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Page 1090, results 27226 - 27250

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Adjusting multistate capture-recapture models for misclassification bias: manatee breeding proportions
W. L. Kendall, J.E. Hines, J.D. Nichols
2003, Ecology (84) 1058-1066
Matrix population models are important tools for research and management of populations. Estimating the parameters of these models is an important step in applying them to real populations. Multistate capture-recapture methods have provided a useful means for estimating survival and parameters of transition between locations or life history...
Factors affecting breeding dispersal of European ducks on Engure Marsh, Latvia
Peter Blums, J.D. Nichols, M. S. Lindberg, J.E. Hines, Aivars Mednis
2003, Journal of Animal Ecology (72) 292-307
1. We used up to 35 years of capture-recapture data from nearly 3300 individual female ducks nesting on Engure Marsh, Latvia, and multistate modelling to test predictions about the influence of environmental, habitat and management factors on breeding dispersal probability within the marsh. 2. Analyses based on observed dispersal distances of common pochards and tufted ducks provided no evidence that breeding success in year t influenced dispersal distance between...
Effects of life-state on detectability in a demographic study of the terrestrial orchid Cleistes bifaria
M. Kery, K.B. Gregg
2003, Journal of Ecology (91) 265-273
1. Most plant demographic studies follow marked individuals in permanent plots. Plots tend to be small, so detectability is assumed to be one for every individual. However, detectability could be affected by factors such as plant traits, time, space, observer, previous detection, biotic interactions, and especially by life-state. 2. We used a double-observer survey and closed population capture-recapture modelling to estimate state-specific detectability of...
Normality of raw data in general linear models: The most widespread myth in statistics
Marc Kery, Jeff S. Hatfield
2003, Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America ( 84) 92-94
In years of statistical consulting for ecologists and wildlife biologists, by far the most common misconception we have come across has been the one about normality in general linear models. These comprise a very large part of the statistical models used in ecology and include t tests, simple and...
Differences in distribution of modified basins and ducks relative to roadside transects
Jane E. Austin, Glenn R. Guntenspergen, H. Thomas Sklebar, T.K. Buhl
2003, Wetlands (23) 140-148
Wetland basins in the Prairie Pothole Region of the U.S. are commonly modified by excavation (e.g., roadside ditches, stock dugouts), partial drainage (ditching), and diking. Differences in the distribution of modified wetlands may affect the predictive accuracy of waterfowl survey data if such wetlands are not distributed randomly...
Experimental lead poisoning in Turkey Vultures, Cathartes aura
J. W. Carpenter, O. H. Pattee, S. H. Fritts, Barnett A. Rattner, Stanley N. Wiemeyer, J. Andrew Royle, M. R. Smith
2003, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (39) 96-104
Lead-induced mortality appears to have been a major factor in the decline of the California condor (Gymnogyps californianus). We orally dosed turkey vultures (Cathartes aura) with BB-sized lead shot from January 1988 through July 1988 to determine physiologic response (delta-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase inhibition, erythrocyte protoporphyrin levels, anemia), diagnostic tissue lead...
Effects of pulsed, high-velocity water flow on larval robust redhorse and V-lip redhorse
R.S. Weyers, Cecil A. Jennings, Mary C. Freeman
2003, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (132) 84-91
The pulsed, high-velocity water flow characteristic of water-flow patterns downstream from hydropower-generating dams has been implicated in the declining abundance of both aquatic insects and fishes in dam-regulated rivers. This study examined the effects of 0, 4, and 12 h per day of pulsed, high-velocity water flow on the egg...
Concentrations of metals in feathers and blood of nestling Black-Crowned Night-Herons (Nycticorax nycticorax) in Chesapeake and Delaware Bays
N. H. Golden, Barnett A. Rattner, P. C. McGowan, K.C. Parsons, M. A. Ottinger
2003, Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (70) 385-393
Over the past decade, destruction and degradation of wetland habitat has contributed to the decline of wading bird colonies on the Atlantic Coast. In 1998, an initial assessment of the possible contribution of metal pollution to declining heron populations in Chesapeake and Delaware Bays was conducted. Study sites...
Estimating abundance from repeated presence-absence data or point counts
J. Andrew Royle, J.D. Nichols
2003, Ecology (84) 777-790
We describe an approach for estimating occupancy rate or the proportion of area occupied when heterogeneity in detection probability exists as a result of variation in abundance of the organism under study. The key feature of such problems, which we exploit, is that variation in abundance induces variation in...
Survival and recovery rates of American woodcock banded in Michigan
David G. Krementz, James E. Hines, David R. Luukkonen
2003, Journal of Wildlife Management (67) 398-407
American woodcock (Scolopax minor) population indices have declined since U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) monitoring began in 1968. Management to stop and/or reverse this population trend has been hampered by the lack of recent information on woodcock population parameters. Without recent information on survival rate trends, managers have had...
Environmental factors affecting contaminant toxicity in aquatic and terrestrial vertebrates
Barnett A. Rattner, Alan G. Heath
David J. Hoffman, Barnett A. Rattner, G. Allen Burton Jr., John Cairns Jr., editor(s)
2003, Book chapter, Handbook of ecotoxicology, second edition
Physical and natural factors have long been known to influence the toxicity of environmental contaminants to vertebrates. The majority of data that address this topic have been derived from studies on fish, highly inbred laboratory rodents, and man.' The degree to which these factors modify toxicity has principally been elucidated...
Population modeling
John R. Sauer, Grey W. Pendleton
David J. Hoffman, Barnett A. Rattner, G. Allen Burton Jr., John Cairns Jr., editor(s)
2003, Book chapter, Handbook of ecotoxicology, second edition
No abstract available....
Ecosystem-level consequences of migratory faunal depletion caused by dams
Mary C. Freeman, C. M. Pringle, E.A. Greathouse, B. J. Freeman
K.E. Limburg, J.R. Waldman, editor(s)
2003, Book chapter, Biodiversity, Status and Conservation of the World?s Shads
Humans have been damming rivers for millennia, and our more ambitious efforts over the past century have arguably altered river ecosystems more extensively than any other anthropogenic activity. Effects of damming on river biota include decimation of migratory fauna (e.g., diadromous and potamodromous fishes and crustaceans), lost fisheries, and...
A critical look at national monitoring programs for birds and other wildlife species
J.R. Sauer
T. J. O'Shea, M.A. Bogon, editor(s)
2003, Book chapter, Monitoring trends in bat populations of the United States and Territories: Problems and Prospects
Concerns?about declines in numerous taxa have created agreat deal of interest in survey development. Because birds have traditionally been monitored by a variety of methods, bird surveys form natural models for development of surveys for other taxa. Here I suggest that most bird surveys are not appropriate models...
Handbook of ecotoxicology, second edition
David J. Hoffman, Barnett A. Rattner, G. Allen Burton Jr., John Cairns Jr., editor(s)
2003, Book
Handbook of Ecotoxicology, Second Edition focuses on toxic substances and how they affect ecosystems worldwide. It presents methods for quantifying and measuring ecotoxicological effects in the field and in the lab, as well as methods for estimating, predicting, and modeling in ecotoxicology studies. Completely revised and updated with 18 new...
The IASPEI Seismological Software Library
W.H.K. Lee
2003, International Geophysics (81) 1605-1607
Since computers became widely available in the early 1960s, seismologists have been using them for data acquisition, processing, and analysis, as well as theoretical computation and modeling. For example, the book by Doornbos (1988) contains a collection of seismological algorithms with the corresponding computer programs available on tape or disk from...
Coupling ice-sheet and climate models for simulation of former ice sheets
Shawn J. Marshall, David Pollard, Steven W. Hostetler, Peter U. Clark
2003, Developments in Quaternary Sciences (1) 105-126
This chapter explores the development of coupled climate and ice-sheet models over the past two decades, discusses the current technical and physical capabilities of models, and identifies future work for developing a better understanding of ice-climate events that have punctuated Earth history. The chapter also illustrates the complex behavior of...
Processing large remote sensing image data sets on Beowulf clusters
Daniel R. Steinwand, Brian Maddox, Tim Beckmann, Gail Schmidt
2003, Open-File Report 2003-216
High-performance computing is often concerned with the speed at which floating- point calculations can be performed. The architectures of many parallel computers and/or their network topologies are based on these investigations. Often, benchmarks resulting from these investigations are compiled with little regard to how a large dataset would move about...
Extending Beowulf Clusters
Daniel R. Steinwand, Brian Maddox, Tim Beckmann, George Hamer
2003, Open-File Report 2003-208
Beowulf clusters can provide a cost-effective way to compute numerical models and process large amounts of remote sensing image data. Usually a Beowulf cluster is designed to accomplish a specific set of processing goals, and processing is very efficient when the problem remains inside the constraints of the original design....
Cx-02 Program, workshop on modeling complex systems
Victor G. Mossotti, Jo Ann Barragan, Todd D. Westergard
2003, Open-File Report 2003-364
This publication contains the abstracts and program for the workshop on complex systems that was held on November 19-21, 2002, in Reno, Nevada. Complex systems are ubiquitous within the realm of the earth sciences. Geological systems consist of a multiplicity of linked components with nested feedback loops; the dynamics of these...