Invasive herbivory: resident Canada geese and the decline of wild rice along the tidal Patuxent River
G. Michael Haramis, Gregory D. Kearns
Matthew C. Perry, editor(s)
2004, Book chapter, Mute swans and their Chesapeake Bay habitats: proceedings of a symposium
While concern grows over the increasing numbers of exotic mute swans (Cygnus olor) on the Chesapeake Bay, less attention seems to be given to the highly familiar and native Canada goose (Branta canadensis) which has over time developed unprecedented nonmigratory, or resident, populations. Although nuisance flocks of Canada geese have...
Food habits of mute swans in the Chesapeake Bay
Matthew C. Perry, P.C. Osenton, E.J.R. Lohnes
Matthew C. Perry, editor(s)
2004, Book chapter, Mute swans and their Chesapeake Bay habitats: proceedings of a symposium
Unlike the tundra swan (Cygnus columbianus) that migrate to the Bay for the winter, the mute swan (Cygnus olor) is a year long resident and therefore has raised concerns among research managers over reports of conflicts with nesting native water birds and the consumption of submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV)....
Biological control of ticks
M. Samish, H. Ginsberg, I. Glazer
A.S. Bowman, P. Nuttall, editor(s)
2004, Book chapter, Ticks: Biology, Disease & Control
Ticks have numerous natural enemies, but only a few species have been evaluated as tick biocontrol agents (BCAs). Some laboratory results suggest that several bacteria are pathogenic to ticks, but their mode of action and their potential value as biocontrol agents remain to be determined. The most promising...
Some consequences of using counts of birds banded as indices to populations
J.R. Sauer, W.A. Link
C. John Ralph, Erica H. Dunn, editor(s)
2004, Book chapter, Monitoring bird populations with mist nets
In mist-net studies, it is often difficult to use capture-recapture methods to estimate number of birds present. Many investigators use number of birds captured as an index of population size. We investigate the consequences of using indices of bird abundance as surrogates for population size in hypothesis tests....
Modeling survival and movement of resident giant Canada goose populations in the Atlantic flyway
M.W. Miller, W. L. Kendall, J.B. Hestbeck
Timothy J. Moser, Ricky D. Lien, Kurt C. VerCauterren, Kenneth F. Abraham, David E. Andersen, John G. Bruggink, John M. Coluccy, David A. Graber, James O. Leafloor, David R. Luukkonen, Robert E. Trost, editor(s)
2004, Book chapter, Proceedings of the 2003 International Canada Goose Symposium: papers, abstracts, and posters from the Symposium held in Madison, Wisconsin, 19-21 March 2003
Distribution of resident giant Canada geese (Branta canadensis maxima) has changed markedly in the Atlantic Flyway in recent decades. This change may be related to habitat variation or to changes in hunting regulations. We attempt to assess impacts of hunting regulations on survival, movement, and harvest rate of...
On the use of capture-recapture models in mist-net studies
W. L. Kendall, J.R. Sauer, J.D. Nichols, R. Pradel, J.E. Hines
C. John Ralph, Erica H. Dunn, editor(s)
2004, Book chapter, Monitoring bird populations with mist nets
Capture-recapture models provide a statistical framework for estimating population parameters from mist-net data. Although Cormack-Jolly-Seber and related models have recently been used to estimate survival rates of birds sampled with mist nets, we believe that the full potential for use of capture-recapture models has not been realized by many researchers...
Houston toad (Bufo houstonensis) in Bastrop County, Texas: need for protecting multiple subpopulations
Jeff S. Hatfield, A.H. Price, D.D. Diamond, C.D. TRUE
2004, Book chapter, Species Conservation and Management: Case Studies
The mute swan, its status, behavior, and history in the U. K
E.J.R. Lohnes
Matthew C. Perry, editor(s)
2004, Book chapter, Mute swans and their Chesapeake Bay habitats: proceedings of a symposium
For many years the mute swan has been considered a royal bird. It is a prominent resident throughout the United Kingdom (U.K.), often found on the inland waterways. Some people consider it to be a nonmigratory native bird because it doesn't tend to move large distances and doesn't often...
Environmentally sustainable trail management
J. L. Marion, Y.-F. Leung
Ralf Buckley, editor(s)
2004, Book chapter, Environmental Impacts of Ecotourism
Exploitation
M.C. Runge, W. L. Kendall, J.D. Nichols
2004, Book chapter, Bird Ecology and Conservation - A Handbook of Techniques
Managing impacts of camping
Y.-F. Leung, J. L. Marion
Ralf Buckley, editor(s)
2004, Book chapter, Environmental Impacts of Ecotourism
Ecogeomorphology of Spartina patens-dominated tidal marshes: Soil organic matter accumulation, marsh elevation dynamics, and disturbance
Donald R. Cahoon, M.A. Ford, P.F. Hensel
Sergio Fagherazzi, Marco Marani, Linda K. Blum, editor(s)
2004, Book chapter, Ecogeomorphology of Tidal Marshes
Marsh soil development and vertical accretion in Spartina patens (Aiton) Muhl.-dominated tidal marshes is largely dependent on soil organic matter accumulation from root-rhizome production and litter deposition. Yet there are few quantitative data sets on belowground production and the relationship between soil organic matter accumulation and soil elevation dynamics...
Combined impacts of Black-crowned Night-Heron predation/disturbance and various management activities on Roseate Tern productivity in 2003, and testing of a video surveillance system for recording the diurnal and nocturnal behavior of terns and night-herons at Falkner Island, Stewart B. McKinney National Wildlife Refuge, Connecticut, in 2004: Report to U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Stewart B. McKinney National Wildlife Refuge, Westbrook, Connecticut and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Region 5 Regional Office, Hadley, Massachusetts
J. A. Spendelow, M. Kuter
2004, Book
Falkner Island (FICT), a unit of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Stewart B. McKinney National Wildlife Refuge (SBMNWR) since 1985, is located in Long Island Sound 5 km south of Guilford, CT. For more than three decades it has been the site of the only large breeding colony...
Biodiversity of Fungi : Inventory and Monitoring Methods
G.M. Mueller, G.F. Bills, M.S. Foster, editor(s)
2004, Book
Biodiversity of Fungi is essential for anyone collecting and/or monitoring any fungi. Fascinating and beautiful, fungi are vital components of nearly all ecosystems and impact human health and our economy in a myriad of ways. Standardized methods for documenting diversity and distribution have been lacking. An wealth...
Species Conservation and Management: Case Studies
H.R. Akcakaya, M.A. Burgman, O. Kindvall, C.C. Wood, P. Sjogren-Gulve, Jeff S. Hatfield, M.A. McCarthy
2004, Book
This edited volume is a collection of population and metapopulation models for a wide variety of species, including plants, invertebrates, fishes, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals. Each chapter of the book describes the application of RAMAS GIS 4.0 to one species, with the aim of demonstrating how various life...
Rhode Island Water Supply System Management Plan Database (WSSMP-Version 1.0)
Gregory E. Granato
2004, Open-File Report 2004-1231
In Rhode Island, the availability of water of sufficient quality and quantity to meet current and future environmental and economic needs is vital to life and the State's economy. Water suppliers, the Rhode Island Water Resources Board (RIWRB), and other State agencies responsible for water resources in Rhode Island need...
Report of the U.S. Geological Survey Lidar Workshop sponsored by the Land Remote Sensing Program and held in St. Petersburg, FL, November 2002
Michael Crane, Tonya Clayton, Ellen Raabe, Jason M. Stoker, Larry Handley, Gerald W. Bawden, Karen Morgan, Vivian R. Queija
2004, Open-File Report 2004-1456
The first United States Geological Survey (USGS) Light Detection And Ranging (lidar) Workshop was held November 20-22, 2002 in St. Petersburg, Florida to bring together scientists and managers from across the agency. The workshop agenda focused on six themes: 1) current and future lidar technologies, 2) lidar applications within USGS...
Climate change, growing season length, and transpiration: Plant response could alter hydrologic regime
Thomas G. Huntington
2004, Plant Biology (6) 651-653
No abstract available...
Back to the basics: Kansas City, Missouri
Lawrence R. Handley, C.M. Lockwood, Nathan Handley
2004, Journal of Geography (103) 226-230
No abstract available....
Chapter A5. Section 6.4.B. Low-Level Mercury
Michael Edward Lewis, Mark E. Brigham
2004, Techniques of Water-Resources Investigations 09-A5.6.4.B
Collecting and processing water samples for analysis of mercury at a low (subnanogram per liter) level requires use of ultratrace-level techniques for equipment cleaning, sample collection, and sample processing. Established techniques and associated quality-assurance (QA) procedures for the collection and processing of water samples for trace-element analysis at the part-per-billion...
Laboratory comparison of polyethylene and dialysis membrane diffusion samplers
Theodore A. Ehlke, Thomas E. Imbrigiotta, Jeffrey M. Dale
2004, Groundwater Monitoring & Remediation (24) 53-59
The ability of diffusion samplers constructed from regenerated cellulose dialysis membrane and low density, lay flat polyethylene tubing to collect volatile organic compounds and inorganic ions was compared in a laboratory study. Concentrations of vinyl chloride, cis‐1, 2‐dichloroethene, bromochloromethane, trichloroethene, bromodichloromethane, and tetrachloroethene collected by both types of diffusion samplers reached...
The Evolving Landscape of the Columbia River Gorge: Lewis and Clark and Cataclysms on the Columbia
James E. O'Connor
2004, Oregon Historical Society Quarterly (105) 390-421
TAVELERS RETRACING LEWIS AND CLARKE JOURNEY to the Pacific over the past two hundred years have witnessed tre mendous change to the Columbia River Gorge and its pri mary feature, the Columbia River. Dams, reservoirs, timber harvest, altered fisheries, transportation infrastructure, and growth and shrinkage of communities have transformed the...
Water: Essential resource of the southern Flint River Basin, Georgia
Debbie Warner, Virgil Norton
2004, General Information Product 4
Introduction Abundant water resources of the Flint River Basin have played a major role in the history and development of southwestern Georgia. The Flint River-along with its tributaries, wetlands, and swamps-and the productive aquifers of the river basin are essential components of the area's diverse ecosystems. These resources also are necessary...
Using Mosix for Wide-Area Compuational Resources
Brian G. Maddox
2004, Open-File Report 2004-1091
One of the problems with using traditional Beowulf-type distributed processing clusters is that they require an investment in dedicated computer resources. These resources are usually needed in addition to pre-existing ones such as desktop computers and file servers. Mosix is a series of modifications to the Linux kernel that creates...
Converting analog interpretive data to digital formats for use in database and GIS applications
James G. Flocks
2004, Open-File Report 2004-1070
There is a growing need by researchers and managers for comprehensive and unified nationwide datasets of scientific data. These datasets must be in a digital format that is easily accessible using database and GIS applications, providing the user with access to a wide variety of current and historical information. Although...