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Page 1670, results 41726 - 41750

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Population ecology of feral horses in an era of fertility control management
J.I. Ransom
2012, Thesis
Management of wildlife often requires intervention to regulate growth of populations that would otherwise become overabundant. Controlling fecundity using contraceptives has become an increasingly popular tool for attempting to manage locally overabundant wildlife species, but the population-level effects of such applications are largely unknown. Contraceptive treatments can produce unexpected feedbacks...
Variations of transcript profiles between sea otters Enhydra lutris from Prince William Sound, Alaska, and clinically normal reference otters
A. Keith Miles, Lizabeth Bowen, Brenda E. Ballachey, James L. Bodkin, M. Murray, J.L. Estes, Robin A. Keister, J.L. Stott
2012, Marine Ecology Progress Series (451) 201-212
Development of blood leukocyte gene transcript profiles has the potential to expand condition assessments beyond those currently available to evaluate wildlife health, including sea otters Enhydra lutris, both individually and as populations. The 10 genes targeted in our study represent multiple physiological systems that play a role in immuno-modulation, inflammation,...
Coastal impacts, adaptation, and vulnerabilities: a technical input to the 2013 National Climate Assessment
Virginia Burkett, Margaret Davidson
Virginia Burkett, Margaret Davidson, editor(s)
2012, Book, National Climate Assessment regional technical input reports
The coast has long provided communities with a multitude of benefits including an abundance of natural resources that sustain economies, societies, and ecosystems. Coasts provide natural harbors for commerce, trade, and transportation; beaches and shorelines that attract residents and tourists; and wetlands and estuaries that are critical for fisheries and...
Range-wide patterns of migratory connectivity in the western sandpiper Calidris mauri
Samantha E. Franks, D. Ryan Norris, T. Kurt Kyser, Guillermo Fernández, Birgit Schwarz, Roberto Carmona, Mark A. Colwell, Jorge Correa Sandoval, Alexey Dondua, H. River Gates, Ben Haase, David J. Hodkinson, Ariam Jimenez, Richard B. Lanctot, Brent Ortego, Brett K. Sandercock, Felicia J. Sanders, John Y. Takekawa, Nils Warnock, Ron C. Ydenberg, David B. Lank
2012, Journal of Avian Biology (43) 155-167
Understanding the population dynamics of migratory animals and predicting the consequences of environmental change requires knowing how populations are spatially connected between different periods of the annual cycle. We used stable isotopes to examine patterns of migratory connectivity across the range of the western sandpiper Calidris mauri. First, we developed...
Endangered river fish: factors hindering conservation and restoration
Steven J. Cooke, Craig P. Paukert, Zeb Hogan
2012, Endangered Species Research (17) 179-191
Globally, riverine fish face many anthropogenic threats including riparian and flood plain habitat degradation, altered hydrology, migration barriers, fisheries exploitation, environmental (climate) change, and introduction of invasive species. Collectively, these threats have made riverine fishes some of the most threatened taxa on the planet. Although much effort has been devoted...
Post-earthquake building safety assessments for the Canterbury Earthquakes
J. Marshall, J. Barnes, N. Gould, K. Jaiswal, B. Lizundia, David A. Swanson, F. Turner
2012, Conference Paper, Structures Congress 2012
This paper explores the post-earthquake building assessment program that was utilized in Christchurch, New Zealand following the Canterbury Sequence of earthquakes beginning with the Magnitude (Mw.) 7.1 Darfield event in September 2010. The aftershocks or triggered events, two of which exceeded Mw 6.0, continued with events in February and June...
A shell-neutral modeling approach yields sustainable oyster harvest estimates: a retrospective analysis of the Louisiana state primary seed grounds
Thomas M. Soniat, John M. Klinck, Eric N. Powell, Nathan W. Cooper, Abdelguerfi, Eileen E. Hofmann, Janak Dahal, Shengru Tu, John Finigan, Benjamin S. Eberline, Jerome F. La Peyre, Megan K. LaPeyre, Fareed Qaddoura
2012, Journal of Shellfish Research (31) 1103-1112
A numerical model is presented that defines a sustainability criterion as no net loss of shell, and calculates a sustainable harvest of seed (<75 mm) and sack or market oysters (≥75 mm). Stock assessments of the Primary State Seed Grounds conducted east of the Mississippi from 2009 to 2011 show...
Postfire chaparral regeneration under mediterranean and non-mediterranean climates
Jon E. Keeley, Connie J. Fotheringham, Philip W. Rundel
2012, Madroño (59) 109-127
This study compares postfire regeneration and diversity patterns in fire-prone chaparral shrublands from mediterranean (California) and non-mediterranean-type climates (Arizona). Vegetation sampling was conducted in tenth hectare plots with nested subplots for the first two years after fire. Floras in the two regions were compared with Jaccard's Index and importance of...
Molecular dynamics simulation of nitric oxide in myoglobin
Myung Won Lee, Markus Meuwly
2012, Journal of Physical Chemistry (116) 4154-4162
The infrared (IR) spectroscopy and ligand migration of photodissociated nitric oxide (NO) in and around the active sites in myoglobin (Mb) are investigated. A distributed multipolar model for open-shell systems is developed and used, which allows one to realistically describe the charge distribution around the diatomic probe molecule. The IR...
Extreme events, trends, and variability in Northern Hemisphere lake-ice phenology (1855-2005)
Barbara J. Benson, John J. Magnuson, Olaf P. Jensen, Virginia M. Card, Glenn Hodgkins, Johanna Korhonen, David M. Livingstone, Kenton M. Stewart, Gesa A. Weyhenmeyer, Nick G. Granin
2012, Climatic Change (112) 299-323
Often extreme events, more than changes in mean conditions, have the greatest impact on the environment and human well-being. Here we examine changes in the occurrence of extremes in the timing of the annual formation and disappearance of lake ice in the Northern Hemisphere. Both changes in the mean condition...
Fire-driven alien invasion in a fire-adapted ecosystem
Jon E. Keeley, Teresa J. Brennan
2012, Oecologia (169) 1043-1052
Disturbance plays a key role in many alien plant invasions. However, often the main driver of invasion is not disturbance per se but alterations in the disturbance regime. In some fire-adapted shrublands, the community is highly resilient to infrequent, high-intensity fires, but changes in the fire regime that result in...
Structure, spectroscopy and dynamics of layered H2O and CO2 ices
Lee. Myung Won, Nuria Plattner, Markus Meuwly
2012, Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics (14) 15464-15474
Molecular dynamics simulations of structural, spectroscopic and dynamical properties of mixed water–carbon dioxide (H2O–CO2) ices are discussed over temperature ranges relevant to atmospheric and astrophysical conditions. The simulations employ multipolar force fields to represent electrostatic interactions which are essential for spectroscopic and dynamical investigations. It is found that at the...
Statewide summary for Texas
Lawrence R. Handley, Kathryn A. Spear, Jim Gibeaut, Cindy A. Thatcher
2012, Report, Emergent wetlands status and trends in the northern Gulf of Mexico: 1950-2010
The Texas coast (Figure 1) consists of complex and diverse ecosystems with a varying precipitation gradient. The northernmost portion of the coast, extending from Sabine Lake to Galveston Bay, is composed of salt, brackish, intermediate, and fresh marshes, with humid flatwoods inland (Moulton and others, 1997). Coastal prairies are found...
Introduction to phytoremediation of contaminated groundwater
James E. Landmeyer
2012, Book
This book provides the reader with the comprehensive view necessary to understand and critically evaluate the design, implementation, and monitoring of phytoremediation at sites characterized by contaminated groundwater. Part I presents the historical foundation of the interaction between plants and groundwater, introduces fundamental groundwater concepts for plant physiologists, and...
Assessment of freshwater fish assemblages and their habitats in the National Park Service system of the southeastern United States
James M. Long, Nathan P. Nibbelink, Kevin T. McAbee, Julie W. Stahli
2012, Fisheries (37) 212-225
The southeast region of the United States contains the highest diversity of freshwater fish species in the country: approximately 662 species. Existing protected areas like units of the National Park Service (NPS) should reflect this biodiversity, but there has been no broad-scale assessment. We compiled several data sets identifying native...
Accuracy evaluation of an ASTER-Derived Global Digital Elevation Model (GDEM) Version 1 and Version 2 for two sites in western Africa
Peter G. Chirico, Katherine C. Malpeli, Sarah M. Trimble
2012, GIScience and Remote Sensing (49) 775-801
This study compares the ASTER Global DEM version 1 (GDEMv1) and version 2 (GDEMv2) for two study sites with distinct terrain and land cover characteristics in western Africa. The effects of land cover, slope, relief, and stack number are evaluated through both absolute and relative DEM statistical comparisons. While GDEMv2...
Well log characterization of natural gas-hydrates
Timothy S. Collett, Myung W. Lee
2012, Book
In the last 25 years there have been significant advancements in the use of well-logging tools to acquire detailed information on the occurrence of gas hydrates in nature: whereas wireline electrical resistivity and acoustic logs were formerly used to identify gas-hydrate occurrences in wells drilled in Arctic permafrost environments, more...
A fine-scale assessment of using barriers to conserve native stream salmonids: a case study in Akokala Creek, Glacier National Park, USA
Clint C. Muhlfeld, Vincent S. D'Angelo, S.T. Kalinowski, Erin L. Landguth, C.C. Downs, J. Tohtz, Jeffrey L. Kershner
2012, Open Fish Science Journal (5) 9-20
Biologists are often faced with the difficult decision in managing native salmonids of where and when to install barriers as a conservation action to prevent upstream invasion of nonnative fishes. However, fine-scale approaches to assess long-term persistence of populations within streams and watersheds chosen for isolation management are often lacking....
Shrews, rats, and a polecat in "the pardoner’s tale"
Sandy Feinstein, Neal Woodman
Carolynn Van Dyke, editor(s)
2012, Book chapter, Rethinking Chaucerian beasts
While historically existing animals and literary animal characters inform allegorical and metaphorical characterization in The Canterbury Tales, figurative usage does not erase recognition of the material animal. "The Pardoner's Tale," for one, challenges the terms of conventional animal metaphors by refocusing attention on common animals as common animals and common...
Geostatistical population-mixture approach to unconventional-resource assessment with an application to the Woodford Gas Shale, Arkoma Basin, eastern Oklahoma
Ricardo A. Olea, Ronald Charpentier, Troy A. Cook, David W. Houseknecht, Christopher P. Garrity
David W. Houseknecht, Ronald R. Charpentier, editor(s)
2012, SPE Reservoir Evaluation & Engineering (15) 554-562
Evaluation of resources such as tight sands and gas shales requires the formulation of assessment models that are different from those used for the inference of conventional resources. Formulations in present use are based in classical statistics that ignore the partly organized and partly random geographical variation of attributes related...
Effect of organic-matter type and thermal maturity on methane adsorption in shale-gas systems
Tongwei Zhang, Geoffrey S. Ellis, Stephen C. Ruppel, Kitty Milliken, Rongsheng Yang
2012, Organic Geochemistry (47) 120-131
A series of methane (CH4) adsorption experiments on bulk organic rich shales and their isolated kerogens were conducted at 35 °C, 50 °C and 65 °C and CH4 pressure of up to 15 MPa under dry conditions. Samples from the Eocene Green River Formation, Devonian–Mississippian Woodford Shale and Upper Cretaceous...
A circumpolar monitoring framework for polar bears
Dag Vongraven, Jon Aars, Steven C. Amstrup, Stephen N. Atkinson, Stanislav Belikov, Erik W. Born, T.D. DeBruyn, Andrew E. Derocher, George M. Durner, Michael J. Gill, Nicholas J. Lunn, Martyn E. Obbard, Jack Omelak, Nikita Ovsyanikov, Elizabeth L. Peacock, E.E. Richardson, Vicki Sahanatien, Ian Stirling, Øystein Wiig
2012, Ursus (23) 1-66
Polar bears (Ursus maritimus) occupy remote regions that are characterized by harsh weather and limited access. Polar bear populations can only persist where temporal and spatial availability of sea ice provides adequate access to their marine mammal prey. Observed declines in sea ice availability will continue as long as greenhouse...
Spatiotemporal analysis of black spruce forest soils and implications for the fate of C
Jennifer W. Harden, Kristen L. Manies, Jonathan O'Donnell, Kristofer Johnson, Steve Frolking, Zhaosheng Fan
2012, Journal of Geophysical Research (117)
Post-fire storage of carbon (C) in organic-soil horizons was measured in one Canadian and three Alaskan chronosequences in black spruce forests, together spanning stand ages of nearly 200 yrs. We used a simple mass balance model to derive estimates of inputs, losses, and accumulation rates of C on timescales of...