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Page 274, results 6826 - 6850

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Tectonic framework and Late Cenozoic tectonic history of the northern part of Cyprus: Implications for earthquake hazards and regional tectonics
Richard W. Harrison, Wayne L. Newell, Hilmi Batihanli, Ioannis Panayides, John McGeehin, Shannon A. Mahan, Ayse Ozhur, Efthymios Tsiolakis, Mehmet Necdet
2004, Journal of Asian Earth Sciences (23) 191-210
Located near the triple junction of the African, Arabia, and Eurasian Plate, Cyprus has had an active and complex neotectonic history, which includes devastating historical earthquakes. Investigations into the tectonic framework of the northern part of Cyprus provide important insights into regional tectonism of the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East....
Selected hydrologic data for Sand Cove Wash, Washington County, Utah
Aaron Norton, David D. Susong
2004, Open-File Report 2004-1328
Southwestern Utah is one of the most arid and fastest growing regions of Utah. Development of new and existing water resources will be required to meet the water needs of the region. Sand Cove Wash, a tributary of the Santa Clara River that flows into Gunlock Reservoir, was investigated as...
Documentation of the Santa Clara Valley regional ground-water/surface-water flow model, Santa Clara Valley, California
R. T. Hanson, Zhen Li, C.C. Faunt
2004, Scientific Investigations Report 2004-5231
 The Santa Clara Valley is a long, narrow trough extending about 35 miles southeast from the southern end of San Francisco Bay where the regional alluvial-aquifer system has been a major source of water. Intensive agricultural and urban development throughout the 20th century and related ground-water development resulted in ground-water-level...
Geologic, water-chemistry, and hydrologic data from multiple-well monitoring sites and selected water-supply wells in the Santa Clara Valley, California, 1999-2003
M.W. Newhouse, R. T. Hanson, C. M. Wentworth, Rhett R. Everett, C.F. Williams, J. C. Tinsley, T.E. Noce, B.A. Carkin
2004, Scientific Investigations Report 2004-5250
To better identify the three-dimensional geohydrologic framework of the Santa Clara Valley, lithologic, geologic, geophysical, geomechanical, hydraulic, and water-chemistry data were collected from eight ground-water multiple-well monitoring sites constructed in Santa Clara County, California, as part of a series of cooperative studies between the U.S. Geological Survey and the Santa...
Characterizing grazing disturbance in semiarid ecosystems across broad spatial scales using multiple indices.
Erik A. Beever, Robin J. Tausch, Peter F. Brussard
2003, Ecological Applications (13) 119-136
Although management and conservation strategies continue to move toward broader spatial scales and consideration of many taxonomic groups simultaneously, researchers have struggled to characterize responses to disturbance at these scales. Most studies of disturbance by feral grazers investigate effects on only one or two ecosystem elements across small spatial scales,...
Winter diel habitat use and movement by subadult bull trout in the upper Flathead River, Montana
Clint C. Muhlfeld, Steve Glutting, Rick Hunt, Durae Daniels, Brian Marotz
2003, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (23) 163-171
We evaluated the diel habitat use and movement of subadult bull trout Salvelinus confluentus by use of radiotelemetry during winter in the upper Flathead River, Montana. Of the 13 monitored bull trout, 12 (92%) made at least one diel movement to other habitat locations during their respective day–night tracking surveys and moved...
Variability of isotope and major ion chemistry in the Allequash Basin, Wisconsin
John F. Walker, Randall J. Hunt, Thomas D. Bullen, David P. Krabbenhoft, Carol Kendall
2003, Ground Water (41) 883-894
As part of ongoing research conducted at one of the U.S. Geological Survey's Water, Energy, and Biogeochem-ical Budgets sites, work was undertaken to describe the spatial and temporal variability of stream and ground water isotopic composition and cation chemistry in the Trout Lake watershed, to relate the variability to the...
Fluorspar
M. Miller
2003, Mining Engineering (55) 26-27
The United States had a small quantity of fluorspar production from one mine in Utah during 2002. Most of the fluorspar consumed in the United States continued to come from imports or material purchased from the National Defense Stockpile (NDS). In addition, a small amount of synthetic fluorspar (CaF2) was...
Demographic analysis from summaries of an age-structured population
William A. Link, J. Andrew Royle, Jeff S. Hatfield
2003, Biometrics (59) 778-785
Demographic analyses of age-structured populations typically rely on life history data for individuals, or when individual animals are not identified, on information about the numbers of individuals in each age class through time. While it is usually difficult to determine the age class of a randomly encountered individual, it is...
Preface: Phragmites australis: A sheep in wolf's clothing?
M.P. Weinstein, J.R. Keough, G.R. Guntenspergen, S.Y. Litvin
2003, Estuaries (26) 397
A. problem with national priorities for control or prevention of aquatic nuisance species is that we often do not know the full extent of the problem, if there is one. To address this issue, we hosted a technical forum and workshop-Phragmites australis: A Sheep in Wolf's Clothing?--with a focus...
Sexual selection affects local extinction and turnover in bird communities
Paul F. Doherty Jr., G. Sorci, J. Andrew Royle, J.E. Hines, J.D. Nichols, T. Boulinier
2003, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (100) 5858-5862
Predicting extinction risks has become a central goal for conservation and evolutionary biologists interested in population and community dynamics. Several factors have been put forward to explain risks of extinction, including ecological and life history characteristics of individuals. For instance, factors that affect the balance between natality and...
On the use of the robust design with transient capture-recapture models
J.E. Hines, W. L. Kendall, J.D. Nichols
2003, The Auk (120) 1151-1158
Capture-mark-recapture studies provide a useful mechanism for estimating the components of the population dynamics of birds, especially survival. In such studies, it is important that the population being captured matches the population of interest. In many studies, transients are captured along with the population of interest (e.g. resident breeders)....
Lead accumulation in feathers of nestling black-crowned night-herons (Nycticorax nycticorax) experimentally treated in the field
N. H. Golden, Barnett A. Rattner, J.B. Cohen, D. J. Hoffman, E. Russek-Cohen, M. A. Ottinger
2003, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (22) 1517-1524
Although lead can attain high concentrations in feathers, interpretation of the biological significance of this phenomenon is difficult. As part of an effort to develop and validate non-invasive methods to monitor contaminant exposure in free-ranging birds, lead uptake by feathers of nestling black-crowned night-herons (Nycticorax nycticorax) was evaluated in...
In memoriam: Eugene Pleasants Odum, 1913-2002
J.M. Meyers, D.W. Johnston
2003, The Auk (120) 536-538
Eugene Pleasants Odum, a Life Member of the AOU since 1932, an Elective Member since 1943, and a Fellow since 1951, died 10 August 2002 of an apparent heart attack while tending his garden. Gene was born in New Hampshire on 17 September 1913 and spent most of his childhood...
Agricultural landscapes: Can they support healthy bird populations as well as farm products?
B.G. Peterjohn
2003, The Auk (120) 14-19
At the beginning of the twentieth century, prospects for bird populations occupying farmlands were promising. Agricultural expansion and the resulting deforestation produced wholesale changes to the landscape of eastern North America (Trautman 1977, Zeranski and Baptist 1990, Nicholson 1997). Regional avifaunas were transformed as Horned Larks (Eremophila alpestris), Dickcissels (Spiza...
Population increase in Kirtland's warbler and summer range expansion to Wisconsin and Michigan's Upper Peninsula, USA
J.R. Probst, D.M. Donner, Carol I. Bocetti, S. Sjogren
2003, Oryx (37) 365-373
The threatened Kirtland's warbler Dendroica kirtlandii breeds in stands of young jack pine Pinus banksiana growing on well-drained soils in Michigan, USA. We summarize information documenting the range expansion of Kirtland's warbler due to increased habitat management in the core breeding range in the Lower Peninsula of Michigan during 1990–2000. We collected...
Local extinction and turnover rates at the edge and interior of species' ranges
P.F. Doherty Jr., T. Boulinier, J.D. Nichols
2003, Annales Zoologici Fennici (40) 145-153
One hypothesis for the maintenance of the edge of a species' range suggests that more central (and abundant) populations are relatively stable and edge populations are less stable with increased local extinction and turnover rates. To date, estimates of such metrics are equivocal due to design and analysis flaws....
Demographic stochasticity in small remnant populations of the declining distylous plant Primula veris
M. Kery, D. Matthies, B. Schmid
2003, Basic and Applied Ecology (4) 197-206
We studied ecological consequences of distyly for the declining perennial plant Primula veris in the Swiss Jura. Distyly favours cross-fertilization and avoids inbreeding, but may lead to pollen limitation and reduced reproduction if morph frequencies deviate from 50 %. Disassortative mating is promoted by the reciprocal position of...
Effects of life-state on detectability in a demographic study of the terrestrial orchid Cleistes bifaria
M. Kery, K.B. Gregg
2003, Journal of Ecology (91) 265-273
1. Most plant demographic studies follow marked individuals in permanent plots. Plots tend to be small, so detectability is assumed to be one for every individual. However, detectability could be affected by factors such as plant traits, time, space, observer, previous detection, biotic interactions, and especially by life-state. 2. We used a double-observer survey and closed population capture-recapture modelling to estimate state-specific detectability of...
Adjusting multistate capture-recapture models for misclassification bias: manatee breeding proportions
W. L. Kendall, J.E. Hines, J.D. Nichols
2003, Ecology (84) 1058-1066
Matrix population models are important tools for research and management of populations. Estimating the parameters of these models is an important step in applying them to real populations. Multistate capture-recapture methods have provided a useful means for estimating survival and parameters of transition between locations or life history...
Estimating abundance from repeated presence-absence data or point counts
J. Andrew Royle, J.D. Nichols
2003, Ecology (84) 777-790
We describe an approach for estimating occupancy rate or the proportion of area occupied when heterogeneity in detection probability exists as a result of variation in abundance of the organism under study. The key feature of such problems, which we exploit, is that variation in abundance induces variation in...
The type specimen of Anoura geoffroyi lasiopyga (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae)
Joaquin Arroyo-Cabrales, A. L. Gardner
2003, Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington (116) 737-741
In 1868, Wilhelm Peters described Glossonycteris lasiopyga, based on a specimen provided by Henri de Saussure and collected in Mexico. The type specimen was presumed to be among those housed in the collections of the Zoologisches Museum of the Humboldt Universitat in Berlin, Germany. Our study of one...
Microbial mercury cycling in sediments of the San Francisco Bay-Delta
Mark Marvin-DiPasquale, Jennifer L. Agee
2003, Estuaries (26) 1517-1528
Microbial mercury (Hg) methylation and methylmercury (MeHg) degradation processes were examined using radiolabled model Hg compounds in San Francisco Bay-Delta surface sediments during three seasonal periods: late winter, spring, and fall. Strong seasonal and spatial differences were evident for both processes. MeHg production rates were positively correlated with microbial sulfate...
Diffusion and drive-point sampling to detect ordnance-related compounds in shallow ground water beneath Snake Pond, Cape Cod, Massachusetts, 2001-02
Denis R. LeBlanc
2003, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2003-4133
Diffusion samplers and temporary drive points were used to test for ordnance-related compounds in ground water discharging to Snake Pond near Camp Edwards at the Massachusetts Military Reservation, Cape Cod, MA. The contamination resulted from artillery use and weapons testing at various ranges upgradient of the pond.The diffusion samplers were...