Evidence for multiple mechanisms of crustal contamination of magma from compositionally zoned plutons and associated ultramafic intrusions of the Alaska Range
P.W. Reiners, B.K. Nelson, S.W. Nelson
1996, Journal of Petrology (37) 261-292
Models of continental crustal magmagenesis commonly invoke the interaction of mafic mantle-derived magma and continental crust to explain geochemical and petrologic characteristics of crustal volcanic and plutonic rocks. This interaction and the specific mechanisms of crustal contamination associated with it are poorly understood. An excellent opportunity to study the...
20th-century glacial-marine sedimentation in Vitus Lake, Bering Glacier, Alaska, U.S.A.
B. F. Molnia, A. Post, P.R. Carlson
1996, Annals of Glaciology (22) 205-210
Vitus Lake, the ice-marginal basin at the southeastern edge of Bering Glacier, Alaska, U.S.A., is a site of modern, rapid, glacial-marine sedimentation. Rather than being a fresh-water lake, Vitus Lake is a tidally influenced, marine to brackish embayment connected to the Pacific Ocean by an inlet, the Seal River. Vitus...
Aeromagnetic survey over U.S. to advance geomagnetic research
T.G. Hildenbrand, R.J. Blakely, W. J. Hinze, Gordon R. Keller, R.A. Langel, M. Nabighian, W. Roest
1996, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (77) 265-268
A proposed high‐altitude survey of the United States offers an exciting and cost effective opportunity to collect magnetic‐anomaly data. Lockheed Martin Missile and Space Company is considering funding a reimbursable ER‐2 aircraft (Figure 1) mission to collect synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery at an altitude of about 21 km over...
Behavioral tactics of male sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) under varying operating sex ratios
Thomas P. Quinn, Milo D. Adkison, Michael B. Ward
1996, Ethology (102) 304-322
Previous studies have demonstrated several reproductive-behavior patterns in male salmon, including competitive and sneaking tactics, the formation of hierarchies, and non-hierarchical aggregations around ripe females. Through behavioral observations at varying spatial and temporal scales, we examined the hypothesis that operational sex ratio (OSR) determines male sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) distribution...
Variation in egg size of the northern pintail
Paul L. Flint, J. Barry Grand
1996, The Condor (98) 162-165
Egg size is an important determinant of reproductive investment by birds. For many species, total investment in a clutch is limited by the size of stored reserves (Ankney and MacInnes 1978, Esler and Grand 1994a). Egg size determines the unit by which these stored reserves are partitioned. Individual females in...
Allocation of limited reserves to a clutch: A model explaining the lack of a relationship between clutch size and egg size
Paul L. Flint, J. Barry Grand, James S. Sedinger
1996, The Auk (113) 939-942
Lack (1967, 1968) proposed that clutch size in waterfowl is limited by the nutrients available to females when producing eggs. He suggested that if nutrients available for clutch formation are limited, then species producing small eggs would, on average, lay more eggs than species with large eggs. Rohwer (1988) argues...
Survival of northern pintail ducklings on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska
J. Barry Grand, Paul L. Flint
1996, The Condor (98) 48-53
We studied survival rates of Northern Pintail (Anas acuta; hereafter pintail) broods and ducklings along the lower Kashunuk River on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska. Survival rates were determined for 770 ducklings in 111 broods. Brood sizes at hatch were smaller in 1993 versus 1991 and 1992. Duckling survival rates were...
Alaska and its importance to Western Hemisphere shorebirds
Robert E. Gill Jr., Stanley E. Senner
1996, International Wader Studies (8) 8-14
Thirty-seven species of shorebirds breed in Alaska, and six overwinter in its subarctic regions. The coastal habitats of Alaska provide critical staging areas during spring and fall migrations; 51 sites qualify within the three categories of shorebird reserves listed by the Western Hemisphere Shorebird Reserve Network (Hemispheric, International and Regional)....
Phylogenetic relationships within the Alcidae (Charadriiformes: Aves) inferred from total molecular evidence
Vicki L. Friesen, Allan J. Baker, John F. Piatt
1996, Molecular Biology and Evolution (13) 359-367
The Alcidae is a unique assemblage of Northern Hemisphere seabirds that forage by "flying" underwater. Despite obvious affinities among the species, their evolutionary relationships are unclear. We analyzed nucleotide sequences of 1,045 base pairs of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene and allelic profiles for 37 allozyme loci in all 22...
Migration, fidelity, and use of autumn staging grounds in Alaska by Cackling Canada Geese Branta canadensis minima
Robert E. Gill Jr., Christopher Babcock, Colleen M. Handel, William R. Butler Jr., Dennis G. Raveling
1996, Wildfowl (47) 42-61
Cackling Canada Geese were studied annually (1985-88) on autumn migration staging areas in Alaska during a period of rapid population growth. Geese concentrated at two estuaries (Ugashik Bay and Cinder Lagoon) along the north side of the Alaska Peninsula. Birds arrived on the staging areas in late September, numbers peaked...
Persistence of oiling in mussel beds three and four years after the Exxon Valdez oil spill
M.M. Babcock, G.V. Irvine, P.M. Harris, J.A. Cusick, S.D. Rice
S.D. Rice, R.B. Spies, D.A. Wolfe, B.A. Wright, editor(s)
1996, Conference Paper, American Fisheries Society Symposium 18: Proceedings of the "Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Symposium"
Dense beds of the mussel Mytilus trossulus affected by Exxon Valdez crude oil in Prince William Sound and along the Kenai and Alaska peninsulas were intentionally left untreated during shoreline cleanup activities in 1989-1991. In 1992 and 1993, mussels and sediments from 70 mussel beds in Prince William Sound and...
Seaducks: A time for action
Margaret R. Petersen, Mary E. Hogan
John T. Ratti, John H. Giudice, editor(s)
1996, Conference Paper, 7th International Waterfowl Symposium (Proceedings)
Seaducks (Tribe Mergini) are a diverse group of birds. In North America, many species nest in boreal or arctic habitats in Canada and Alaska and winter in ice-free coastal, marine, and freshwater habitats. Data from long- term surveys, population studies, and local knowledge suggest that some populations and species of...
Late Paleocene Arctic Ocean shallow-marine temperatures from mollusc stable isotopes
Karen L. Bice, Michael A. Arthur, Louie Marincovich Jr.
1996, Paleoceanography (11) 241-249
Late Paleocene high-latitude (80°N) Arctic Ocean shallow-marine temperatures are estimated from molluscan δ18O time series. Sampling of individual growth increments of two specimens of the bivalve Camptochlamys alaskensis provides a high-resolution record of shell stable isotope composition. The heavy carbon isotopic values of the specimens support a late Paleocene age...
Three-dimensional P and S wave velocity structure of Redoubt Volcano, Alaska
H.M. Benz, B. A. Chouet, P.B. Dawson, J.C. Lahr, R.A. Page, J.A. Hole
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (101) 8111-8128
The three‐dimensional P and S wave structure of Redoubt Volcano, Alaska, and the underlying crust to depths of 7–8 km is determined from 6219 P wave and 4008 S wave first‐arrival times recorded by a 30‐station seismograph network deployed on and around the volcano. First‐arrival times are calculated using a finite‐difference technique, which allows for flexible parameterization of...
The origin of the Bering Sea basalt province, western Alaska
E. J. Moll-Stalcup
1996, Geology of the Pacific Ocean (12) 671-689
Bering Sea basalt province consists of at least 15 late Cenozoic (less than 6 Ma) volcanic fields that occur on islands in the Bering Sea and along the adjacent west coast of Alaska. The fields are composed of widespread flows of tholeiitic and alkali olivine basalt and small cones, flows,...
Outburst floods from glacier-dammed lakes: The effect of mode of lake drainage on flood magnitude
Joseph S. Walder, John E. Costa
1996, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (21) 701-723
Published accounts of outburst floods from glacier‐dammed lakes show that a significant number of such floods are associated not with drainage through a tunnel incised into the basal ice—the process generally assumed—but rather with ice‐marginal drainage, mechanical failure of part of the ice dam, or both. Non‐tunnel floods are strongly correlated with...
Mitochondrial-DNA variation among subspecies and populations of sea otters (Enhydra lutris)
Matthew A. Cronin, James L. Bodkin, Brenda E. Ballachey, James A. Estes, John C. Patton
1996, Journal of Mammalogy (77) 546-557
We used restriction-enzyme analysis of polymerase-chain reaction-amplified, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) to assess genetic differentiation of subspecies and populations of sea otters, Enhydra lutris, throughout the range of the species. There were several haplotypes of mtDNA in each subspecies and geographically separate populations. MtDNA sequence divergence of haplotypes of sea otters was...
The risk of disease and threats to the wild population. Special Issue: Conservation and Management of the Southern Sea Otter
Nancy J. Thomas, Rebecca A. Cole
1996, Endangered Species UPDATE (13) 23-27
The growth of the southern sea otter population has been steady, but slow in comparison to Alaskan subspecies, and range expansion in California has faltered. Slower growth is occurring in California despite birth rates comparable to those in Alaska, so biologists have reasoned that mortality is hindering the growth of...
Geographic variation in migratory behavior of greater white-fronted geese (Anser albifrons)
Craig R. Ely, John Y. Takekawa
1996, The Auk (113) 889-901
We studied the migration and winter distribution of adult Greater White-fronted Geese (Anser albifrons frontalis) radio-marked on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta (YKD) and Bristol Bay Lowlands (BBL) of Alaska from 1987 to 1992. The major autumn staging site for geese from both breeding areas was the Klamath Basin on the California/Oregon...
40Ar/39Ar thermochronology of white mica from the Nome District, Alaska; the first ages of lode sources to placer gold deposits in the Seward Peninsula
R.C. Ford, L.W. Snee
1996, Economic Geology (91) 213-220
No abstract available....
Effects of silvicultultural modifications of temperate rainforest on breeding and wintering bird communities, Prince of Wales Island, southeast Alaska
Dominick A. Dellasala, Joan C. Hagar, Kathleen A. Engel, W.C. McComb, Randal L. Fairbanks, Ellen G. Campbell
1996, The Condor (98) 706-721
We inventoried breeding and wintering bird communities in four treatments of temperate rainforest on Prince of Wales Island, southeast Alaska during 1991-1992 and 1992-1993. The four forest treatments sampled included: (1) young growth (20 years) originating from clearcut logging with no silvicultural modification (non-modified), (2) young growth (20 years) precommercially thinned along uniformly-spaced thinning...
Monitoring the status of wild sea otter populations: field studies and techniques
James L. Bodkin, Brenda E. Ballachey
1996, Endangered Species UPDATE (13) 14-20
Breeding populations of northern pintails have similar mitochondrial DNA
M. A. Cronin, J.B. Grand, Daniel Esler, D.V. Derksen, K.T. Scribner
1996, Canadian Journal of Zoology (74) 992-999
Northern pintails (Anas acuta) are highly nomadic, which may result in high levels of gene flow among nesting areas. To assess the extent of genetic differentiation among nesting areas, we analyzed mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variation in northern pintail females from three regions: Alaska, California, and midcontinent prairies and parklands. Abundant mtDNA...
Ground-water levels in an alluvial plain between the Tanana and Chena Rivers near Fairbanks, Alaska 1986-93
R. L. Glass, M. R. Lilly, D. F. Meyer
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 96-4060
The aquifer of an alluvial plain between the Tanana and Chena Rivers near Fairbanks, Alaska, generally consists of highly transmissive sands and gravels under water-table conditions. During 1986-88, the U.S. Geological Survey studied the distribution of ground-water levels in the alluvial plain between Moose Creek Dam and the confluence of...
Dispersion of adult Cancer magister at Glacier Bay, Alaska: Variation with spatial scale, sex, and reproductive status
Charles E. O’Clair, Thomas C. Shirley, S. James Taggart
1996, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the international symposium on biology, management, and economics of crabs from high latitude habitats: Lowell Wakefield fisheries symposium
Patterns of micro- to mesoscale distribution of Dungeness crabs (Cancer magister) in nearshore habitats at five locations in and near Glacier Bay National Park were revealed using subtidal transects. Sampling was conducted in April and September 1992 and 1993 and April 1994. Divers censused crabs by sex and reproductive status...