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Page 4437, results 110901 - 110925

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Recent developments in hydrologic instrumentation
Vito J. Latkovich, James C. Futrell II
Douglas L. Kane, editor(s)
1986, American Water Resources Association Technical Publication Series 86-1
The programs of the U.S. Geological Survey require instrumentation for collecting and monitoring hydrologic data in cold regions. The availability of space-age materials and implementation of modern electronics and mechanics is making possible the recent developments of hydrologic instrumentation, especially in the area of measuring streamflow under ice cover. Material...
Relationship between snow depth and gray wolf predation on white-tailed deer
Michael E. Nelson, L. David Mech
1986, Journal of Wildlife Management (50) 471-474
Survival of 203 yearling and adult white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) was monitored for 23,441 deer days from January through April 1975-85 in northeastern Minnesota. Gray wolf (Canis lupus) predation was the primary mortality cause, and from year to year during this period, the mean predation rate ranged from 0.00 to...
Paleomagnetism of Middle Tertiary volcanic rocks from the Western Cascade Series, northern California
Myrl E. Beck Jr., Russell F. Burmester, Douglas E. Craig, C. Sherman Gromme, Ray E. Wells
1986, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (91) 8219-8230
The Western Cascade Series (WCS) is a 3.5‐km‐thick, crudely homoclinal (east dipping) calcalkaline volcanic sequence of mid‐Oligocene to early Miocene age that crops out near the southern tip of the Cascade Range in northern California. The mean direction of remanent magnetization in the WCS is D, 4.9°; I, 57.6° (N,...
Influence of nutrients on feed intake and condition of captive canvasbacks in winter
Matthew C. Perry, Wayne J. Kuenzel, Byron K. Williams, John A. Serafin
1986, Journal of Wildlife Management (50) 427-434
Dramatic changes in the food habits and distribution of canvasbacks (Aythya valisineria) in Chesapeake Bay during the 1970's generated a need to evaluate the nutritional value of food items and the requirements of this species on its wintering grounds. Groups of captive canvasbacks were maintained ad libitum on 5 diets...
Glacial sequence near McCall, Idaho: Weathering rinds, soil development, morphology, and other relative-age criteria
S.M. Colman, Kenneth L. Pierce
1986, Quaternary Research (25) 25-42
The sequence of glacial deposits near McCall, Idaho, previously assigned to the Pinedale and Bull Lake glaciations, contains deposits of four different ages. These ages are defined by multiple relative-age criteria, including weathering rinds, soil development, surface-rock weathering, morainal morphology, and loess stratigraphy. The thickness of weathering rinds on basaltic...
The Munson-Nygren slide: A major lower-slope slide off Georges Bank
Dennis W. O’Leary
1986, Marine Geology (72) 101-114
The Munson-Nygren slide is a large compound slide located between Munson and Nygren Canyons below 1900 m depth on the Continental Slope off Georges Bank. Its structural and morphological features are recognized in high-resolution seismic-reflection profiles. The slide comprises an axial trough which has a relief as great as 325...
Klamath-Blue Mountain lineament, Oregon
Robin P. Riddihough, Carol A. Finn, Richard Couch
1986, Geology (14) 528-531
Regional gravity data clearly show a zone of southwest-northeast lineations across Oregon that defines a major crustal lineament. Its existence is supported by geologic and geophysical data. Its correlation with the northwestern boundaries of the Klamath and Blue Mountain provinces suggests that these are continuous beneath the Cascade volcanic arc....
Shrinkage and growth compensation in common sunflowers: refining estimates of damage
James A. Sedgwick, John L. Oldemeye, Elizabeth L. Swenson
1986, Journal of Wildlife Management (50) 513-520
Shrinkage and growth compensation of artificially damaged common sunflowers (Helianthus annuus) were studied in central North Dakota during 1981-1982 in an effort to increase accuracy of estimates of blackbird damage to sunflowers. In both years, as plants matured damaged areas on seedheads shrank at a greater rate than the...
An inverse method using toroidal mode data
C. Willis
1986, Inverse Problems (2) 111-130
The author presents a numerical method for calculating the density and S-wave velocity in the upper mantle of a spherically symmetric, non-rotating Earth which consists of a perfect elastic, isotropic material. The data comes from the periods of the toroidal oscillations. She tests the method...
Marine cobalt resources
F.T. Manheim
1986, Science (232) 600-608
Ferromanganese oxides in the open oceans are more enriched in cobalt than any other widely distributed sediments or rocks. Concentrations of cobalt exceed 1 percent in ferromanganese crusts on seamounts, ocean ridges, and other raised areas of the ocean. The cobalt-rich crusts may be the slowest growing of any earth...
Habitat use and terrestrial activity by red tree voles (Arborimus longicaudus) in Oregon
Paul Stephen Corn, R. Bruce Bury
1986, Journal of Mammalogy (67) 404-406
Several species of vertebrates may find optimal habitat for breeding, nesting, or foraging in old-growth (>200 years old) confierous forests in the Pacific Northwest. Old-growth forests are economically valuable, however, and most unprotected stands will be cut within 40 years (Franklin et al., 1981). Meslow et al. (1981)...
Biomonitors of stream quality on agricultural areas: fish versus invertebrates
Hilary E. Berkman, Charles F. Rabeni, Terence P. Boyle
1986, Environmental Management (10) 413-419
Although the utility of using either fish or benthic invertebrates as biomonitors of stream quality has been clearly shown, there is little comparative information on the usefulness of the groups in any particular situation. We compared fish to invertebrate assemblages in their ability to reflect habitat quality of sediment-impacted streams...
Infectious pancreatic necrosis virus: Protocol for a standard challenge to brook trout
P. E. McAllister, W. J. Owens
1986, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (115) 466-470
A protocol for experimental challenge with infectious pancreatic necrosis (IPN) virus was defined with brook trout Salvelinus fontinalis as the model species. Fish were exposed by immersion for 5 h in water containing IPN virus at a concentration of 105 plaque‐forming units per milliliter. We propose the protocol as a standard...
An instrument system for monitoring and sampling suspended sediment in the benthic boundary layer
R.W. Sternberg, R.V. Johnson II, D.A. Cacchione, D.E. Drake
1986, Marine Geology (71) 187-199
An instrument system has been constructed that can monitor and sample suspended sediment distributions in the benthic boundary layer. It consists of miniature nephelometers and suspended sediment samplers placed within one meter of the seabed. The system is capable of continuously monitoring suspended sediment profiles at eight levels between 14...
Plasma corticosteroid stress response of fourteen species of warmwater fish to transportation
K. B. Davis, N. C. Parker
1986, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (115) 495-499
Plasma corticosteroid concentrations were measured in 14 species of fish immediately after they were electrofished from reservoirs on the Alabama River and after they had been transported for 2 h. There was no corticosteroid response in spotted gars Lepisosteus oculatus. Bowfins Amia calva, longnose gars Lepisosteus osseus, and freshwater drums...
Does pH affect fish species richness when lake area is considered?
P.J. Rago, J.G. Wiener
1986, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (115) 438-447
Numerous surveys have shown that fish species richness (number of species) is positively correlated with lake pH. However, species richness of fish communities is also correlated with lake size, and low‐pH lakes are often small. Thus, conclusions drawn from examination of fish community structure relative to spatial...
Determination of the components of stormflow using water chemistry and environmental isotopes, Mattole River basin, California
V. C. Kennedy, Cynthia R. Adams, Gary W. Zellweger, Theodore A. Wyerman, R.J. Avanzino
1986, Journal of Hydrology (84) 107-140
The chemical and isotopic composition of rainfall and stream water was monitored during a storm in the Mattole River basin of northwestern California. About 250 mm of rain fell during 6 days (∼80% within a 42 h period) in late January, 1972, following 24 days of little or no precipitation....
Evaluation of coded wire tags for marking lake trout
Joseph H. Elrod, Clifford P. Schneider
1986, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (6) 264-271
Among hatchery-reared lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) of the 1979-1982 year classes stocked in New York waters of Lake Ontario, more than 3 million fish were marked with a coded wire tag (CWT) plus an adipose fin clip, and 1.5 million with only conventional fin clips. Altogether, 7,640 tags were recovered...