The central arctic caribou herd
Raymond D. Cameron, Walter T. Smith, Robert G. White, Brad Griffith
David C. Douglas, Patricia E. Reynolds, E. B. Rhode, editor(s)
2002, Biological Science Report 2002-0001-4
From the mid-1970s through the mid-1980s, use of calving and summer habitats by Central Arctic herd caribou (Rangifer tarandus granti) declined near petroleum development infrastructure on Alaska's arctic coastal plain (Cameron et al. 1979; Cameron and Whitten 1980, Smith and Cameron 1983. Whitten and Cameron 1983a, 1985: Dau and Cameron...
Forage quantity and quality
Janet C. Jorgenson, Mark S. Udevitz, Nancy A. Felix
David C. Douglas, Patricia E. Reynolds, E. B. Rhode, editor(s)
2002, Biological Science Report 2002-0001-5
The Porcupine caribou herd has traditionally used the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, Alaska, for calving. Availability of nutritious forage has been hypothesized as one of the reasons the Porcupine caribou herd migrates hundreds of kilometers to reach the coastal plain for calving (Kuropat and Bryant 1980,...
Population genetic structure in Lahontan cutthroat trout
Jennifer L. Nielsen, George K. Sage
2002, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (131) 376-388
We used 10 microsatellite loci to examine the genetic population structure of cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus clarki within the Lahontan Basin complex. Genetic diversity was analyzed for trout from Nevada, California, and Utah representing three putative subspecies: Lahontan O. c. henshawi, Paiute O. c. seleniris, and Humboldt (an unnamed subspecies) cutthroat...
Polar Bears
Steven C. Amstrup
David C. Douglas, Patricia E. Reynolds, E. B. Rhode, editor(s)
2002, Biological Science Report 2002-0001-8
Polar bears (Ursus maritimus) are hunted throughout most of their range. In addition to hunting polar bears of the Beaufort Sea region are exposed to mineral and petroleum extraction and related human activities such as shipping road-building, and seismic testing (Stirling 1990).Little was known at the start of this project...
Abundance: Population size and density estimation
Mark S. Udevitz, William R. Gould
Abdel H. El-Shaarawi, Walter W. Piegorsch, editor(s)
2002, Book chapter, Encyclopedia of Environmetrics, volume 1
Estimates of population size (total number of individuals) or density (number of individuals per unit area) are some of the most basic requirements for wildlife research and management. This article provides a brief overview of approaches for wildlife population estimation. These include habitat-based approaches such as quadrat, line intercept,...
Growth and abundance of Pacific Sand Lance, Ammodytes hexapterus, under differing oceanographic regimes
Martin D. Robards, Floyd Gray, John F. Piatt
2002, Environmental Biology of Fishes (64) 429-441
Dramatic changes in seabird and marine mammal stocks in the Gulf of Alaska have been linked to shifts in abundance and composition of forage fish stocks over the past 20 years. The relative value (e.g., size and condition of individual fish, abundance) of specific forage fish stocks to predators under...
Land cover
Janet C. Jorgenson, Peter C. Joria, David C. Douglas
David C. Douglas, Patricia E. Reynolds, E. B. Rhode, editor(s)
2002, Biological Science Report 2002-0001-2
Documenting the distribution of land-cover types on the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge coastal plain is the foundation for impact assessment and mitigation of potential oil exploration and development. Vegetation maps facilitate wildlife studies by allowing biologists to quantify the availability of important wildlife habitats, investigate the relationships between animal locations...
Mechanisms of impact and potential recovery of nearshore vertebrate predators following the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill
Leslie E. Holland-Bartels, editor(s)
2002, Report
The 1989 spill of some 42 million L of crude oil into Prince William Sound, Alaska, represents not only the largest tanker spill in United States history, but the world’s largest spill in northern waters. Acute effects have been studied extensively. However, efforts to quantify the spill’s long-term chronic effects...
Ecological perspectives on Pacific salmon: Can we sustain biodiversity and fisheries?
E. Eric Knudsen
Kristine D. Lynch, Michael L. Jones, William W. Taylor, editor(s)
2002, Book chapter, Sustaining North American salmon: Perspectives across regions and disciplines
No abstract available....
Using satellite telemetry to define spatial population structure in polar bears in the Norwegian and western Russian Arctic
Mette Mauritzen, Andrew E. Derocher, Øystein Wiig, Stanislav Belikov, Andrei N. Boltunov, Gerald W. Garner
2002, Journal of Applied Ecology (39) 79-90
1. Animal populations, defined by geographical areas within a species’ distribution where population dynamics are largely regulated by births and deaths rather than by migration from surrounding areas, may be the correct unit for wildlife management. However, in heterogeneous landscapes varying habitat quality may yield subpopulations with distinct patterns in...
The porcupine caribou herd
Brad Griffith, David C. Douglas, Noreen E. Walsh, Donald D. Young, Thomas R. McCabe, Donald E. Russell, Robert G. White, Raymond D. Cameron, Kenneth R. Whitten
David C. Douglas, Patricia E. Reynolds, E. B. Rhode, editor(s)
2002, Biological Science Report 2002-0001-3
Documentation of the natural range of variation in ecological, life history, and physiological characteristics of caribou (Rangifer tarandus) of the Porcupine caribou herd is a necessary base for detecting or predicting any potential effects of industrial development on the performance (e.g., distribution, demography, weight-gain of individuals) of the herd. To...
A tectonic earthquake sequence preceding the April-May 1999 eruption of Shishaldin Volcano, Alaska
S.C. Moran, S.D. Stihler, J.A. Power
2002, Bulletin of Volcanology (64) 520-524
On 4 March 1999, a shallow ML 5.2 earthquake occurred beneath Unimak Island in the Aleutian Arc. This earthquake was located 10-15 km west of Shishaldin Volcano, a large, frequently active basaltic-andesite stratovolcano. A Strombolian eruption began at Shishaldin roughly 1 month after the mainshock, culminating in a large explosive...
A near-surface, daytime occurrence of two mesopelagic fish species (Stenobrachius leucopsarus and Leuroglossus schmidti) in a glacial fjord
Alisa A. Abookire, John F. Piatt, Suzann G. Speckman
2002, Fishery Bulletin (100) 376-380
The northern lampfish (Stenobrachius leucopsarus, family Myctophidae) and northern smoothtongue (Leuroglossus schmidti, family Bathylagidae) are mesopelagic fishes, defined by their vertical distribution in the mesopelagic zone (200–1000 m) during daylight hours. Northern lampfish range from the Bering Sea to southern California (Shimada, 1948), where their abundance is highest along the...
Some aspects of resource uncertainty and their economic consequences in assessment of the 1002 Area of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
Emil D. Attanasi, John H. Schuenemeyer
2002, Natural Resources Research (11) 109-120
Exploration ventures in frontier areas have high risks. Before committing to them, firms prepare regional resource assessments to evaluate the potential payoffs. With no historical basis for directly estimating size distribution of undiscovered accumulations, reservoir attribute probability distributions can be assessed subjectively and used to project...
Preeruptive inflation and surface interferometric coherence characteristics revealed by satellite radar interferometry at Makushin Volcano, Alaska: 1993-2000
Z. Lu, J.A. Power, V.S. McConnell, C. Wicks Jr., D. Dzurisin
2002, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (107) ECV 1-1-ECV 1-13
Pilot reports in January 1995 and geologic field observations from the summer of 1996 indicate that a relatively small explosive eruption of Makushin, one of the more frequently active volcanoes in the Aleutian arc of Alaska, occurred on 30 January 1995. Several independent radar interferograms that each span the time...
Reduction of provisioning effort in response to experimental manipulation of chick nutritional status in the Horned Puffin
A.M.A. Harding, Thomas I. van Pelt, John F. Piatt, A.S. Kitaysky
2002, Condor (104) 842-847
Using a supplemental feeding experiment, we investigated the ability of adult Horned Puffins to decrease provisioning effort in response to reduced nutritional requirements of chicks. We found no difference between experimental and control groups in parental provisioning before supplementary feeding was initiated. After receiving supplemental food for seven days, experimental...
The effects of partial cutting on stand structure and growth of western hemlock-Sitka spruce stands in southeast Alaska
R.L. Deal, J. C. Tappeiner
2002, Forest Ecology and Management (159) 173-186
The effects of partial cutting on species composition, new and residual-tree cohorts, tree size distribution, and tree growth was evaluated on 73 plots in 18 stands throughout southeast Alaska. These partially cut stands were harvested 12-96 years ago, when 16-96% of the former stand basal area was removed. Partial cutting...
Educational background and professional participation by federal wildlife biologists: Implications for science, management, and The Wildlife Society
Joel A. Schmutz
2002, Wildlife Society Bulletin (30) 594-598
Over 2,000 people are employed in wildlife biology in the United States federal government. The size of this constituency motivated me to examine the amount of formal education federal biologists have received and the extent of continuing education they undertake by reading journals or attending scientific meetings. Most federal biologists...
Timing and warmth of the Last Interglacial period: New U-series evidence from Hawaii and Bermuda and a new fossil compilation for North America
D.R. Muhs, K. R. Simmons, B. Steinke
2002, Quaternary Science Reviews (21) 1355-1383
The timing and duration of the Last Interglacial period have been controversial, with some studies suggesting a relatively short duration that is orbitally forced and others suggesting a long duration that is at most only partly related to orbital forcing. New, high-precison thermal ionization mass spectrometric (TIMS) U-series ages of...
Linking the pacific decadal oscillation to seasonal stream discharge patterns in Southeast Alaska
E.G. Neal, Walter M. Todd, C. Coffeen
2002, Journal of Hydrology (263) 188-197
This study identified and examined differences in Southeast Alaskan streamflow patterns between the two most recent modes of the Pacific decadal oscillation (PDO). Identifying relationships between the PDO and specific regional phenomena is important for understanding climate variability, interpreting historical hydrological variability, and improving water-resources forecasting. Stream discharge data from...
Does increasing daylength control seasonal changes in clutch sizes of Northern Pintails (Anas acuta)?
Gary L. Krapu, G.A. Sargeant, A.E.H. Perkins
2002, The Auk (119) 498-506
We evaluated spatiotemporal variation in clutch sizes of Northern Pintails (pintails; Anas acuta) nesting in California (1985 to 1996), North Dakota (1982 to 1985), Saskatchewan (1982 to 1985) and Alaska (1991 to 1993) to determine whether seasonal declines in clutch size varied in ways that were consistent with a controlling...
Activity patterns and time budgets of the declining sea otter population at Amchitka Island, Alaska
Thomas S. Gelatt, Donald B. Siniff, James A. Estes
2002, Journal of Wildlife Management (66) 29-39
Time budgets of predators may reflect population status if time spent foraging varies with local prey abun- dance. We assumed that the sea otter (Enhydra lutris) population at Amchitka Island, Alaska, USA, had been at equilibrium since the early 1960s and collected time budgets of otters to be used to...
Genetic characterization of infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus of coastal salmonid stocks in Washington State
E.J. Emmenegger, Gael Kurath
2002, Journal of Aquatic Animal Health (14) 25-34
Infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV) is a pathogen that infects many Pacific salmonid stocks from the watersheds of North America. Previous studies have thoroughly characterized the genetic diversity of IHNV isolates from Alaska and the Hagerman Valley in Idaho. To enhance understanding of the evolution and viral transmission patterns of...
Holocene tephrochronology of the Cold Bay area, southwest Alaska Peninsula
E.C. Carson, J.H. Fournelle, T. P. Miller, D.M. Mickelson
2002, Quaternary Science Reviews (21) 2213-2228
The major-element glass geochemistry of 92 tephra samples from the southwest Alaska Peninsula provides the basis for establishing a Holocene tephrochronology for the region. Electron microprobe analysis has been combined with field descriptions of samples, stratigraphic relationships between tephra samples and sample localities, and glass shard micro-morphology to correlate these...
Persistent organochlorine pollutants in ringed seals and polar bears collected from northern Alaska
J.R. Kucklick, W.D.J. Struntz, P.R. Becker, G.W. York, T. M. O'Hara, J.E. Bohonowych
2002, Science of the Total Environment (287) 45-59
Blubber samples from ringed seal (Phoca hispida; n=8) and polar bear subcutaneous fat (Ursus maritimus; n=5) were collected near Barrow, Alaska in 1996 as part of the Alaska Marine Mammal Tissue Archival Project (AMMTAP) and retained in the National Biomonitoring Specimen Bank at the National Institute of Standards and Technology...