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Spatial interactions of yarded White-tailed Deer, Odocoileus virginianus
M.E. Nelson, G.A. Sargeant
2008, Canadian Field-Naturalist (122) 221-225
We examined the spatial interactions of nine female White-tailed Deer (Odocoileus virginianus) in two deeryards (winter aggregations) in northeastern Minnesota during February-April 1999. Global positioning system (GPS) collars yielded seven pair-wise comparisons of deer that were located at the same time (???1 minute apart) and mat used overlapping areas. Deer...
Comparison of rainbow smelt age estimates from fin rays and otoliths
M. G. Walsh, A.P. Maloy, T. P. O’Brien
2008, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (28) 42-49
Rainbow smelt Osmerus mordax, although nonnative, are an important component of the offshore food web in the Laurentian Great Lakes. In Lake Ontario, we estimate ages of rainbow smelt annually to study population dynamics such as year-class strength and age-specific growth and mortality. Since the early 1980s, we have used...
Structural equation modeling for observational studies
J.B. Grace
2008, Journal of Wildlife Management (72) 14-22
Structural equation modeling (SEM) represents a framework for developing and evaluating complex hypotheses about systems. This method of data analysis differs from conventional univariate and multivariate approaches familiar to most biologists in several ways. First, SEMs are multiequational and capable of representing a wide array of complex hypotheses about how...
Rethinking avian response to Tamarix on the lower Colorado River: A threshold hypothesis
Charles van Riper III, K.L. Paxton, C. O'brien, P.B. Shafroth, L.J. McGrath
2008, Restoration Ecology (16) 155-167
Many of the world's large river systems have been greatly altered in the past century due to river regulation, agriculture, and invasion of introduced Tamarix spp. (saltcedar, tamarisk). These riverine ecosystems are known to provide important habitat for avian communities, but information on responses of birds to differing levels of...
Hydrogeomorphic features mediate the effects of land use/cover on reservoir productivity and food webs
M.T. Bremigan, P.A. Soranno, M.J. Gonzalez, D.B. Bunnell, K.K. Arend, W. H. Renwick, R.A. Stein, M.J. Vanni
2008, Limnology and Oceanography (53) 1420-1433
Although effects of land use/cover on nutrient concentrations in aquatic systems are well known, half or more of the variation in nutrient concentration remains unexplained by land use/cover alone. Hydrogeomorphic (HGM) landscape features can explain much remaining variation and influence food web interactions. To explore complex linkages among land use/cover,...
Sequestering ADM ethanol plant carbon dioxide
R.J. Finley, D. Riddle
2008, Industrial Bioprocessing (30) 4
Archer Daniels Midland Co. (ADM) and the Illinois State Geological Survey (ISGS) are collaborating on a project in confirming that a rock formation can store carbon dioxide from the plant in its pores. The project aimed to sequester the gas underground permanently to minimize release of the greenhouse gas into...
Evaluation of a method for determining concentrations of isoeugenol, an AQUI-S residue, in fillet tissue from freshwater fish species.
J.R. Meinertz, Theresa M. Schreier, J.A. Bernardy
2008, Journal of AOAC International (91) 884-891
AQUI-S is a fish anesthetic/sedative that is approved for use in a number of countries throughout the world and has the potential for use in the United States. The active ingredient in AQUI-S is isoeugenol. A method for determining isoeugenol concentrations in edible fillet tissue is needed for regulatory purposes,...
Low-Level detections of halogenated volatile organic compounds in groundwater: Use in vulnerability assessments
Niel Plummer, E. Busenberg, S. M. Eberts, L. M. Bexfield, C. J. Brown, L.S. Fahlquist, B. G. Katz, M.K. Landon
2008, Journal of Hydrologic Engineering (13) 1049-1068
Concentrations of halogenated volatile organic compounds (VOCs) were determined by gas chromatography (GC) with an electron-capture detector (GC-ECD) and by gas chromatography with mass spectrometry (GC-MS) in 109 groundwater samples from five study areas in the United States. In each case, the untreated water sample was used...
Top predators in relation to bathymetry, ice and krill during austral winter in Marguerite Bay, Antarctica
C. A. Ribic, E. Chapman, William R. Fraser, G.L. Lawson, P.H. Wiebe
2008, Deep-Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography (55) 485-499
A key hypothesis guiding the US Southern Ocean Global Ocean Ecosystems Dynamics (US SO GLOBEC) program is that deep across-shelf troughs facilitate the transport of warm and nutrient-rich waters onto the continental shelf of the Western Antarctic Peninsula, resulting in enhanced winter production and prey availability to top predators. We...
Utilizing spectral analysis of coastal discharge computed by a numerical model to determine boundary influence
E.D. Swain, C.D. Langevin, J.D. Wang
2008, Journal of Coastal Research (24) 1418-1429
In the present study, a spectral analysis was applied to field data and a numerical model of southeastern Everglades and northeastern Florida Bay that involved computing and comparing the power spectrum of simulated and measured flows at the primary coastal outflow creek. Four dominant power frequencies, corresponding to the S1,...
Predicting the locations of naturally fishless lakes
Emily Gaenzle Schilling, C.S. Loftin, K.E. Degoosh, Alexander D. Huryn, K.E. Webster
2008, Freshwater Biology (53) 1021-1035
1. Fish have been introduced into many previously fishless lakes throughout North America over the past 100+ years. It is difficult to determine the historical distribution of fishless lakes, however, because these introductions have not always been well-documented. 2. Due to its glacial history and low human population density, the...
The distribution of nuclear genetic variation and historical demography of sea otters
A. Aguilar, David A. Jessup, J. Estes, J.C. Garza
2008, Animal Conservation (11) 35-45
The amount and distribution of population genetic variation is crucial information for the design of effective conservation strategies for endangered species and can also be used to provide inference about demographic processes and patterns of migration. Here, we describe variation at a large number of nuclear genes in sea otters...
Carbonate precipitation by the thermophilic archaeon Archaeoglobus fulgidus: A model of carbon flow for an ancient microorganism
L. L. Robbins, K. A. Van Cleave, P. Ostrom
2008, Biogeosciences Discussions (5) 3409-3432
Microbial carbonate precipitation experiments were conducted using the archaeon bacteria Archaeoglobus fulgidus to determine chemical and isotopic fractionation of organic and inorganic carbon into mineral phases. Carbonate precipitation was induced in two different experiments using A. fulgidus to determine the relative abundance of organically derived carbon incorporated into carbonate minerals...
Evaluation of statistical treatments of left-censored environmental data using coincident uncensored data sets: I. Summary statistics
Ronald C. Antweiler, Howard E. Taylor
2008, Environmental Science & Technology (42) 3732-3738
The main classes of statistical treatment of below-detection limit (left-censored) environmental data for the determination of basic statistics that have been used in the literature are substitution methods, maximum likelihood, regression on order statistics (ROS), and nonparametric techniques. These treatments, along with using all instrument-generated data (even those below detection),...
Kaguyak dome field and its Holocene caldera, Alaska Peninsula
J. Fierstein, W. Hildreth
2008, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (177) 340-366
Kaguyak Caldera lies in a remote corner of Katmai National Park, 375 km SW of Anchorage, Alaska. The 2.5-by-3-km caldera collapsed ~ 5.8 ± 0.2 ka (14C age) during emplacement of a radial apron of poorly pumiceous crystal-rich dacitic pyroclastic flows (61–67% SiO2). Proximal pumice-fall deposits are thin...
Anthropogenic and natural lead isotopes in Fe-hydroxides and Fe-sulphates in a watershed associated with arsenic-enriched groundwater, Maine, USA
Robert A. Ayuso, Nora K. Foley
2008, Geochemistry: Exploration, Environment, Analysis (8) 77-89
A survey of the natural and anthropogenic sources of lead contributing to secondary minerals in sulphidic schists associated with arsenic-enriched groundwater in Coastal Maine shows that the most likely source is natural Pb, particularly from coexisting sulphide minerals. The secondary minerals also reflect notable contributions from anthropogenic Pb. The Pb...
Comparison and assessment of aerial and ground estimates of waterbird colonies
M.C. Green, M.C. Luent, T.C. Michot, C.W. Jeske, P.L. Leberg
2008, Journal of Wildlife Management (72) 697-706
Aerial surveys are often used to quantify sizes of waterbird colonies; however, these surveys would benefit from a better understanding of associated biases. We compared estimates of breeding pairs of waterbirds, in colonies across southern Louisiana, USA, made from the ground, fixed-wing aircraft, and a helicopter. We used a marked-subsample...
Decadal-scale changes of nitrate in ground water of the United States, 1988-2004
Michael G. Rupert
2008, Journal of Environmental Quality (37) S240-S248
This study evaluated decadal-scale changes of nitrate concentrations in groundwater samples collected by the USGS National Water-Quality Assessment Program from 495 wells in 24 well networks across the USA in predominantly agricultural areas. Each well network was sampled once during 1988-1995 and resampled once during 2000-2004. Statistical tests of decadal-scale...
Electromagnetic surveying of seafloor mounds in the northern Gulf of Mexico
M. Ellis, R.L. Evans, D. Hutchinson, P. Hart, J. Gardner, R. Hagen
2008, Marine and Petroleum Geology (25) 960-968
Seafloor controlled source electromagnetic data, probing the uppermost 30 m of seafloor sediments, have been collected with a towed magnetic dipole-dipole system across two seafloor mounds at approximately 1300 m water depth in the northern Gulf of Mexico. One of these mounds was the focus of??a recent gas hydrate research...
Using amplified fragment length polymorphism analysis to differentiate isolates of Pasteurella multocida serotype 1
David S. Blehert, K. L. Jefferson, Dennis M. Heisey, M. D. Samuel, Brenda M. Berlowski-Zier, Daniel J. Shadduck
2008, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (44) 209-225
Avian cholera, an infectious disease caused by the bacterium Pasteurella multocida, kills thousands of North American wild waterfowl annually. Pasteurella multocida serotype 1 isolates cultured during a laboratory challenge study of Mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) and collected from wild birds and environmental samples during avian cholera outbreaks were characterized using amplified fragment length polymorphism...
The potential applications of using compost chars for removing the hydrophobic herbicide atrazine from solution
L. Tsui, William R. Roy
2008, Bioresource Technology (99) 5673-5678
One commercial compost sample was pyrolyzed to produce chars as a sorbent for removing the herbicide atrazine from solution. The sorption behavior of compost-based char was compared with that of an activated carbon derived from corn stillage. When compost was pyrolyzed, the char yield was greater than 45% when heated...
Validation of the ASTER instrument level 1A scene geometry
H. H. Kieffer, K. F. Mullins, D. J. MacKinnon
2008, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (74) 289-301
An independent assessment of the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) instrument geometry was undertaken by the U.S. ASTER Team, to confirm the geometric correction parameters developed and applied to Level 1A (radiometrically and geometrically raw with correction parameters appended) ASTER data. The goal was to evaluate the...
Congruent population structure inferred from dispersal behaviour and intensive genetic surveys of the threatened Florida scrub-jay (Aphelocoma cœrulescens)
A. Coulon, J.W. Fitzpatrick, R. Bowman, B.M. Stith, C.A. Makarewich, L.M. Stenzler, I.J. Lovette
2008, Molecular Ecology (17) 1685-1701
The delimitation of populations, defined as groups of individuals linked by gene flow, is possible by the analysis of genetic markers and also by spatial models based on dispersal probabilities across a landscape. We combined these two complimentary methods to define the spatial pattern of genetic structure among remaining populations...
Comparison of visual survey and seining methods for estimating abundance of an endangered, benthic stream fish
F. Jordan, H.L. Jelks, S.A. Bortone, R.M. Dorazio
2008, Environmental Biology of Fishes (81) 313-319
We compared visual survey and seining methods for estimating abundance of endangered Okaloosa darters, Etheostoma okaloosae, in 12 replicate stream reaches during August 2001. For each 20-m stream reach, two divers systematically located and marked the position of darters and then a second crew of three to five people came...
Endocrine systems in juvenile anadromous and landlocked Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar): Seasonal development and seawater acclimation
Tom O. Nilsen, Lars O.E. Ebbesson, P. Kiilerich, B. Th Bjornsson, Steffen S. Madsen, S. D. McCormick, S.O. Stefansson
2008, General and Comparative Endocrinology (155) 762-772
The present study compares developmental changes in plasma levels of growth hormone (GH), insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) and cortisol, and mRNA levels of their receptors and the prolactin receptor (PRLR) in the gill of anadromous and landlocked Atlantic salmon during the spring parr-smolt transformation (smoltification) period and following four...