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Page 2611, results 65251 - 65275

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Influence of barriers to movement on within-watershed genetic variation of coastal cutthroat trout
John E. B. Wofford, Robert E. Gresswell, Michael A. Banks
2005, Ecological Applications (15) 628-637
Because human land use activities often result in increased fragmentation of aquatic and terrestrial habitats, a better understanding of the effects of fragmentation on the genetic heterogeneity of animal populations may be useful for effective management. We used eight microsatellites to examine the genetic structure of coastal cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus...
Red brome (Bromus rubens subsp. madritensis) in North America: Possible modes for early introductions, subsequent spread
L. F. Salo
2005, Biological Invasions (7) 165-180
Although invasions by exotic plants have increased dramatically as human travel and commerce have increased, few have been comprehensively described. Understanding the patterns of invasive species’ spread over space and time will help guide management activities and policy. Tracing the earliest appearances of an exotic plant reveals likely sites of...
Should we expect population thresholds for wildlife disease?
James O. Lloyd-Smith, P.C. Cross, C.J. Briggs, M. Daugherty, W.M. Getz, J. Latto, M. Sanchez, A. Smith, A. Swei
2005, Trends in Ecology and Evolution (20) 511-519
Host population thresholds for invasion or persistence of infectious disease are core concepts of disease ecology, and underlie on-going and controversial disease control policies based on culling and vaccination. Empirical evidence for these thresholds in wildlife populations has been sparse, however, though recent studies have narrowed this gap. Here we...
Spatiotemporal patterns in community structure of macroinvertebrates inhabiting calcareous periphyton mats
S.E. Liston, J.C. Trexler
2005, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (24) 832-844
Calcareous floating periphyton mats in the southern Everglades provide habitat for a diverse macroinvertebrate community that has not been well characterized. Our study described this community in an oligotrophic marsh, compared it with the macroinvertebrate community associated with adjacent epiphytic algae attached to macrophytes in the water column, and detected...
Geography of spring landbird migration through riparian habitats in southwestern North America
S. K. Skagen, J.F. Kelly, Charles van Riper III, R.L. Hutto, D.M. Finch, D.J. Krueper, Cynthia Melcher
2005, The Condor (107) 212-227
Migration stopover resources, particularly riparian habitats, are critically important to landbirds migrating across the arid southwestern region of North America. To explore the effects of species biogeography and habitat affinity on spring migration patterns, we synthesized existing bird abundance and capture data collected in riparian habitats of the borderlands region...
Apparent predation by cattle at grassland bird nests
Jamie L. Nack, Christine Ribic
2005, The Wilson Bulletin (117) 56-62
We document the first cases of cattle behaving as avian predators, removing nestlings and eggs from three active ground nests in continuously grazed pastures in southwestern Wisconsin, 2000–2001. Cows removed three of four Savannah Sparrow (Passerculus sandwichensis) eggs from one nest (the fourth egg was damaged), all four Eastern...
Duelling timescales of host mixing and disease spread determine invasion of disease in structured populations
P.C. Cross, James O. Lloyd-Smith, P.L.F. Johnson, W.M. Getz
2005, Ecology Letters (8) 587-595
The epidemic potential of a disease is traditionally assessed using the basic reproductive number, R0. However, in populations with social or spatial structure a chronic disease is more likely to invade than an acute disease with the same R0, because it persists longer within each group and allows for more...
Disentangling association patterns in fission-fusion societies using African buffalo as an example
P.C. Cross, James O. Lloyd-Smith, W.M. Getz
2005, Animal Behaviour (69) 499-506
A description of the social network of a population aids us in understanding dispersal, the spread of disease, and genetic structure in that population. Many animal populations can be classified as fission–fusion societies, whereby groups form and separate over time. Examples discussed in the literature include ungulates, primates and cetaceans...
Climate change and amphibians
P.S. Corn
2005, Animal Biodiversity and Conservation (28) 59-67
Amphibian life histories are exceedingly sensitive to temperature and precipitation, and there is good evidence that recent climate change has already resulted in a shift to breeding earlier in the year for some species. There are also suggestions that the recent increase in the occurrence of El Niño events has...
Movements of fluvial Bonneville cutthroat trout in the Thomas Fork of the Bear River, Idaho-Wyoming
W.T. Colyer, J. L. Kershner, R.H. Hilderbrand
2005, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (25) 954-963
The majority of interior subspecies of cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus clarkii have been extirpated from large rivers by anthropogenic activities that have fragmented habitats and introduced nonnative competitors. Selective pressures against migratory behaviors and main-stem river occupation, coupled with conservation strategies that isolate genetically pure populations above barriers, have restricted gene...
Applications of Radarsat-1 synthetic aperture radar imagery to assess hurricane-related flooding of coastal Louisiana
L.M. Kiage, N.D. Walker, S. Balasubramanian, A. Babin, J. Barras
2005, International Journal of Remote Sensing (26) 5359-5380
The Louisiana coast is subjected to hurricane impacts including flooding of human settlements, river channels and coastal marshes, and salt water intrusion. Information on the extent of flooding is often required quickly for emergency relief, repairs of infrastructure, and production of flood risk maps. This study investigates the feasibility of...
Spatial and temporal variations in the age structure of Arctic sea ice
G. I. Belchansky, David C. Douglas, Nikita G. Platonov
2005, Geophysical Research Letters (32)
Spatial and temporal variations in the age structure of Arctic sea ice are investigated using a new reverse chronology algorithm that tracks ice-covered pixels to their location and date of origin based on ice motion and concentration data. The Beaufort Gyre tends to harbor the oldest (>10 years old) sea...
Viscoelasticity, postseismic slip, fault interactions, and the recurrence of large earthquakes
A.J. Michael
2005, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (95) 1594-1603
The Brownian Passage Time (BPT) model for earthquake recurrence is modified to include transient deformation due to either viscoelasticity or deep post seismic slip. Both of these processes act to increase the rate of loading on the seismogenic fault for some time after a large event. To approximate these effects,...
Paleoproterozoic high-sulfidation mineralization in the Tapajós gold province, Amazonian Craton, Brazil: geology, mineralogy, alunite argon age, and stable-isotope constraints
Caetano Juliani, Robert O. Rye, Carmen Nunes, Lawrence W. Snee, Rafael H. Correa, Lena V.S. Monteiro, Jorge S. Bettencourt, Rainer Neumann, Arnaldo A. Neto
2005, Chemical Geology (215) 95-125
The Brazilian Tapajós gold province contains the first evidence of high-sulfidation gold mineralization in the Amazonian Craton. The mineralization appears to be in large nested calderas. The Tapajós–Parima (or Ventuari–Tapajós) geological province consists of a metamorphic, igneous, and sedimentary sequence formed during a 2.10 to 1.87 Ga ocean−continent orogeny. The...
Ecohydrological control of deep drainage in arid and semiarid regions
M.S. Seyfried, S. Schwinning, Michelle Ann Walvoord, W. T. Pockman, B.D. Newman, R.B. Jackson, F. M. Phillips
2005, Ecology (86) 277-287
The amount and spatial distribution of deep drainage (downward movement of water across the bottom of the root zone) and groundwater recharge affect the quantity and quality of increasingly limited groundwater in arid and semiarid regions. We synthesize research from the fields of ecology and hydrology to address the issue...
Physiological characterization of a broad spectrum reductively dechlorinating consortium
M.M. Lorah, E. Majcher, E. Jones, G. Driedger, S. Dworatzek, D. Graves
2005, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 8th International In Situ and On-Site Bioremediation Symposium
A wetland sediment-derived microbial consortium (WBC-2) was developed by the US Geological Survey and propagated in vitro to large quantities by SiREM Laboratory for potential use in bioaugmentation applications. On the basis of bench-scale tests, the consortium could completely dechlorinate 1,1,2,2-tetrachloroethylene, tetrachloroethylene, trichloroethylene, 1,1,2-trichloroethane, cis- and trans-1,2-dichoroethylene, 1,1-dichloroethylene, 1,2-dichloroethane, and...
Modeling duckweed growth in wastewater treatment systems
L. Landesman, N. C. Parker, C.B. Fedler, M. Konikoff
2005, Livestock Research for Rural Development (17)
Species of the genera Lemnaceae, or duckweeds, are floating aquatic plants that show great promise for both wastewater treatment and livestock feed production. Research conducted in the Southern High Plains of Texas has shown that Lemna obscura grew well in cattle feedlot runoff water and produced leaf tissue with a...
Sources of variability of evapotranspiration in California
H.G. Hidalgo, D.R. Cayan, M. D. Dettinger
2005, Journal of Hydrometeorology (6) 3-19
The variability (1990–2002) of potential evapotranspiration estimates (ETo) and related meteorological variables from a set of stations from the California Irrigation Management System (CIMIS) is studied. Data from the National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) and from the Department of Energy from 1950 to 2001 were used to...
Amphibian occurrence and aquatic invaders in a changing landscape: Implications for wetland mitigation in the Willamette Valley, Oregon
Christopher A. Pearl, M. J. Adams, N. Leuthold, R. Bruce Bury
2005, Wetlands (25) 76-88
Despite concern about the conservation status of amphibians in western North America, few field studies have documented occurrence patterns of amphibians relative to potential stressors. We surveyed wetland fauna in Oregon's Willamette Valley and used an information theoretic approach (AIC) to rank the associations between native amphibian breeding occurrence and...
Invasion history, proliferation, and offshore diet of the round goby Neogobius melanostomus in western Lake Huron, USA
Jeffrey S. Schaeffer, Anjanette Bowen, Michael Thomas, John R. P. French III, Gary L. Curtis
2005, Journal of Great Lakes Research (31) 414-425
We used data from three trawl surveys during 1996–2003 to document range expansion, population trends, and use of offshore habitats by round gobies in the U.S. waters of Lake Huron. Round gobies (Neogobius melanostomus) were not detected in any survey until 1997, but by 2003 they had been recorded at...
InSAR studies of Alaska volcanoes
Zhong Lu, Chuck Wicks, Daniel Dzurisin, John A. Power
2005, Korean Journal of Remote Sensing (21) 59-72
Interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) is a remote sensing technique capable of measuring ground surface deformation with sub-centimeter precision and spatial resolution in tens-of­meters over a large region. This paper describes basics of InSAR and highlights our studies of Alaskan volcanoes with InSAR images acquired from European ERS-l and ERS-2,...
Puncture-ejection of own egg by Least Bell's Vireo and potential implications for anti-parasitism defense
Bryan L. Sharp, Bonnie L. Peterson, Barbara E. Kus
2005, Western Birds (36) 64-66
A simple, papillary cystic adenocarcinoma of the mammary gland with metastases to the internal iliac and mesenteric lymph nodes, liver, and spleen was observed in a 12 to 13 year old female black-footed ferret (Mustela nigripes). Histologically, the tumor was aggressive, and lymphatic invasion was found. Attempts at virus isolation...
Time-specific variation in passerine nest survival: New insights for old questions
T.A. Grant, T.L. Shaffer, E.M. Madden, P.J. Pietz
2005, The Auk (122) 661-672
Nest survival likely varies with nest age and date, but until recently researchers had only limited tools to efficiently address those sources of variability. Beginning with Mayfield (1961), many researchers have averaged survival rates within time-specific categories (e.g. egg and nestling stages; early and late nesting dates). However, Mayfield's estimator...
Radar stage uncertainty
J.M. Fulford, W.J. Davies
2005, Conference Paper, World Water Congress 2005: Impacts of Global Climate Change - Proceedings of the 2005 World Water and Environmental Resources Congress
The U.S. Geological Survey is investigating the performance of radars used for stage (or water-level) measurement. This paper presents a comparison of estimated uncertainties and data for radar water-level measurements with float, bubbler, and wire weight water-level measurements. The radar sensor was also temperature-tested in a laboratory. The uncertainty estimates...