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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Estimating mortality rates of adult fish from entrainment through the propellers of river towboats
S. Gutreuter, John M. Dettmers, David H. Wahl
2003, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (132) 646-661
We developed a method to estimate mortality rates of adult fish caused by entrainment through the propellers of commercial towboats operating in river channels. The method combines trawling while following towboats (to recover a fraction of the kills) and application of a hydrodynamic model of diffusion (to estimate the fraction...
Rare male aggression directed toward females in a female-dominated society: Baiting behavior in the spotted hyena
Micaela Szykman, Anne L. Engh, Russell C. Van Horn, Erin E. Boydston, Kim T. Scribner, Kay E. Holekamp
2003, Aggressive Behavior (29) 457-474
Spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) are gregarious carnivores. The females are socially dominant to males, and adult males rarely direct aggression toward adult females. This study analyzed all cases in which adult immigrant males behaved aggressively toward adult females in a large population of free-living hyenas in Kenya, observed for 11...
Spatial use and habitat associations of Columbian white-tailed deer fawns in southwestern Oregon
M.A. Ricca, R.G. Anthony, Dewaine H. Jackson, S.A. Wolfe
2003, Northwest Science (77) 72-80
Fawns represent a critical life history stage in the dynamics of deer populations, yet little recent information is available on the ecology of neonatal Columbian white-tailed deer (CWTD), a geographically isolated and federally endangered sub-species. We described home ranges, areas of concentrated use, and habitat associations of CWTD fawns in...
Relating species abundance distributions to species-area curves in two Mediterranean-type shrublands
Jon E. Keeley
2003, Diversity and Distributions (9) 253-259
Based on both theoretical and empirical studies there is evidence that different species abundance distributions underlie different species-area relationships. Here I show that Australian and Californian shrubland communities (at the scale from 1 to 1000 m2) exhibit different species-area relationships and different species abundance patterns. The species-area relationship in Australian heathlands...
Fish faunal resurgence in Lake Nabugabo, East Africa
L.J. Chapman, Colin A. Chapman, P. J. Schofield, J.P. Olowo, L.S. Kaufman, O. Seehausen, R. Ogutu-Ohwayo.
2003, Conservation Biology (17) 500-511
 In Lake Nabugabo, Uganda, a small satellite of the equatorial Lake Victoria, approximately 50% of the indigenous fish species disappeared from the open waters subsequent to establishment of the introduced predatory Nile perch (   Lates niloticus ). However, several of these species persisted in wetland refugia. Over the past decade, Nile perch...
Large carnivores response to recreational big game hunting along the Yellowstone National Park and Absaroka-Beartooth Wilderness boundary
T.E. Ruth, D.W. Smith, M.A. Haroldson, P.C. Buotte, C.C. Schwartz, H.B. Quigley, S. Cherry, D. Tyres, K. Frey
2003, Wildlife Society Bulletin (31) 1150-1161
The Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem contains the rare combination of an intact guild of native large carnivores, their prey, and differing land management policies (National Park versus National Forest; no hunting versus hunting). Concurrent field studies on large carnivores allowed us to investigate activities of humans and carnivores on Yellowstone National...
A nested-intensity design for surveying plant diversity
D.T. Barnett, T.J. Stohlgren
2003, Biodiversity and Conservation (12) 255-278
Managers of natural landscapes need cost-efficient, accurate, and precise systems to inventory plant diversity. We investigated a nested-intensity sampling design to assess local and landscape-scale heterogeneity of plant species richness in aspen stands in southern Colorado, USA. The nested-intensity design used three vegetation sampling techniques: the Modified-Whittaker, a 1000-m2 multiple-scale...
Soil characteristics and plant exotic species invasions in the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, Utah, USA
Michael A. Bashkin, Thomas J. Stohlgren, Yuka Otsuki, Michelle Lee, Paul H. Evangelista, Jayne Belnap
2003, Applied Soil Ecology (22) 67-77
The Grand Staircase - Escalante National Monument (GSENM) contains a rich diversity of native plant communities. However, many exotic plant species have become established, potentially threatening native plant diversity. We sought to quantify patterns of native and exotic plant species and cryptobiotic crusts (mats of lichens, algae, and mosses on...
Multiple pathways for woody plant establishment on floodplains at local to regional scales
D.J. Cooper, D.C. Andersen, Rodney A. Chimner
2003, Journal of Ecology (91) 182-196
1. The structure and functioning of riverine ecosystems is dependent upon regional setting and the interplay of hydrologic regime and geomorphologic processes. We used a retrospective analysis to study recruitment along broad, alluvial valley segments (parks) and canyon segments of the unregulated Yampa River and the regulated Green River in...
Gyrfalcon feeding behavior during the nestling period in central west Greenland
Travis Booms, Mark R. Fuller
2003, Arctic (56) 341-348
We studied gyrfalcon (Falco rusticolus) food delivery and feeding behavior during the nestling period in central West Greenland during the 2000 and 2001 field seasons. We used time-lapse video cameras installed at three nests to record 2677.25 hours of nestling video. Ptarmigan delivered to nests were usually plucked prior to...
Combining inferences from models of capture efficiency, detectability, and suitable habitat to classify landscapes for conservation of threatened bull trout
J. Peterson, J. B. Dunham
2003, Conservation Biology (17) 1070-1077
Effective conservation efforts for at-risk species require knowledge of the locations of existing populations. Species presence can be estimated directly by conducting field-sampling surveys or alternatively by developing predictive models. Direct surveys can be expensive and inefficient, particularly for rare and difficult-to-sample species, and models of species presence may produce biased predictions. We present a...
Supra-subduction zone extensional magmatism in Vermont and adjacent Quebec: Implications for early Paleozoic Appalachian tectonics
J. Kim, R. Coish, M. Evans, G. Dick
2003, Geological Society of America Bulletin (115) 1552-1569
Metadiabasic intrusions of the Mount Norris Intrusive Suite occur in fault-bounded lithotectonic packages containing Stowe, Moretown, and Cram Hill Formation lithologies in the northern Vermont Rowe-Hawley belt, a proposed Ordovician arc-trench gap above an east-dipping subduction zone. Rocks of the Mount Norris Intrusive Suite are characteristically massive and weakly foliated,...
Impacts of Daily Bag Limit Reductions on Angler Effort in Wisconsin Walleye Lakes
T.D. Beard Jr., S.P. Cox, S.R. Carpenter
2003, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (23) 1283-1293
Angler effort is an important factor affecting recreational fisheries. However, angler responses are rarely incorporated into recreational fisheries regulations or predictions. Few have attempted to examine how daily bag limit regulations affect total angling pressure and subsequent stock densities. Our paper develops a theoretical basis for predicting angler effort and...
A 16,000 14C yr B.P. packrat midden series from the USA-Mexico Borderlands
C.A. Holmgren, M.C. Penalba, K.A. Rylander, J.L. Betancourt
2003, Quaternary Research (60) 319-329
A new packrat midden chronology from Playas Valley, southwestern New Mexico, is the first installment of an ongoing effort to reconstruct paleovegetation and paleoclimate in the U.S.A.-Mexico Borderlands. Playas Valley and neighboring basins supported pluvial lakes during full and/or late glacial times. Plant macrofossil and pollen assemblages from nine middens...
Recent and historical distributions of Canada lynx in Maine and the Northeast
C.L. Hoving, R.A. Joseph, W.B. Krohn
2003, Northeastern Naturalist (10) 363-382
The contiguous United States population of Canada lynx (Lynx canadensis Kerr) is listed as threatened under the federal Endangered Species Act. However, the historic distribution of lynx in the Northeast is poorly understood. We used museum records, bibliographic records, and interviews to reconstruct the past distribution of lynx in Maine,...
Recovery of prairie fish assemblages at the transition from channelized to nonchannelized: Implications for conservation of natural channels
Jason C. Vokoun, Charles F. Rabeni
2003, Natural Areas Journal (23) 349-355
Fish assemblages were systematically sampled along the transition from channelized to unchannelized reaches in seven streams in northern Missouri, USA. Streams ranged in size from 4th to 8th order and were located in the Central Dissected Till Plains including the Grand, Chariton, Salt, and Fabius watersheds. Maximum species richness was...
Hyperpycnal sediment discharge from semiarid southern California rivers: Implications for coastal sediment budgets
J.A. Warrick, John D. Milliman
2003, Geology (31) 781-784
Southern California rivers discharge hyperpycnal (river density greater than ocean density) concentrations of suspended sediment (>40 g/L, according to buoyancy theory) during flood events, mostly during El Nin??o-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) conditions. Because hyperpycnal river discharge commonly occurs during brief periods (hours to occasionally days), mean daily flow statistics often do...
The history of dinosaur footprint discoveries in Wyoming with emphasis on the Bighorn Basin
Erik P. Kvale, Debra L. Mickelson, Stephen T Hasiotis, Gary D. Johnson
2003, Ichnos: An International Journal for Plant and Animal Traces (11) 3-9
Dinosaur traces are well known from the western United States in the Colorado Plateau region (Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona). Utah contains the greatest abundance of known and documented dinosaur footprints and trackways. Far less well known, however, is the occurrence and distribution of dinosaur footprint-bearing horizons in Wyoming....
Survey methods for assessing land cover map accuracy
S.M. Nusser, Erwin E. Klaas
2003, Environmental and Ecological Statistics (10) 309-331
The increasing availability of digital photographic materials has fueled efforts by agencies and organizations to generate land cover maps for states, regions, and the United States as a whole. Regardless of the information sources and classification methods used, land cover maps are subject to numerous sources of error. In order...
Ord's kangaroo rats living in floodplain habitats: Factors contributing to habitat attraction
M. S. Miller, K.R. Wilson, D.C. Andersen
2003, Southwestern Naturalist (48) 411-418
High densities of an aridland granivore, Ord's kangaroo rat (Dipodomys ordii), have been documented in floodplain habitats along the Yampa River in northwestern Colorado. Despite a high probability of inundation and attendant high mortality during the spring flood period, the habitat is consistently recolonized. To understand factors that potentially make...
Age constraints on Tarkwaian palaeoplacer and lode-gold formation in the Tarkwa-Damang district, SW Ghana
J.-P. Pigois, D.I. Groves, I.R. Fletcher, N.J. McNaughton, L.W. Snee
2003, Mineralium Deposita (38) 695-714
Two major epigenetic gold-forming events are recorded in the world-class gold province of southwest Ghana. A pre-Tarkwaian event was the source of the world-class Tarkwa palaeoplacers whereas post-Birimian and Tarkwaian deformation, which was related to the Eburnean orogeny, gave rise to the world-class (e.g. Prestea) to giant (e.g. Obuasi) orogenic...
The distribution of uranium over Europe: Geological and environmental significance
J.A. Plant, S. Reeder, R. Salminen, D. B. Smith, T. Tarvainen, B. de Vivo, M.G. Petterson
2003, Transactions of the Institution of Mining and Metallurgy, Section B: Applied Earth Science (112) 221-238
The variation of baseline levels of uranium in soil and stream sediments over Europe is described, based on new data prepared by the Forum of European Geological Surveys (FOREGS). The samples have been collected and analysed according to the protocols established for the International Union of Geological Sciences/International Association of...
Microparasite assemblages of conspecific shrew populations in Southern California
J. Laakkonen, Robert N. Fisher, T. J. Case
2003, Journal of Parasitology (89) 1153-1158
The microparasite component communities of 2 species of shrews, Notiosorex crawfordi and Sorex ornatus, were investigated for the first time in 2 isolated and 3 continuous landscapes in southern California. With microscopical examination, a total of 6 parasite species was found in N. crawfordi and 8 species in S. ornatus....
Simulation of Submarine Ground Water Discharge to a Marine Estuary: Biscayne Bay, Florida
C.D. Langevin
2003, Ground Water (41) 758-771
Variable density ground water flow models are rarely used to estimate submarine ground water discharge because of limitations in computer speed, data availability, and availability of a simulation tool that can minimize numerical dispersion. This paper presents an application of the SEAWAT code, which is a combined version of MODFLOW...