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Page 1103, results 27551 - 27575

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A model for the interaction of frog population dynamics with Batrachochytrium dendrobaties, Janthinobacterium lividium and temperature and its implication for chytridiomycosis management
Azmy S. Ackleh, Jacoby Carter, Vinodh K. Chellamuthu, Baoling Ma
2016, Ecological Modelling (320) 158-169
Chytridiomycosis is an emerging disease caused by the fungal pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) that poses a serious threat to frog populations worldwide. Several studies have shown that inoculation of bacterial species Janthinobacterium lividum (Jl) can mitigate the impact of the disease. However, there are many questions regarding this interaction. A mathematical model of a...
Multi-decadal trends in spring arrival of avian migrants to the central Arctic coast of Alaska: Effects of environmental and ecological factors
David H. Ward, J. Helmericks, Jerry W. Hupp, L. McManus, Michael Budde, David C. Douglas, K.D. Tape
2016, Journal of Avian Biology (47) 197-207
Warming in the Arctic has caused the transition from winter to summer to occur weeks earlier over the last half century, yet little is known about whether avian migrants have altered their timing of arrival on breeding areas to match this earlier seasonal transition. Over a 50-yr period, we examined...
Response of Schoenoplectus acutus and Schoenoplectus californicus at different life-history stages to hydrologic regime
Taylor M Sloey, Rebecca J. Howard, Mark W. Hester
2016, Wetlands (36) 37-46
For wetland restoration success to be maximized, restoration managers need better information regarding how the frequency, depth, and duration of flooding affect soil chemistry and the survival, growth, and morphology of targeted plant species. In a greenhouse study we investigated the impact of four different flooding durations (0 %, 40 %, 60 %,...
A quantitative framework for estimating risk of collision between marine mammals and boats
Julien Martin, Quentin Sabatier, Timothy A. Gowan, Christophe Giraud, Eliezer Gurarie, Scott Calleson, Joel G. Ortega-Ortiz, Charles J. Deutsch, Athena Rycyk, Stacie M. Koslovsky
2016, Methods in Ecology and Evolution (7) 42-50
Speed regulations of watercraft in protected areas are designed to reduce lethal collisions with wildlife but can have economic consequences. We present a quantitative framework for investigating the risk of deadly collisions between boats and wildlife. We apply encounter rate theory to demonstrate how marine mammal-boat encounter rate can be used...
Deep divergence and structure in the Tropical Oceanic Pacific: a multilocus phylogeography of a widespread gekkonid lizard (Squamata: Gekkonidae: Gehyra oceanica)
Maria A. Tonione, Robert N. Fisher, Catherine Zhu, Craig Moritz
2016, Journal of Biogeography (43) 268-278
Aim The islands of the Tropical Oceanic Pacific (TOP) host both local radiations and widespread, colonizing species. The few phylogeographical analyses of widespread species often point to recent human-aided expansions through the Pacific, suggesting that the communities are recently assembled. Here we apply multilocus data to infer biogeographical...
A generalizable energetics-based model of avian migration to facilitate continental-scale waterbird conservation
Eric V. Lonsdorf, Wayne E. Thogmartin, Sarah Jacobi, Jorge Coppen, Amelie Y. Davis, Timothy J. Fox, Patricia J. Heglund, Rex Johnson, Tim Jones, Kevin P. Kenow, James E. Lyons, Kirsten E. Luke, Shannon Still, Brian G. Tavernia
2016, Ecological Applications (26) 1136-1153
Conserving migratory birds is made especially difficult because of movement among spatially disparate locations across the annual cycle. In light of challenges presented by the scale and ecology of migratory birds, successful conservation requires integrating objectives, management, and monitoring across scales, from local management units to ecoregional and flyway administrative...
Effects of freezing on white perch Morone americana (Gmelin, 1789): Implications for multivariate morphometrics
Patrick Kocovsky
2016, Journal of Applied Ichthyology (32) 92-96
This study tested the hypothesis that duration of freezing differentially affects whole-body morphometrics of a derived teleost. Whole-body morphometrics are frequently analyzed to test hypotheses of different species, or stocks within a species, of fishes. Specimens used for morphometric analyses are typically fixed or preserved prior to analysis, yet little...
Fluid spatial dynamics of West Nile virus in the USA: Rapid spread in a permissive host environment
Francesca Di Giallonardo, Jemma L. Geoghegan, Douglas E. Docherty, Robert G. McLean, Michael C. Zody, James Qu, Xiao Yang, Bruce W. Birren, Christine M. Malboeuf, R. Newman, S. Ip, Edward C. Holmes
2016, Journal of Virology (90) 862-872
The introduction of West Nile virus (WNV) into North America in 1999 is a classical example of viral emergence in a new environment, with its subsequent dispersion across the continent having a major impact on local bird populations. Despite the importance of this epizootic, the pattern, dynamics and determinants of...
Prototypic automated continuous recreational water quality monitoring of nine Chicago beaches
Dawn Shively, Meredith Nevers, Cathy Breitenbach, Mantha S. Phanikumar, Kasia Przybyla-Kelly, Ashley M. Spoljaric, Richard L. Whitman
2016, Journal of Environmental Management (166) 285-293
Predictive empirical modeling is used in many locations worldwide as a rapid, alternative recreational water quality management tool to eliminate delayed notifications associated with traditional fecal indicator bacteria (FIB) culturing (referred to as the persistence model, PM) and to prevent errors in releasing swimming advisories. The goal of this study...
Integrating spatially explicit indices of abundance and habitat quality: an applied example for greater sage-grouse management
Peter S. Coates, Michael L. Casazza, Mark A. Ricca, Brianne E. Brussee, Erik J. Blomberg, K. Benjamin Gustafson, Cory T. Overton, Dawn M. Davis, Lara E. Niell, Shawn P. Espinosa, Scott C. Gardner, David J. Delehanty
2016, Journal of Applied Ecology (53) 83-95
Predictive species distributional models are a cornerstone of wildlife conservation planning. Constructing such models requires robust underpinning science that integrates formerly disparate data types to achieve effective species management. Greater sage-grouse Centrocercus urophasianus, hereafter “sage-grouse” populations are declining throughout sagebrush-steppe ecosystems in North America, particularly within the Great Basin, which...
Effects of harvesting forest biomass on water and climate regulation services: A synthesis of long-term ecosystem experiments in eastern North America
Jesse Caputo, Colin D Beier, Peter M Groffman, Douglas A. Burns, Frederick D Beall, Paul W. Hazlett, Thad E Yorks
2016, Ecosystems (19) 271-283
Demand for woody biomass fuels is increasing amidst concerns about global energy security and climate change, but there may be negative implications of increased harvesting for forest ecosystem functions and their benefits to society (ecosystem services). Using new methods for assessing ecosystem services based on long-term experimental research,...
Engagement with indigenous peoples and honoring traditional knowledge systems
Julie Maldonado, Bull Bennett, Karletta Chief, Patricia Cochran, Karen Cozetto, Bob Gough, Margaret M. Hiza-Redsteer, Kathy Lynn, Nancy Maynard, Garrit Voggesser
2016, Climatic Change (135) 111-126
The organizers of the 2014 US National Climate Assessment (NCA) made a concerted effort to reach out to and collaborate with Indigenous peoples, resulting in the most comprehensive information to date on climate change impacts to Indigenous peoples in a US national assessment. Yet, there is still much...
A dynamic population model to investigate effects of climate and climate-independent factors on the lifecycle of the tick Amblyomma americanum (Acari: Ixodidae)
Antoinette Ludwig, Howard S. Ginsberg, Graham J. Hickling, Nicholas H. Ogden
2016, Journal of Medical Entomology (53) 99-115
The lone star tick, Amblyomma americanum, is a disease vector of significance for human and animal health throughout much of the eastern United States. To model the potential effects of climate change on this tick, a better understanding is needed of the relative roles of temperature-dependent and temperature-independent (day-length-dependent behavioral...
Using occupancy modeling and logistic regression to assess the distribution of shrimp species in lowland streams, Costa Rica: Does regional groundwater create favorable habitat?
Marcia Snyder, Mary Freeman, S. Thomas Purucker, Catherine M. Pringle
2016, Freshwater Science (35) 80-90
Freshwater shrimps are an important biotic component of tropical ecosystems. However, they can have a low probability of detection when abundances are low. We sampled 3 of the most common freshwater shrimp species, Macrobrachium olfersii, Macrobrachium carcinus, and Macrobrachium heterochirus, and used occupancy modeling and logistic regression models to improve our limited...
Novel and lost forests in the Upper Midwestern United States, from new estimates of settlement-era composition, stem density, and biomass
Simon Goring, David J. Mladenoff, Charles Cogbill, Sydne Record, Christopher J. Paciorek, Michael C. Dietze, Andria Dawson, Jaclyn Matthes, Jason S. McLachlan, John W. Williams
2016, PLoS ONE (11)
EuroAmerican land-use and its legacies have transformed forest structure and composition across the United States (US). More accurate reconstructions of historical states are critical to understanding the processes governing past, current, and future forest dynamics. Here we present new gridded (8x8km) reconstructions of pre-settlement (1800s) forest composition and structure from...
Metabolism correlates with variation in post-natal growth rate among songbirds at three latitudes
Riccardo Ton, Thomas E. Martin
2016, Functional Ecology (30) 743-748
1. Variation in post-natal growth rates is substantial among organisms and especially strong among latitudes because tropical and south temperate species typically have slower growth than north temperate relatives. Metabolic rate is thought to be a critical mechanism underlying growth rates after accounting for allometric effects of body mass. However,...
Population trends, bend use relative to available habitat and within-river-bend habitat use of eight indicator species of Missouri and Lower Kansas River benthic fishes: 15 years after baseline assessment
Mark L. Wildhaber, Wen-Hsi Yang, Ali Arab
2016, River Research and Applications (32) 36-65
A baseline assessment of the Missouri River fish community and species-specific habitat use patterns conducted from 1996 to 1998 provided the first comprehensive analysis of Missouri River benthic fish population trends and habitat use in the Missouri and Lower Yellowstone rivers, exclusive of reservoirs, and provided the foundation for the...
Mycobacterial infection in Northern snakehead (Channa argus) from the Potomac River catchment
Christine L. Densmore, Luke R. Iwanowicz, Anne Henderson, Deborah D. Iwanowicz, J.S. Odenkirk
2016, Journal of Fish Diseases (39) 771-775
The Northern snakehead, Channa argus (Cantor), is a non-native predatory fish that has become established regionally in some temperate freshwater habitats within the United States. Over the past decade, Northern snakehead populations have developed within aquatic ecosystems throughout the eastern USA, including the Potomac River system within Virginia, Maryland and Washington, D.C....
Relating mesocarnivore relative abundance to anthropogenic land-use with a hierarchical spatial count model
Shawn M. Crimmins, Liza R. Walleser, Dan R. Hertel, Patrick C. McKann, Jason J. Rohweder, Wayne E. Thogmartin
2016, Ecography (39) 524-532
There is growing need to develop models of spatial patterns in animal abundance, yet comparatively few examples of such models exist. This is especially true in situations where the abundance of one species may inhibit that of another, such as the intensively-farmed landscape of the Prairie Pothole Region (PPR) of...
Measuring spatial variation in secondary production and food quality using a common consumer approach in Lake Erie
James H. Larson, William B. Richardson, Mary Anne Evans, Jeff Schaeffer, Timothy Wynne, Michelle Bartsch, Lynn Bartsch, J. C. Nelson, Jon M. Vallazza
2016, Ecological Applications (26) 873-885
Lake Erie is a large lake straddling the border of the U.S. and Canada that has become increasingly eutrophic in recent years. Eutrophication is particularly focused in the shallow western basin. The western basin of Lake Erie is hydrodynamically similar to a large estuary, with riverine inputs from the Detroit...
Environmental controls on spatial patterns in the long-term persistence of giant kelp in central California
Mary Alida Young, Kyle C. Cavanaugh, Tom W. Bell, Peter T. Raimondi, Christopher A. Edwards, Patrick T. Drake, Li H. Erikson, Curt D. Storlazzi
2016, Ecology (86) 45-60
As marine management is moving towards the practice of protecting static areas, it is 44 important to make sure protected areas capture and protect persistent populations. Rocky reefs in 45 many temperate areas worldwide serve as habitat for canopy forming macroalgae and these 46 structure forming species of kelps (order...
The Iquique earthquake sequence of April 2014: Bayesian modeling accounting for prediction uncertainty
Zacharie Duputel, Junle Jiang, Romain Jolivet, Mark Simons, Luis Rivera, Jean-Paul Ampuero, Bryan Riel, Susan E Owen, Angelyn W Moore, Sergey V Samsonov, Francisco Ortega Culaciati, Sarah E. Minson
2016, Geophysical Research Letters (42) 7949-7957
The subduction zone in northern Chile is a well-identified seismic gap that last ruptured in 1877. On 1 April 2014, this region was struck by a large earthquake following a two week long series of foreshocks. This study combines a wide range of observations, including geodetic, tsunami, and...
Generic reclassification and species boundaries in the rediscovered freshwater mussel ‘Quadrula’ mitchelli (Simpson in Dall, 1896)
John M. Pfeiffer III, Nathan A. Johnson, Charles R. Randklev, Robert G. Howells, James D. Williams
2016, Conservation Genetics (17) 279-292
The Central Texas endemic freshwater mussel, Quadrula mitchelli (Simpson in Dall, 1896), had been presumed extinct until relict populations were recently rediscovered. To help guide ongoing and future conservation efforts focused on Q. mitchelli we set out to resolve several uncertainties regarding its evolutionary history, specifically its unknown generic...
Assessing accuracy and precision for field and laboratory data: a perspective in ecosystem restoration
Martin A. Stapanian, Timothy E Lewis, Craig J. Palmer, Molly Middlebrook Amos
2016, Restoration Ecology (24) 18-26
Unlike most laboratory studies, rigorous quality assurance/quality control (QA/QC) procedures may be lacking in ecosystem restoration (“ecorestoration”) projects, despite legislative mandates in the United States. This is due, in part, to ecorestoration specialists making the false assumption that some types of data (e.g. discrete variables such as species identification and...
Animal movement constraints improve resource selection inference in the presence of telemetry error
Brian M. Brost, Mevin Hooten, Ephraim M. Hanks, Robert J. Small
2016, Ecology (96) 2590-2597
Multiple factors complicate the analysis of animal telemetry location data. Recent advancements address issues such as temporal autocorrelation and telemetry measurement error, but additional challenges remain. Difficulties introduced by complicated error structures or barriers to animal movement can weaken inference. We propose an approach for obtaining resource selection inference from...