted surveys in 1983 and 1984 of submersed macrophyte communities off six islands in the St. Clair and Detroit rivers using low altitude aerial photography and ground-truth collections. Sample collections in 1984 followed one of the coldest winters on record, during which ice up to 4 m thick developed...
Food of forage fishes in western Lake Erie, 1975-76
Kenneth M. Muth, Wolf-Dieter N. Busch
1989, Journal of Great Lakes Research (15) 217-222
In western Lake Erie in the summer and fall of 1975–1976, food eaten by seven forage fishes—emerald shiner (Notropis atherinoides), spottail shiner (Notropis hudsonius), trout-perch (Percopsis omiscomaycus), andyoung-of-the-year (YOY) of alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus), gizzard shad (Dorosoma cepedianum), white bass (Morone chrysops), and freshwater drum (Aplodi-notus grunniens)—was divided among six major...