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Page 4964, results 124076 - 124100

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Factors affecting waterfowl breeding density and productivity estimates in the Northeast
J. R. Longcore, J.K. Ringelman
1980, Transactions of the Northeast Section of the Wildlife Society, Annual Fish and Wildlife Conference (37) 169-181
During 1977-79, information useful for making breeding pair and brood surveys was obtained while studying black duck (Anas rubripes) habitat selection and productivity in south-central Maine. Surveys should be initiated in relation to sunrise and sunset time. Morning versus evening counts, familiarity with the survey area, wetland dynamics of the...
Consistency in habitat preference of forest bird species
B.R. Noon, D.K. Dawson, D.B. Inkley, C.S. Robbins, S.H. Anderson
1980, Transactions of the North American Wildlife and Natural Resources Conference (45) 226-244
The important management conclusion that follows from our results is that the habitat requirements of most forest bird species, although quite specific for each species, apply generally throughout their breeding ranges. Thus a habitat management program that proves beneficial in one part of the breeding range of a species...
Atlantic brant--human commensalism on eelgrass beds in New Jersey
R.E. Kirby, H.H. Obrecht III
1980, Wildfowl (31) 158-160
Atlantic Brant Branta bernicla hrota in Barnegat Bay, New Jersey, have established a commensal feeding relationship with man. Small flocks feed 3-5 m from clam fishermen on Zostera torn from the sea bottom by the fishing activities. Background material on the availability and digestibility of different brant foods is presented....
Sleeping distance in wild wolf packs
S.T. Knick, L.D. Mech
1980, Behavioral and Neural Biology (28) 507-511
Sleeping distances were observed among members of 13 wild wolf (Canis lupus) packs and 11 pairs in northeastern Minnesota to determine if the distances correlated with pack size and composition. The study utilized aerial radio-tracking and observation during winter. Pack size and number of adults per pack were...
Secondary poisoning of owls by anticoagulant rodenticides
Vivian M. Mendenhall, L.F. Pank
1980, Wildlife Society Bulletin (8) 311-315
Anticoagulants-compounds that prevent clotting of the blood-are extensively used for control of small mammal pests. The potential secondary hazards of 6 anticoagulant rodenticides to birds of prey were examined in this study. Whole rats or mice were killed with each anticoagulant and were fed to 1-3 species of owls. Owls...
Effects of toxaphene and endrin at very low dietary concentrations on discrimination acquisition and reversal in bobwhite quail, Colinus virginianus
J.F. Kreitzer
1980, Environmental Pollution (Series A) (23) 217-230
Adult male bobwhite quail Colinus virginianus were fed toxaphene (chlorinated camphene, 67–69% chlorine) at 10 and 50 ppm or endrin (1,2,3,4,10,10-hexachloro-6,7-epoxy-1,4,4a,5,6,7,8,8a-octahydro-1,4-endo-endo,5,8-dimethanonaphalene) at 0·1 and 1·0 ppm and their performance on non-spatial discrimination reversal tasks was measured. The birds were on dosage for 138 days (beginning at the age of 3 days) prior...
Demography of the Everglade kite: Implications for population management
J.D. Nichols, Gary L. Hensler, P.W. Sykes Jr.
1980, Ecological Modelling (9) 215-232
Simple deterministic and stochastic population modelsi are used to examine the demographic patterns of the Everglade Kite population. These efforts are directed at making inferences about the evolution of the kite life-history pattern, and at providing guidelines for the management of the kite population. The Everglade Kite has...
White-faced ibis populations and pollutants in Texas, 1969-1976
Kirk A. King, D. L. Meeker, D. M. Swineford
1980, Southwestern Naturalist (25) 225-240
Eggshell thickness, levels of pollutant residues, and population status of the white-faced ibis (Plegadis chihi) were monitored in Texas from 1969 through 1976. Texas ibis nesting populations declined by 42%. Reproductive success apparently was limited by DDE-induced shell thinning and by dieldrin-caused mortality. Eggshells averaged 4% to 10% thinner than...
Organochlorine pesticide, PCB, and PBB residues and necropsy data for bald eagles from 29 states - 1975-77
T. Earl Kaiser, William L. Reichel, Louis N. Locke, Eugene Cromartie, Alexander J. Krynitsky, Thair Lamont, Bernard M. Mulhern, Richard M. Prouty, Charles J. Stafford, Douglas M. Swineford
1980, Pesticides Monitoring Journal (13) 145-149
During 1975-77, 168 bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) found moribund or dead in 29 states were analyzed for organochlorine pesticides and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs); 32 specimens from 13 states were analyzed for polybrominated biphenyls (PBBs). PCBs were present in 166 bald eagle carcasses and DDE was found in 165. TDE and...
Toxic effects of endrin and toxaphene on the southern leopard frog Rana sphenocephala
R.J. Hall, D. Swineford
1980, Environmental Pollution (Series A) (23) 53-65
Eggs, larvae and sub-adults of the southern leopard frog Rana sphenocephala were exposed to endrin and toxaphene. Exposure was in water by a continuous-flow technique, following standards that have been used successfully in the study of fish and invertebrates. R. sphenocephala is more sensitive to both pesticides than are higher vertebrates but is slightly...
Intestinal absorption of 5 chromium compounds in young black ducks (Anas rubripes)
W. C. Eastin Jr., S. D. Haseltine, H. C. Murray
1980, Toxicology Letters (6) 193-197
An in vivo intestinal perfusion technique was used to measure the absorption rates of five Cr compounds in black ducks. Cr was absorbed from saline solutions of KCr(SO4)2 and CrO3 at a rate about 1.5 to 2.0 times greater than from solutions of Cr, Cr(NO3)3, and Cr(C5H7O2)3. These results suggest the ionic...
Canine tooth wear in captive little brown bats
Donald R. Clark Jr.
1980, Acta Theriologica (25) 270-273
Upper canine teeth of little brown bats Myotis lucifugus lucifugus held in stainless steel wire mesh cages underwent severe wear which exceeded that observed previously in caged big brown bats, Eptesicus fuscus fuscus. This suggests a relationship between amount of wear and size of the caged bats with damage increasing...
Situation report: Heavy DDT contamination at Wheeler National Wildlife Refuge
W. James Fleming, T.Z. Atkeson
1980, Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the Southeastern Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies (34) 453-461
A DDT manufacturing plant that operated on the Redstone Arsenal near Huntsville, Alabama discharged DDT-Iaden effluent from 1947 to 1970 into a creek on Wheeler National Wildlife Refuge. Seven to 9 years after the plant closed, high DDT, DDE, and DDD levels were reported in soils, river sediments, and fish...
Lead residues in eastern tent caterpillars (Malacosoma americanum) and their host plant (Prunus serotina) close to a major highway
W. N. Beyer, John Moore
1980, Environmental Entomology (9) 10-12
Eastern tent caterpillars, Malacosoma americanum (F.) (Lepidoptera: Lasiocampidae), and leaves of their host plant, black cherry, Prunus serotina Ehrh., were collected in May, 1978, at various distances from the Baltimore-Washington Parkway, Prince George's Co., MD, and were analyzed for lead by atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Caterpillars collected within 10 m of the parkway contained 7.1–7.4...
On getting involved
Richard C. Banks
1980, The Auk (97) 637-638
The American Ornithologists' Union and its members had an early history of involvement in public affairs and conservation activities. A very active Committee on Bird Protection was among the first of the service committees to be established. In the 1880s it gathered data on the plumage trade and worked...
Waterfowl production estimates on forested wetlands from pair and brood counts
R.E. Kirby
1980, Wildlife Society Bulletin (8) 273-278
Waterfowl pair and brood counts and estimates of total brood utilization were obtained from 10 beaver (Castor canadensis) flowages in north-central Minnesota and compared with rank correlation techniques. Summing the data for each species, correlation between pair and brood censuses was significant ( p = 0.8304, P < 0.025). Similarly,...
Organochlorine pollutants in small cetaceans from the Pacific and south Atlantic Oceans, November 1968-June 1976
T. J. O'Shea, R.L. Brownell Jr., D. R. Clark Jr., W.A. Walker, M. L. Gay, T. G. Lamont
1980, Pesticides Monitoring Journal (14) 35-46
Organochlorine residues were analyzed in blubber, brain, or muscle tissues of 69 individuals representing 10 species of small cetaceans. Collections were made from November 1968 through June 1976 at localities in the Eastern Tropical Pacific and along the coasts of California, Hawaii, Japan, and Uruguay, Relations of residue concentrations between...
Influence of a local source of DDT pollution on statewide DDT residues in waterfowl wings, northern Alabama, 1978-79
W. James Fleming, T. J. O'Shea
1980, Pesticides Monitoring Journal (14) 86-89
Heavy DDT contamination resulting from a former DDT manufacturing plant in northern Alabama has influenced statewide averages of DDT, DDE, and TDE residues in duck wings tested in the National Pesticide Monitoring Program. In states where contaminant levels in duck wings are high, residue analyses of wings categorized by finer...