Summary of geophysical investigations of the Death Valley regional water-flow modeling project, Nevada and California
Richard J. Blakely, Victoria E. Langenheim, David A. Ponce
2000, Open-File Report 2000-189
This report summarizes geophysical investigations in the Amargosa Desert and surrounding areas conducted between 1997 and 2000 in support of the Death Valley Regional Water-Flow Modeling Project of the U.S. Geological Survey. These investigations used both gravity and aeromagnetic data to develop a regional-scale tectonic and lithologic model for the...
Elk-effects vegetation monitoring program for Tomales Point Elk Range, Point Reyes National Seashore, California
Kathryn McEachern, Marcia Semenoff-Irving, Pamela van der Leeden
2000, Open-File Report 2000-487
The monitoring program for elk effects on Tomales Point vegetation is designed to provide information on how tule elk grazing affects plant communities and rare species. The basic objective of the program is to show whether the elk are driving the vegetation into an unacceptable state by their grazing. The...
Modeling water quality in rivers using the Branched Lagrangian Transport Model (BLTM)
Harvey E. Jobson
2000, Fact Sheet 147-00
Hydrologic data for water years 1933-97 used in the River and Reservoir Operations Model, Truckee River basin, California and Nevada
Steven N. Berris, Glen W. Hess, Larry R. Bohman
2000, Open-File Report 2000-478
Title II of Public Law 101-618, the Truckee?Carson?Pyramid Lake Water Rights Settlement Act of 1990, provides direction, authority, and a mechanism for resolving conflicts over water rights in the Truckee and Carson River Basins. The Truckee Carson Program of the U.S. Geological Survey, to support implementation of Public Law 101-618,...
Potential runoff-contributing areas in Kansas
Kyle E. Juracek
2000, Open-File Report 2000-253
This digital spatial data set provides information on the spatial distribution of potential runoff-contributing areas in the State of Kansas. Potential runoff-contributing areas were estimated collectively for the processes of infiltration-excess overland flow and saturation-excess overland flow. For infiltration-excess overland flow, various rainfall-intensity and soil-permeability values were used. For saturation-excess...
Watershed modeling approach to assessing the hydrologic effects of future development in the Ninemile Creek basin, Onondaga County, New York
Phillip J. Zarriello
1999, Fact Sheet 112-99
No abstract available. ...
Antigenic and functional characterization of p57 produced by Renibacterium salmoninarum
G. Weins, M.S. Chien, J. R. Winton, S.L. Kaatari
1999, Diseases of Aquatic Organisms (37) 43-52
Renibacterium salmoninarum, the causative agent of bacterial kidney disease, produces large quantities of a 57-58 kDa protein (p57) during growth in broth culture and during infection of salmonid fish. Biological activities of secreted p57 include agglutination of salrnonid leucocytes and rabbit erythrocytes. We define the location of epitopes on p57...
Debating complexity in modeling
Randall J. Hunt, Chunmiao Zheng
1999, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (80) 29-29
Complexity in modeling would seem to be an issue of universal importance throughout the geosciences, perhaps throughout all science, if the debate last year among groundwater modelers is any indication. During the discussion the following questions and observations made up the heart of the debate. As scientists trying to understand the...
A global digital elevation model - GTOP030
1999, Fact Sheet 123-99
GTOP030, the U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) digital elevation model (DEM) of the Earth, provides the flrst global coverage of moderate resolution elevation data. The original GTOP30 data set, which was developed over a 3-year period through a collaborative effort led by the USGS, was completed in 1996 at the USGS...
Stratigraphic framework of upper Paleozoic rocks, southeastern Sangre de Cristo Mountains, New Mexico
E.H. Baltz, D.A. Myers
1999, Report, Memoir 48
The Sangre de Cristo Mountains of south-central Colorado and north-central New Mexico are the physiographic expression of a southerly trending Cenozoic structural uplift that plunges gently south to die out in the Great Plains south of Santa Fe and Las Vegas, New Mexico. The uplift is bounded on the west...
Hazard evaluation of ten organophosphorous insecticides against the midge, Chironomus riparius via QSAR
Peter F. Landrum, Susan W. Fisher, Haejo Hwang, James P. Hickey
1999, SAR and QSAR in Environmental Research (10) 423-450
Toxicities of ten organophosphorus (OP) insecticides were measured against midge larvae (Chironomus riparius) under varying temperature (11, 18, and 25°C) and pH (6, 7, and 8) conditions and with and without sediment. Toxicity usually increased with increasing temperature and was greater in the absence of sediment. No trend was found...
Bioenergetics estimate of the effects of stocking density on hatchery production of smallmouth bass fingerlings
G.L. Robel, W.L. Fisher
1999, North American Journal of Aquaculture (61) 1-7
Production of and consumption by hatchery-reared fingerling (age-0) smallmouth bass Micropterus dolomieu at various simulated stocking densities were estimated with a bioenergetics model. Fish growth rates and pond water temperatures during the 1996 growing season at two hatcheries in Oklahoma were used in the model. Fish growth and simulated consumption and production...
Husbandry and care of quail
M. A. Ottinger, Barnett A. Rattner
1999, Avian and Poultry Biology Reviews (10) 117-120
Both the Japanese and Bobwhite quail are important species for biomedical, toxicological and basic biological research. In view of their rapid maturation, high reproductive rate in captivity, and other physiological characteristics, these species have been and will continue to be used successfully as model avian species. This short reviews...
[Book review] Cowbirds and Other Brood Parasites by Catherine Ortega. Tucson, Arizona: University of Arizona Press (1998). The Avian Brood Parasites: Deception at the Nest by Paul A. Johnsgard. New York: Oxford University Press (1997) Parasitic Birds and their Hosts: Studies in Coevolution edited by S.I. Rothstein & S.K. Robinson. New York: Oxford University Press (1998)
D.C. Hahn
1999, Animal Behaviour (58) 1155-1160
We are in a golden age for the study of brood parasitism, judging from both the quantity and quality of recent scientific publications on cuckoos, cowbirds and parasitic finches by investigators working in Europe, the Americas, Africa and Asia. As Johnsgard (1997) remarks in his preface, the evolutionary, ecological, and...
The effects of landscape position on plant species density: Evidence of past environmental effects in a coastal wetland
J.B. Grace, G.R. Guntenspergen
1999, Écoscience (6) 381-391
Here we propose that an important cause of variation in species density may be prior environmental conditions that continue to influence current patterns. In this paper we investigated the degree to which species density varies with location within the landscape, independent of contemporaneous environmental conditions. The area studied...
The effectiveness of tape playbacks in estimating Black Rail densities
M. Legare, W.R. Eddleman, P. A. Buckley, C. Kelly
1999, Journal of Wildlife Management (63) 116-125
Tape playback is often the only efficient technique to survey for secretive birds. We measured the vocal responses and movements of radio-tagged black rails (Laterallus jamaicensis; 26 M, 17 F) to playback of vocalizations at 2 sites in Florida during the breeding seasons of 1992-95. We used coefficients...
Sex determination of the Acadian Flycatcher using discriminant analysis
R.R. Wilson
1999, Journal of Field Ornithology (70) 514-519
I used five morphometric variables from 114 individuals captured in Arkansas to develop a discriminant model to predict the sex of Acadian Flycatchers (Empidonax virescens). Stepwise discriminant function analyses selected wing chord and tail length as the most parsimonious subset of variables for discriminating sex. This two-variable model...
Development and application of a mark-recapture model incorporating predicted sex and transitory behaviour
M.J. Conroy, J.C. Senar, J.E. Hines, J. Domenech
1999, Bird Study (46) S62-S73
We developed an extension of Cormack-Jolly-Seber models to handle a complex mark-recapture problem in which (a) the sex of birds cannot be determined prior to first moult, but can be predicted on the basis of body measurements, and (b) a significant portion of captured birds appear to be transients (i.e....
Quantitative studies of bird movement: A methodological review
J.D. Nichols, A. Kaiser
1999, Bird Study (46) S289-S298
The past several years have seen development of a number of statistical models and methods for drawing inferences about bird movement using data from marked individuals. It can be difficult to keep up with this rapid development of new methods, so our purpose here is to categorize and review...
Effects of landscape composition and wetland fragmentation on frog and toad abundance and species richness in Iowa and Wisconsin, USA
M. G. Knutson, J.R. Sauer, D.A. Olsen, M.J. Mossman, L.M. Hemesath, M.J. Lannoo
1999, Conservation Biology (13) 1437-1446
Management of amphibian populations to reverse recent declines will require defining high-quality habitat for individual species or groups of species, followed by efforts to retain or restore these habitats on the landscape. We examined landscape-level habitat relationships for frogs and toads by measuring associations between relative abundance and species richness...
Program RDSURVIV: An estimation tool for capture-recapture data collected under Pollock's robust design
W. L. Kendall, J.E. Hines
1999, Bird Study (46) S32-S38
Several papers have demonstrated the advantages of collecting capture- recapture data using subsamples (i.e. Pollock's robust design). Compared with a standard design (i.e. one sample per period), this approach (1) permits the estimation of more demographic parameters and (2) in many cases produces more efficient estimators. Program SURVIV is a...
Large-scale studies of marked birds in North America
John Tautin, L. Metras, Graham W. Smith
1999, Bird Study (46) S271-S278
The first large-scale, co-operative, studies of marked birds in North America were attempted in the 1950s. Operation Recovery, which linked numerous ringing stations along the east coast in a study of autumn migration of passerines, and the Preseason Duck Ringing Programme in prairie states and provinces, conclusively demonstrated the...
Preliminary survey for entomopathogenic fungi associated with Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae) in southern New York and New England, USA
Elyes Zhioua, Howard S. Ginsberg, Richard A. Humber, Roger A. LeBrun
1999, Journal of Medical Entomology (36) 635-637
Free-living larval, nymphal, and adult Ixodes scapularis Say were collected from scattered locales in southern New England and New York to determine infection rates with entomopathogenic fungi. Infection rates of larvae, nymphs, males, and females were 0% (571), 0% (272), 0% (57), and 4.3% (47), respectively. Two entomopathogenic...
A model to predict breeding-season productivity for multibrooded songbirds
L.A. Powell, M.J. Conroy, D.G. Krementz, J. D. Lang
1999, The Auk (116) 1001-1008
Breeding-season productivity (the per capita number of offspring surviving to the end of the breeding season) is seldom estimated for multibrooded songbirds because of cost and logistical constraints. However, this parameter is critical for predictions of population growth rates and comparisons of seasonal productivity across geographic or temporal scales. We...
Modeling pattern in collections of parameters
W.A. Link
1999, Journal of Wildlife Management (63) 1017-1027
Wildlife management is increasingly guided by analyses of large and complex datasets. The description of such datasets often requires a large number of parameters, among which certain patterns might be discernible. For example, one may consider a long-term study producing estimates of annual survival rates; of interest is...