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Page 1212, results 30276 - 30300

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Validity of using semipermeable membrane devices for determining aqueous concentrations of freely dissolved PAHs
Harry Prest, J. D. Petty, J.N. Huckins
1998, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (17) 535-536
An in-depth review of the recent contribution to this journal by Gustafson and Dickhut [1] prompts us to share our concerns regarding some of their conclusions. The paper presents data comparing three techniques for determining aqueous concentrations of freely dissolved polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) gas sparging, lipid-containing semipermeable membrane devices...
Effects of surgically and gastrically implanted radio transmitters on swimming performance and predator avoidance of juvenile chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha)
N.S. Adams, D.W. Rondorf, S.D. Evans, J.E. Kelly, R.W. Perry
1998, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (55) 781-787
Radiotelemetry data are often used to make inferences about an entire study population; therefore, the transmitter attachment method should be the one that least affects the study animal. Juvenile chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) <120 mm in fork length (FL) with either gastrically or surgically implanted transmitters had significantly lower critical...
Thermally induced chronic developmental stress in coho salmon: Integrating measures of mortality, early growth and fluctuating asymmetry
W.B. Campbell, J.M. Emlen, W.K. Hershberger
1998, Oikos (81) 398-410
Developmental stability, or homeostasis, facilitates the production of consistent phenotypes by buffering against stress. Fluctuating asymmetry is produced by developmental instability and is manifested as small random departures from bilateral symmetry. Increased fluctuating asymmetry is thought to parallel compromised fitness, in part, because stress promotes energy dissipation. Compensatory energy expenditures...
The OhioView Project
1998, Fact Sheet 116-98
Affordable, Integrated Access and Delivery of U.S. Government Satel lite and Geospatial Data to the American Public The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is a leader in collecting and archiving geospatial data and information about the Earth and in distributing this information to educational institutes; local, State, and Federal agencies; private industry;...
Exploration
D.R. Wilburn
1998, Mining Engineering (50) 51-60
This summary of international nonfuel mineral exploration activities for 1997 draws upon available data from literature, industry and US Geological Sulvey (USGS) specialists. Data on exploration budgets by region and commodity are reported, significant mineral discoveries and exploration target areas are identified and government programs affecting the mineral exploration industry...
A new evaluation of the USGS streamgaging network
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1998, Report
Since 1889, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has operated a streamgaging network to collect information about the Nation's water resources. It is a multipurpose network funded by the USGS and many other Federal, State and local agencies. Individual streamgaging stations are supported for specific purposes such as water allocation, reservoir...
Wisconsin: A summary of cooperative water-resources investigations 1998
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey, Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
1998, Report
The objectives of this study are to provide continuous discharge records for selected rivers at specific sites to supply the needs for regulation, analytical studies, definition of statistical properties, trends analysis, determination of the occurrence, and distribution of water in streams for planning. The project is also designed to determine...
Checklists: An under-used tool for the inventory and monitoring of plants and animals
Sam Droege, A. Cyr, J. Larivee
1998, Conservation Biology (12) 1134-1138
Checklists are widely used to catalog field observations of plants and animals. We used 25 years of bird checklist data from the Études des Populations d’Oiseaux du Quebec program to examine the ability of checklists to produce reliable conservation, management, and ecological information. We found that checklists can provide reliable...
Size-sex variation in survival rates and abundance of pig frogs, Rana grylio, in northern Florida wetlands
K.V. Wood, J.D. Nichols, H.F. Percival, J.E. Hines
1998, Journal of Herpetology (32) 527-535
During 1991-1993, we conducted capture-recapture studies on pig frogs, Rana grylio, in seven study locations in northcentral Florida. Resulting data were used to test hypotheses about variation in survival probability over different size-sex classes of pig frogs. We developed multistate capture-recapture models for the resulting data and used...
Winter habitat of Kirtland's warbler: an endangered nearctic/neotropical migrant
P.W. Sykes Jr., M.H. Clench
1998, The Wilson Bulletin (110) 244-261
Habitats of Kirtland?s Warbler (Dendroica kirtlandii) on the wintering grounds in the Bahama Archipelago are presented based upon data from 29 specimens, two bandings, and 67 sightings of at least 61 individuals on 13 islands scattered through the region. Major emphasis is placed on a study site in central...
Key areas for wintering North American herons
T. Mikuska, J.A. Kushlan, S. Hartley
1998, Colonial Waterbirds (21) 125-134
Nearly all North American heron populations are migratory, but details of where they winter are little known. Locations where North American herons winter were identified using banding recovery data. North American herons winter from Canada through northern South America but especially in eastern North America south of New...
Inference methods for spatial variation in species richness and community composition when not all species are detected
J.D. Nichols, T. Boulinier, J.E. Hines, K. H. Pollock, J.R. Sauer
1998, Conservation Biology (12) 1390-1398
Inferences about spatial variation in species richness and community composition are important both to ecological hypotheses about the structure and function of communities and to community-level conservation and management. Few sampling programs for animal communities provide censuses, and usually some species in surveyed areas are not detected. Thus, counts of...
Effects of radio transmitters on migrating wood thrushes
L.A. Powell, D.G. Krementz, J. D. Lang, M.J. Conroy
1998, Journal of Field Ornithology (69) 306-315
We quantified the effects of radio transmitters on Wood Thrushes (Hylocichla mustelina) using 4 yr of banding and telemetry data from Piedmont National Wildlife Refuge, Georgia. Flight performance models suggest that the 1.6-g transmitter shortens the migratory range of Wood Thrushes by only 60 km, and the estimated migratory...
Increasing point-count duration increases standard error
W.P. Smith, D.J. Twedt, P.B. Hamel, R.P. Ford, D.A. Wiedenfeld, R.J. Cooper
1998, Journal of Field Ornithology (69) 450-456
We examined data from point counts of varying duration in bottomland forests of west Tennessee and the Mississippi Alluvial Valley to determine if counting interval influenced sampling efficiency. Estimates of standard error increased as point count duration increased both for cumulative number of individuals and species in both locations....
Estimating rates of local species extinction, colonization and turnover in animal communities
James D. Nichols, T. Boulinier, J.E. Hines, K. H. Pollock, J.R. Sauer
1998, Ecological Applications (8) 1213-1225
Species richness has been identified as a useful state variable for conservation and management purposes. Changes in richness over time provide a basis for predicting and evaluating community responses to management, to natural disturbance, and to changes in factors such as community composition (e.g., the removal of a keystone...
Evaluation of age determination techniques for gray wolves
D.B. Landon, C.A. Waite, R. O. Peterson, L.D. Mech
1998, Journal of Wildlife Management (62) 674-682
We evaluated tooth wear, cranial suture fusion, closure of the canine pulp cavity, and cementum annuli as methods of age determination for known- and unknown-age gray wolves (Canis lupus) from Alaska, Minnesota, Ontario, and Isle Royale, Michigan. We developed age classes for...
Assemblage organization in stream fishes: Effects of environmental variation and interspecific interactions
Gary D. Grossman, R. E. Ratajczak Jr., M. M. Crawford, Mary C. Freeman
1998, Ecological Monographs (68) 395-420
We assessed the relative importance of environmental variation, interspecific competition for space, and predator abundance on assemblage structure and microhabitat use in a stream fish assemblage inhabiting Coweeta Creek, North Carolina, USA. Our study encompassed a 10–yr time span (1983–1992) and included some of the highest and lowest flows in...
The North American Bird Banding Program: Into the 21st century
P. A. Buckley, C.M. Francis, P. Blancher, D.F. DeSante, C.S. Robbins, G. Smith, P. Cannell
1998, Journal of Field Ornithology (69) 511-529
The authors examined the legal, scientific, and philosophical underpinnings of the North American Bird Banding Program [BBP], with emphasis on the U.S. Bird Banding Laboratory [BBL], but also considering the Canadian Bird Banding Office [BBO]. In this report, we review the value of banding data, enumerate and expand on...
Modeling colony site dynamics: A case study of gull-billed terns (Sterna nilotica) in coastal Virginia
R.M. Erwin, J.D. Nichols, T.B. Eyler, Daniel B. Stotts, B.R. Truitt
1998, The Auk (115) 970-978
We developed a Markov process model for colony-site dynamics of Gull-billed Terns (Sterna nilotica). From 1993 through 1996, we monitored breeding numbers of Gull-billed Terns and their frequent colony associates, Common Terns (Sterna hirundo) and Black Skimmers (Rynchops niger), at colony sites along 80 km of the barrier island region...
Contaminants in eggs of colonial waterbirds and hepatic cytochrome P450 enzyme levels in pipped tern embryos, Washington State
L. J. Blus, M. J. Melancon, D. J. Hoffman, Charles J. Henny
1998, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (35) 492-497
Eggs of Forster's terns (Sterna forsteri) collected in 1991 from nesting colonies on Crescent Island (Columbia River) and the Potholes Reservoir in south central Washington generally contained low residues of organochlorine pesticides and metabolites, 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin, 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzofuran, and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). Hepatic cytochrome P450 enzyme activity in pipped embryos...
Estimating population parameters for northern and southern breeding populations of Canada geese
J.B. Hestbeck
Donald H. Rusch, Michael D. Samuel, Dale D. Humburg, Brian D. Sullivan, editor(s)
1998, Book chapter, Biology and management of Canada geese: proceedings of the International Canada Goose Symposium
Canada geese (Branta canadensis) have been managed largely as a migratory resource. In the 1960's, Canada goose flocks were restored to historic breeding ranges in the United States and southern Canada to enhance recreational opportunity for observation and harvest. These populations of southern breeding geese have rapidly expanded,...
The Wisconsin Frog and Toad Survey: Update and 1984-97 trends [abstract]
M.J. Mossman, L. Hartman, J. Sauer, R. Hay, B. Dhuey
1998, Book chapter, Midwest Declining Amphibians Conference: A Joint Meeting of the Great Lakes and Central Division Working Groups of the Declining Amphibian Populations Task Force, March 20 and 21, 1998
The Wisconsin Frog and Toad Survey (WFTS) is a volunteer-based, roadside auditory count that began in 1981. It's protocols were recently modified for continent-wide use by the North American Amphibian Monitoring Plan (NAAMP). In 1997 we initiated a study to compare data collected by the WFTS and NAAMP protocols, in...
Effects of landscape composition and wetland fragmentation on frog and toad abundance and species richness in Iowa and Wisconsin, USA [abstract]
M. G. Knutson, J.R. Sauer, D.A. Olsen, M.J. Mossman, L.M. Hemesath, M.J. Lannoo
1998, Book chapter, Midwest Declining Amphibians Conference, a joint meeting of the Great Lakes and Central Division Working Groups of the Declining Amphibian Populations Task Force, March 20 & 21, 1998
We examined the relationships between anuran diversity and landscape features in the Upper Midwestern United States. Anuran relative abundance and species richness were measured using data collected by Wisconsin and Iowa state calling surveys conducted from 1990-1995. Landscape features surrounding survey points were determined using National Wetland Inventory...
Fish and wildlife species as sentinels of environmental endocrine disruption
S.R. Sheffield, J.M. Matter, Barnett A. Rattner, P.D. Guiney
Ronald J. Kendall, Richard L. Dickerson, John P. Giesy, William P. Suk, editor(s)
1998, Book chapter, Principles and Processes for Evaluating Endocrine Disruption in Wildlife
This chapter provides an overview of the history and criteria for use of captive and free-ranging fish and wildlife (amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals) species as sentinels of potential environmental endocrine disruption. Biochemical, behavioral, physiological, immunological, genetic, reproductive, developmental, and ecological correlates of endocrine disruption in these sentinels are...