Loma Prieta response of an eccentrically braced tall building
M. Çelebi
1993, Conference Paper, Structural Engineering in Natural Hazards Mitigation
Acceleration response records obtained during the October 17, 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake [Ms = 7.1] from the 47-story, eccentrically braced Embarcadero Building (No. 4) [EMB], located in San Francisco, California, are studied. The predominant response modes of the building and the associated dynamic characteristics are determined by spectral analyses and...
Application of mixed-mode, solid-phase extraction in environmental and clinical chemistry. Combining hydrogen-bonding, cation-exchange and Van der Waals interactions
M. S. Mills, E.M. Thurman, M.J. Pedersen
1993, Journal of Chromatography A (629) 11-21
Silica- and styrene-divinylbenzene-based mixed-mode resins that contain C8, C18 and sulphonated cation-exchange groups were compared for their efficiency in isolation of neutral triazine compounds from water and of the basic drug, benzoylecgonine, from urine. The triazine compounds were isolated by a combination of Van der Waals and hydrogen-bonding interactions, and...
Chemical and nutritional evaluation of soya protein preparations as primary nitrogen sources for rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss)
G. L. Rumsey, S. G. Hughes, Robert Winfree
1993, Animal Feed Science and Technology (40) 135-151
Five soya-bean preparations that had been subjected to various physicochemical processing procedures were chemically defined in respect to proximate analysis, amino acid analyses, protease inhibitor activity, soluble oligosaccharides and antigenicity. These soya preparations were then formulated, along with a low-temperature fish meal control, into six isonitrogenous and isocaloric experimental diets....
Modeling the response of native steelhead to hatchery supplementation programs in an Idaho River
Alan Byrne, T.C. Bjornn, J.D. McIntyre
1993, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (12) 62-78
A life history model was used to predict the response of native steelhead Oncorhynchus mykiss in the Lochsa River, Idaho, to long-term supplementation with hatchery fry and smolts. The four key factors affecting the response of the native fish to a stocking program were (1) the number of native spawners,...
A theoretical model for the flux of radon from rock to ground water
Richard B. Wanty, Errol P. Lawrence, Linda C. Gundersen
1992, GSA Special Papers (271)
A model is derived to predict the abundance of 222Rn in ground water in contact with a rock of known uranium content. The model assumes that secular equilibrium is attained in the rock-water system as a whole, but is independent of any microscopic geometric properties of the system. The key...
Use of semipermeable membrane devices for in situ monitoring of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in aquatic environments
Jon A. Lebo, James L. Zajicek, James N. Huckins, Jimmie D. Petty, Paul H. Peterman
1992, Chemosphere (25) 697-718
A method is given for the recovery, cleanup, and analysis of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) that have been sequestered in SPMDs (semipermeable membrane devices). SPMDs are polymeric membranes enclosing lipids, and mimic the bioconcentration process of aquatic animals. SPMDs are used as passive, in situ monitors of contamination by organic...
Sources of nitrogen and phosphorous to northern San Francisco Bay
Stephen W. Hager, Laurence E. Schemel
1992, Estuaries and Coasts (15) 40-52
We studied nutrient sources to the Sacramento River and Suisun Bay (northern San Francisco Bay) and the influence which these sources have on the distributions of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) and dissolved reactive phosphorus (DRP) in the river and bay. We...
Impacts of variation in planktivorous fish on abundance of daphnids: A simulation model of the Lake Mendota food web: Chapter 20
Chris Luecke, Cynthia C. Lunte, Russell A. Wright, Dale M. Robertson, Ann S. McLain
James F. Kitchell, editor(s)
1992, Book chapter, Food Web Managment: A Case Study of Lake Mendota
Previous chapters in this volume have outlined the goals of the Lake Mendota food web manipulation study (Rudstam et al., Ch. 12) and have reported on variations in phytoplankton and zooplankton abundances during the past 15 years (Lathrop and Carpenter, Ch. 7 and 8). Because of the long time scales...
The zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha), a new pest in North America: reproductive mechanisms as possible targets of control strategies
Jeffrey L. Ram, Peter Fong, Roger P. Croll, Susan J. Nichols, Darcie Wall
1992, Invertebrate Reproduction and Development (22) 77-86
The zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) has spread rapidly in temperate fresh waters of North America since its introduction into the Great Lakes in 1985 or 1986. It attaches to hard substrates, forming layers, occluding water intakes, encrusting and killing native mussels, filtering algae in competition with other planktivores, and...
Puffins as samplers of juvenile pollock and other forage fish in the Gulf of Alaska
Scott Hatch, Gerald A. Sanger
1992, Marine Ecology Progress Series (80) 1-14
We sampled the nestling diets of tufted puffins (Fratercula cirrhata) and horned puffins (F. corniculata) in 3 years at colonies from the north-central Gulf of Alaska to the eastern Aleutian Islands, Alaska, USA. Overall, tufted puffins consumed (by weight) 41% sandlance (Ammodytes hexapterus), 22% capelin (Mallotus villosus), 19% walleye pollock...
Effects of chronic exposure to soft, acidic water on gill development and chloride cell numbers in embryo-larval brook trout, Salvelinus fontinalis
D.J. Conklin, R.C. Mowbray, W.H. Gingerich
1992, Aquatic Toxicology (22) 39-52
Recruitment failure is considered to be a major factor contributing to the decline of fish populations in soft, acidic waters; direct mortality of embryo-larval fishes has been postulated as a major cause of the decline. Little is understood of the physiological consequences to embryo-larval fishes of prolonged exposure to soft,...
[Software review] RAMAS/Stage: Generalized stage-based modeling for population dynamics
J.R. Sauer
1992, The Quarterly Review of Biology (67) 569-570
Capture-recapture models: Using marked animals to study population dynamics
J.D. Nichols
1992, BioScience (42) 94-102
No abstract available....
Body condition, food habits, and molt status of late-wintering ruddy ducks in California
W.L. Hohman, C.D. Ankney, D.L. Roster
1992, Southwestern Naturalist (37) 268-273
We studied body condition, food habits, and molt status of late-wintering ruddy ducks (Oxyura jamaicensis) using drainwater evaporation ponds in the southern San Joaquin Valley, California. Levels of body fat and protein were similar by sex but varied by age (adults greater than immatures). Masses of breast and leg muscle...
Robustness of survival estimates for radio-marked animals
C.M. Bunck, Chiu-Lan Chen
1992, Biometric Bulletin (9) 8 (Abstrac
Telemetry techniques are often used to study the survival of birds and mammals; particularly whcn mark-recapture approaches are unsuitable. Both parametric and nonparametric methods to estimate survival have becn developed or modified from other applications. An implicit assumption in these approaches is that the probability of re-locating an animal with...
Variations in the fine-scale composition of a central Pacific ferromanganese crust: Paleoceanographic implications
J.R. Hein, W.A. Bohrson, M. S. Schulz, M. Noble, D.A. Clague
1992, Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology (7) 63-77
A 47- to 60-mm-thick Fe-Mn crust from Horizon Guyot (water depth 1800–1780 m), central Pacific, was used to evaluate the potential of crusts as recorders of Neogene paleoceanographic and paleoclimatic conditions. The chemical composition was determined by microprobe for 16 elements from a polished thin section. Three analyses were made...
Population Characteristics and Simulation Modeling of Black Ducks
W.W. Blandin
1992, Fish and Wildlife Research No. 11
Techniques for rearing and releasing nonmigratory cranes: Lessons from the Mississippi Sandhill Crane program
D. H. Ellis, Glenn H. Olsen, G.F. Gee, Jane M. Nicolich, K.E. O’Malley, Meenakshi Nagendran, Scott G. Hereford, P. Range, W.T. Harper, R.P. Ingram, D.G. Smith
1992, Book chapter, Proceedings of the Sixth North American Crane Workshop.
Captive-reared Mississippi sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis pulla) reared at the Patuxent Wildlife Research Center (Patuxent) have been released at the Mississippi Sandhill Crane National Wildlife Refuge (MSCNWR) since 1981. Of 131 birds released through December 1990, 103 were reared by foster parents. The remaining 28 were experimentally hand-reared in 1989...
Modeling metapopulation dynamics for single species of seabirds
P. A. Buckley, R. Downer
D.R. McCullough, R.H. Barrett, editor(s)
1992, Book chapter, Wildlife 2001: Populations
Seabirds share many characteristics setting them apart from other birds. Importantly, they breed more or less obligatorily in local clusters of colonies that can move regularly from site to site, and they routinely exchange breeders. The properties of such metapopulations have only recently begun to be examined, often with...
A stochastic population model of mid-continental mallards
Rolf R. Koford, J.R. Sauer, Douglas H. Johnson, J.D. Nichols, M.D. Samuel
D.R. McCullough, R.H. Barrett, editor(s)
1992, Book chapter, Wildlife 2001: Populations
We developed a simulation model that integrates infonnation on factors affecting the population dynamics of mallards in the mid-continental region of the United States. In the model we vary age, body mass, and reproductive and molt status of simulated females. Females use several types of nesting and foraging habitat in...
Behavior of sandhill cranes harnessed with different satellite transmitters
Glenn H. Olsen, D. H. Ellis, S.E. Landfried, L.H. Miller, S.S. Klugman, M.R. Fuller, C.H. Vermillion
1992, Book chapter, Proceedings of the Sixth North American Crane Workshop
The effectiveness of various attachment methods and designs of platform transmitting terminals (PTT's) was tested on captive sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis) at the Patuxent Wildlife Research Center, Laurel, Maryland, during 1989-91. Combinations of attachment and transmitter designs included neoprene cord harness with batteries separate from the transmitter (2 harness designs),...
Population models for passerine birds: structure, parameterization, and analysis
B.R. Noon, J.R. Sauer
D.R. McCullough, R.H. Barrett, editor(s)
1992, Book chapter, Wildlife 2001: Populations.
Population models have great potential as management tools, as they use infonnation about the life history of a species to summarize estimates of fecundity and survival into a description of population change. Models provide a framework for projecting future populations, determining the effects of management decisions on future population dynamics,...
Foreword
H.M. Reeves, J.D. Nichols
1992, Fish and Wildlife Research 11
Modelling population change from time series data
R. J. Barker, J.R. Sauer
D.R. McCullough, R.H. Barrett, editor(s)
1992, Book chapter, Wildlife 2001: Populations
Information on change in population size over time is among the most basic inputs for population management. Unfortunately, population changes are generally difficult to identify, and once identified difficult to explain. Sources of variald (patterns) in population data include: changes in environment that affect carrying capaciyy and produce...
Karyotype and identification of sex in two endangered crane species
C. Goodpasture, G. Seluja, G. Gee
Don A. Wood, editor(s)
1992, Book chapter, Proceedings of the 1988 North American Crane Workshop
A laboratory procedure for sex identification of monomorphic birds was developed using modern cytological methods of detecting chromosome abnormalities in human amniotic fluid samples. A pin feather is taken from a pre-fledging bird for tissue culture and karyotype analysis. Through this method, the sex was identified and the karyotype described...