The 1999-2003 Summary of the North American Breeding Bird Survey
K.L. Pardieck, J.R. Sauer
2007, Bird Populations (8) 28-45
Data from the North American Breeding Bird Survey were used to estimate continental and regional changes in bird populations for the 5-yr period 1999-2003 and the 2-yr period 2002-2003. These short-term changes were placed in the context of population trends estimated over the 1966-2003 interval. During 1999-2003, 41%...
Morphological diversity and evolution of egg and clutch structure in amphibians
Ronald Altig, Roy W. McDiarmid
2007, Herpetological Monographs (21) 1-32
The first part of this synthesis summarizes the morphology of the jelly layers surrounding an amphibian ovum. We propose a standard terminology and discuss the evolution of jelly layers. The second part reviews the morphological diversity and arrangement of deposited eggs?the ovipositional mode; we recognize 5 morphological classes...
Current range of the eastern population of Painted Bunting (Passerina ciris). Part II: Winter range
P.W. Sykes Jr., S. Holzman, Eduardo E. Inigo-Elias
2007, North American Birds (61) 378-406
The importance of wintering areas for Neotropical migrants is well established. The wintering range of the eastern population of Painted Bunting (Passerina ciris) is described in detail and presented in maps. The paper also discusses extralimital records from islands in the Caribbean Basin as well as scattered wintering...
A new species of nectar-feeding bat, genus Lonchophylla, from western Colombia and western Ecuador (Mammalia: Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae)
N. Woodman
2007, Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington (120) 340-358
The twelve recognized species of nectar-feeding bats of the genus Lonchophylla occur in low- and middle-elevation, humid, Neotropical forests. Morphological and morphometrical analyses of specimens formerly lumped with Lonchophylla mordax O. Thomas (1903) support recognition of Lonchophylla concava Goldman (1914) as a separate species and reveal a third species from...
Climatic variation and the distribution of an amphibian polyploid complex
C.R.V. Otto, J.W. Snodgrass, D.C. Forester, J.C. Mitchell, R.W. Miller
2007, Journal of Animal Ecology (76) 1053-1061
1. The establishment of polyploid populations involves the persistence and growth of the polyploid in the presence of the progenitor species. Although there have been a number of animal polyploid species documented, relatively few inquiries have been made into the large-scale mechanisms of polyploid establishment in animal groups. Herein we...
Enhancing the interpretation of stated choice analysis through the application of a verbal protocol assessment
K.L. Cahill, J. L. Marion, S.R. Lawson
2007, Journal of Leisure Research (39) 201-221
A stated choice survey was employed to evaluate the relative importance of resource, social, and management attributes by asking visitors to select preferred configurations of these attributes. A verbal protocol assessment was added to consider how respondents interpret and respond to stated choice questions applied to hikers of a popular...
Revision of the characters of Centrolenidae (Amphibia: Anura: Athesphatanura), with comments on its taxonomy and the description of new taxa of glassfrogs
D.F. Cisneros-Heredia, Roy W. McDiarmid
2007, Zootaxa (1572) 1-82
Anurans of the family Centrolenidae are a diverse clade of arboreal frogs distributed across tropical America. Knowledge of their taxonomy, systematics, ecology, behavior, morphology, and other evolutionary aspects of their biology is deficient. Relationships among centrolenid species remain largely unresolved, with no satisfactory phylogenetic hypothesis, and none of the current...
Effects of methylmercury on reproduction in American kestrels
P.H. Albers, M.T. Koterba, R. Rossmann, W.A. Link, J.B. French, R.S. Bennett, W.C. Bauer
2007, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (26) 1856-1866
Sixty breeding pairs of captive American kestrels (Falco sparverius) were exposed to a range of sublethal dietary concentrations of mercury (Hg), in the form of methylmercuric chloride, and their subsequent reproduction was measured. Egg production, incubation performance, and the number and percent of eggs hatched decreased markedly between 3.3 and...
Analysis of multinomial models with unknown index using data augmentation
J. Andrew Royle, R.M. Dorazio, W.A. Link
2007, Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics (16) 67-85
Multinomial models with unknown index ('sample size') arise in many practical settings. In practice, Bayesian analysis of such models has proved difficult because the dimension of the parameter space is not fixed, being in some cases a function of the unknown index. We describe a data augmentation approach...
Population influences on tornado reports in the United States
C.J. Anderson, C. K. Wikle, Q. Zhou, J. Andrew Royle
2007, Weather and Forecasting (22) 571-579
The number of tornadoes reported in the United States is believed to be less than the actual incidence of tornadoes, especially prior to the 1990s, because tornadoes may be undetectable by human witnesses in sparsely populated areas and areas in which obstructions limit the line of sight. A hierarchical...
Comparison of immune responses of brown-headed cowbird and related blackbirds to West Nile and other mosquito-borne encephalitis viruses
W.K. Reisen, D.C. Hahn
2007, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (43) 439-449
The rapid geographic spread of West Nile virus (family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus, WNV) across the United States has stimulated interest in comparative host infection studies to delineate competent avian hosts critical for viral amplification. We compared the host competence of four taxonomically related blackbird species (Icteridae) after experimental infection with...
Occupancy estimation and modeling with multiple states and state uncertainty
J.D. Nichols, J.E. Hines, D.I. MacKenzie, M.E. Seamans, R. J. Gutierrez
2007, Ecology (88) 1395-1400
The distribution of a species over space is of central interest in ecology, but species occurrence does not provide all of the information needed to characterize either the well-being of a population or the suitability of occupied habitat. Recent methodological development has focused on drawing inferences about species occurrence in...
Are two methods better than one? Area constrained transects and leaf litterbags for sampling stream salamanders
S.D. Mattfeldt, E.H.C. Grant
2007, Herpetological Review (38) 43-45
Mapping the information landscape: Discerning peaks and valleys for ecological monitoring
L.J. Moniz, J.D. Nichols, J.M. Nichols
2007, Journal of Biological Physics (33) 171-181
We investigate previously unreported phenomena that have a potentially significant impact on the design of surveillance monitoring programs for ecological systems. Ecological monitoring practitioners have long recognized that different species are differentially informative of a system's dynamics, as codified in the well-known concepts of indicator or keystone species. Using a...
Poplar Island Environmental Restoration Project: Challenges in waterbird restoration on an island in Chesapeake Bay
R.M. Erwin, J. Miller, J.G. Reese
2007, Ecological Restoration (25) 256-262
At 460 hectares, the Paul Sarbanes Environmental Restoration Project at Poplar Island, Talbot County, Maryland, represents the largest 'beneficial use' dredged material project of the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers (a cooperative project with Maryland Port Administration). Begun in 1998, the 15-year restoration project will ultimately consist of roughly...
Application of information theory methods to food web reconstruction
L.J. Moniz, E.G. Cooch, S.P. Ellner, J.D. Nichols, J.M. Nichols
2007, Ecological Modelling (208) 145-158
In this paper we use information theory techniques on time series of abundances to determine the topology of a food web. At the outset, the food web participants (two consumers, two resources) are known; in addition we know that each consumer prefers one of the resources over the other....
Tarphonomus, a new genus of ovenbird (Aves: Passeriformes: Furnariidae) from South America
R.T. Chesser, R.T. Brumfield
2007, Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington (120) 337-339
Tarphonomus, a new genus of ovenbird (Aves: Passeriformes: Furnariidae) from South America, is described. Species included in the new genus, formerly placed in Upucerthia, are T. certhioides and T. harterti....
Making great leaps forward: Accounting for detectability in herpetological field studies
Marc J. Mazerolle, Larissa L. Bailey, William L. Kendall, J. Andrew Royle, Sarah J. Converse, James D. Nichols
2007, Journal of Herpetology (41) 672-689
Detecting individuals of amphibian and reptile species can be a daunting task. Detection can be hindered by various factors such as cryptic behavior, color patterns, or observer experience. These factors complicate the estimation of state variables of interest (e.g., abundance, occupancy, species richness) as well as the vital rates that...
Egg incubation position affects toxicity of air cell administered polychlorinated biphenyl 126 (3,3′,4,4′,5-pentachlorobiphenyl) in chicken (Gallus gallus) embryos
M.A. McKernan, Barnett A. Rattner, R. C. Hale, M. A. Ottinger
2007, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (26) 2724-2727
The avian egg is used extensively for chemical screening and determining the relative sensitivity of species to environmental contaminants (e.g., metals, pesticides, polyhalogenated compounds). The effect of egg incubation position on embryonic survival, pipping, and hatching success was examined following air cell administration of polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) congener 126 (3,3',4,4',5-pentachlorobiphenyl...
Adaptive harvest management of North American waterfowl populations: a brief history and future prospects
J.D. Nichols, M.C. Runge, Fred A. Johnson, B. Kenneth Williams
2007, Journal of Ornithology (148) S343-S349
Since 1995, the US Fish and Wildlife Service has used an adaptive approach to the management of sport harvest of mid-continent Mallard ducks (Anas platyrhynchos) in North America. This approach differs from many current approaches to conservation and management in requiring close collaboration between managers and scientists. Key elements of...
How many tigers Panthera tigris are there in Huai Kha Khaeng Wildlife Sanctuary, Thailand? An estimate using photographic capture-recapture sampling
S. Simcharoen, A. Pattanavibool, K. U. Karanth, J.D. Nichols, S. Kumar
2007, Oryx (41) 447-453
We used capture-recapture analyses to estimate the density of a tiger Panthera tigris population in the tropical forests of Huai Kha Khaeng Wildlife Sanctuary, Thailand, from photographic capture histories of 15 distinct individuals. The closure test results (z = 0.39, P = 0.65) provided some evidence in support of the...
Hierarchical spatial models of abundance and occurrence from imperfect survey data
J. Andrew Royle, M. Kery, R. Gautier, Hans Schmid
2007, Ecological Monographs (77) 465-481
Many estimation and inference problems arising from large-scale animal surveys are focused on developing an understanding of patterns in abundance or occurrence of a species based on spatially referenced count data. One fundamental challenge, then, is that it is generally not feasible to completely enumerate ('census') all individuals present...
A Bayesian state-space formulation of dynamic occupancy models
J. Andrew Royle, M. Kery
2007, Ecology (88) 1813-1823
Species occurrence and its dynamic components, extinction and colonization probabilities, are focal quantities in biogeography and metapopulation biology, and for species conservation assessments. It has been increasingly appreciated that these parameters must be estimated separately from detection probability to avoid the biases induced by nondetection error. Hence, there is...
A sampling device for the fauna of storm water catch basins
M. Butler, R. Casagrande, R. LeBrun, H. Ginsberg, A. Gettman
2007, Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the New Jersey Mosquito Control Association (94) 70-74
Storm water drainage catch basins provide habitat to a variety of different aquatic organisms including arthropods, molluscs and annelid worms. Arthropods such as mosquitoes are known to use these environments as larval habitat. Because of health concerns, catch basins are often targeted for mosquito control exposing all inhabitants...
Calculating background levels for ecological risk parameters in toxic harbor sediment
C.J. Leadon, T.R. McDonnell, J. Lear, D. Barclift
2007, Soil and Sediment Contamination (16) 433-450
Establishing background levels for biological parameters is necessary in assessing the ecological risks from harbor sediment contaminated with toxic chemicals. For chemicals in sediment, the term contaminated is defined as having concentrations above background and significant human health or ecological risk levels. For biological parameters, a site could...