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Page 277, results 6901 - 6925

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Movements of Gulf sturgeon (Acipenser oxyrinchus desotoi) in nearshore habitat as determined by acoustic telemetry
R. E. Edwards, K. J. Sulak, Craig B. Grimes, M. Randall
2003, Gulf of Mexico Science (21) 59-70
Gulf sturgeon were tagged with telemetry tags and were tracked and relocated in fall and early winter of 1996 and 1998 to determine migration patterns and winter feeding habitats after they emigrated from the Suwannee River, Florida, into the Gulf of Mexico. We hypothesized that their migration would generally follow...
Non-native plant invasions in managed and protected ponderosa pine/Douglas-fir forests of the Colorado Front Range
Paula J. Fornwalt, M. R. Kaufmann, L. S. Huckaby, J. M. Stoker, Thomas J. Stohlgren
2003, Forest Ecology and Management (177) 515-527
We examined patterns of non-native plant diversity in protected and managed ponderosa pine/Douglas-fir forests of the Colorado Front Range. Cheesman Lake, a protected landscape, and Turkey Creek, a managed landscape, appear to have had similar natural disturbance histories prior to European settlement and fire protection during the last century....
Recent ecological and biogeochemical changes in alpine lakes of Rocky Mountain National Park (Colorado, USA): A response to anthropogenic nitrogen deposition
A.P. Wolfe, A.C. Van Gorp, Jill Baron
2003, Geobiology (1) 153-168
Dated sediment cores from five alpine lakes (>3200 m asl) in Rocky Mountain National Park (Colorado Front Range, USA) record near-synchronous stratigraphic changes that are believed to reflect ecological and biogeochemical responses to enhanced nitrogen deposition from anthropogenic sources. Changes in sediment proxies include progressive increases in the frequencies of mesotrophic...
The effects of bird use on nutrient removal in a constructed wastewater-treatment wetland
D.C. Andersen, J.J. Sartoris, J.S. Thullen, P.G. Reusch
2003, Wetlands (23) 423-435
A 9.9-ha constructed wetland designed to reduce nitrogen in municipal wastewater following conventional secondary treatment began operating in southern California's San Jacinto Valley in September 1994. The wetland incorporated zones of bulrush (Schoenoplectus acutus and S. californicus) for effluent treatment, plus areas of 1.8-m deep open water and other features...
Evaluation of the eastern (Centrocercus urophasianus urophasianus) and western (Centrocercus urophasianus phaios) subspecies of Sage-grouse using mitochondrial control-region sequence data
N.G. Benedict, S.J. Oyler-McCance, S.E. Taylor, C.E. Braun
2003, Conservation Genetics (4) 301-310
The status of Sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) is of increasing concern, as populations throughout its range have contracted as a result of habitat loss and degradation. Historically, Sage-grouse were classified into two subspecies: eastern(C. u. urophasianus) and western Sage-grouse (C. u. phaios) based on slight...
Challenges to reestablishment of free-ranging populations of black-footed ferrets
E. Biggins, Jerry L. Godbey
2003, Comptes Rendus - Biologies (326) 104-111
The black-footed ferret (Mustela nigripes) of North America is critically endangered due in part to its extreme specialization on formerly stable and abundant prairie dogs (Cynomys). Its close relative, the Siberian polecat (M. eversmannii) seems to have been subjected to a varying environment that was not conducive to specialization. One...
Beaver herbivory and its effect on cottonwood trees: Influence of flooding along matched regulated and unregulated rivers
S.W. Breck, K.R. Wilson, D.C. Andersen
2003, River Research and Applications (19) 43-58
We compared beaver (Castor canadensis) foraging patterns on Fremont cottonwood (Populus deltoides subsp. wislizenii) saplings and the probability of saplings being cut on a 10 km reach of the flow-regulated Green River and a 8.6 km reach of the free-flowing Yampa River in northwestern Colorado. We measured the abundance and...
Processes and rates of sediment and wood accumulation in headwater streams of the Oregon Coast Range, USA
Christine L. May, Robert E. Gresswell
2003, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (28) 409-424
Channels that have been scoured to bedrock by debris flows provide unique opportunities to calculate the rate of sediment and wood accumulation in low-order streams, to understand the temporal succession of channel morphology following disturbance, and to make inferences about processes associated with input and transport of sediment. Dendrochronology was...
The effect of stochiastic technique on estimates of population viability from transition matrix models
T.N. Kaye, David A. Pyke
2003, Ecology (84) 1464-1476
Population viability analysis is an important tool for conservation biologists, and matrix models that incorporate stochasticity are commonly used for this purpose. However, stochastic simulations may require assumptions about the distribution of matrix parameters, and modelers often select a statistical distribution that seems reasonable without sufficient data to test its...
Parentage and relatedness in polyandrous comb-crested jacanas using ISSRs
Susan M. Haig, Terrence R. Mace, Thomas D. Mullins
2003, Journal of Heredity (94) 302-309
In this article we present the first analysis of parentage and relatedness in a natural vertebrate population, using Intersimple Sequence Repeat (ISSR) markers. Thus, 28 ISSR markers were used in a study of a sex-role reversed, simultaneously polyandrous shorebird from northeastern Australia, the comb-crested jacana (Irediparra gallinacea). Assessment of parentage...
Bilateral uric acid nephrolithiasis and ureteral hypertrophy in a free-ranging river otter (Lontra canadensis)
Robert A. Grove, Rob Bildfell, Charles J. Henny, D. R. Buhler
2003, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (39) 914-917
We report the first case of uric acid nephrolithiasis in a free-ranging river otter (Lontra canadensis). A 7 yr old male river otter collected from the Skagit River of western Washington (USA) had bilateral nephrolithiasis and severely enlarged ureters (one of 305 examined [0.33%]). The uroliths were 97% uric acid...
Comparison of ion-exchange resin counterions in the nutrient measurement of calcareous soils: Implications for correlative studies of plant-soil relationships
S. K. Sherrod, Jayne Belnap, M. E. Miller
2003, Communications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis (34) 1981-2001
For more than 40 years, ion-exchange resins have been used to characterize nutrient bioavailability in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. To date, however, no standardized methodology has been developed, particularly with respect to the counterions that initially occupy resin exchange sites. To determine whether different resin counterions yield different measures of...
Status of native fishes in the western United States and issues for fire and fuels management
B. Rieman, D. Lee, D. Burns, Robert E. Gresswell, M. Young, R. Stowell, J. Rinne, P. Howell
2003, Forest Ecology and Management (178) 197-211
Conservation of native fishes and changing patterns in wildfire and fuels are defining challenges for managers of forested landscapes in the western United States. Many species and populations of native fishes have declined in recorded history and some now occur as isolated remnants of what once were larger more complex...
Use of hydraulic head to estimate volumetric gas content and ebullition flux in northern peatlands
Donald O. Rosenberry, Paul H. Glaser, Donald I. Siegel, Edwin P. Weeks
2003, Water Resources Research (39) 13-1-13-10
Hydraulic head was overpressured at middepth in a 4.2‐m thick raised bog in the Glacial Lake Agassiz peatlands of northern Minnesota, and fluctuated in response to atmospheric pressure. Barometric efficiency (BE), determined by calculating ratios of change in hydraulic head to change in atmospheric pressure, ranged from 0.05 to 0.15...
Genetic Algorithm Calibration of Probabilistic Cellular Automata for Modeling Mining Permit Activity
S.J. Louis, G. L. Raines
2003, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the International Conference on Tools with Artificial Intelligence
We use a genetic algorithm to calibrate a spatially and temporally resolved cellular automata to model mining activity on public land in Idaho and western Montana. The genetic algorithm searches through a space of transition rule parameters of a two dimensional cellular automata model to find rule parameters that fit...
Nest sites and conservation of endangered Interior Least Terns Sterna antillarum athalassos on an alkaline flat in the south-central Great Plains (USA)
Brian R. Winton, David M. Leslie Jr.
2003, Acta Ornithologica (38) 135-141
We monitored nest sites of endangered Interior Least Terns on a 5 095 ha alkaline flat in north-central Oklahoma, USA. After nest loss, Least Terns commonly renested and experienced 30% apparent nest success in 1995-1996 (n = 233 nests). Nest success and predation differed by location on the alkaline flat...
Safety of oxytetracycline (Terramycin TM-100F) administered in feed to hybrid striped bass, walleyes, and yellow perch
M.P. Gaikowski, J.C. Wolf, S.M. Schleis, W.H. Gingerich
2003, Journal of Aquatic Animal Health (15) 274-286
Oxytetracycline (Terramycin TM-100F, a medicated premix containing oxytetracycline at 220 g/kg) is approved in the United States to control certain systemic bacterial diseases of salmon and catfish when fed at a rate of 55-82.5 mg per kilogram of bodyweight per day for 10 d. Although oxytetracycline may also control certain...
Automated calibration of a stream solute transport model: Implications for interpretation of biogeochemical parameters
D.T. Scott, M.N. Gooseff, K.E. Bencala, R.L. Runkel
2003, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (22) 492-510
The hydrologic processes of advection, dispersion, and transient storage are the primary physical mechanisms affecting solute transport in streams. The estimation of parameters for a conservative solute transport model is an essential step to characterize transient storage and other physical features that cannot be directly measured, and often is a...
Vertical velocity variance in the mixed layer from radar wind profilers
K. Eng, R.L. Coulter, W. Brutsaert
2003, Journal of Hydrologic Engineering (8) 301-307
Vertical velocity variance data were derived from remotely sensed mixed layer turbulence measurements at the Atmospheric Boundary Layer Experiments (ABLE) facility in Butler County, Kansas. These measurements and associated data were provided by a collection of instruments that included two 915 MHz wind profilers, two radio acoustic sounding systems, and...
Erosion of an ancient mountain range, the Great Smoky Mountains, North Carolina and Tennessee
A. Matmon, P.R. Bierman, J. Larsen, S. Southworth, M. Pavich, R. Finkel, M. Caffee
2003, American Journal of Science (303) 817-855
Analysis of 10Be and 26Al in bedrock (n=10), colluvium (n=5 including grain size splits), and alluvial sediments (n=59 including grain size splits), coupled with field observations and GIS analysis, suggest that erosion rates in the Great Smoky Mountains are controlled by subsurface bedrock erosion and diffusive slope processes. The results indicate...
Geology and geochemistry of the Reocín zinc-lead deposit, Basque-Cantabrian Basin, Northern Spain
Francisco Velasco, Jose Miguel Herrero, Inaki Yusta, Jose Antonio Alonso, Ignacio Seebold, David Leach
2003, Economic Geology (98) 1371-1396
The Reocín Zn-Pb deposit, 30 km southwest of Santander, Spain, occurs within Lower Cretaceous dolomitized Urgonian limestones on the southern flank of the Santillana syncline. The Reocín deposit is one of the largest known strata-bound, carbonate-hosted, zinc-lead deposits in Europe. The total metal endowment of the deposit, including past production and remaining reserves, is 62 Mt of ore grading 8.7...
Historic range of variability in landscape structure in subalpine forests of the Greater Yellowstone Area, USA
D.B. Tinker, W.H. Romme, Don G. Despain
2003, Landscape Ecology (18) 427-439
A measure of the historic range of variability (HRV) in landscape structure is essential for evaluating current landscape patterns of Rocky Mountain coniferous forests that have been subjected to intensive timber harvest. We used a geographic information system (GIS) and FRAGSTATS to calculate key landscape metrics on two ???130,000-ha landscapes...
Complications with using ratios for environmental data: Comparing enantiomeric ratios (ERs) and enantiomer fractions (EFs)
E.M. Ulrich, D.R. Helsel, W.T. Foreman
2003, Chemosphere (53) 531-538
Complications arise when ratios are used to present environmental data because ratios are an unbounded, multiplicative scale that can lead to asymmetrical (skewed) data distributions. Enantiomeric ratios (ERs), historically used in discussions of chiral signatures, often are published as mean ER??single-value standard deviation. Application of statistical summaries, such as the...
Influence of landscape structure and climate variability on a late holocene plant migration
M.E. Lyford, S.T. Jackson, J.L. Betancourt, S.T. Gray
2003, Ecological Monographs (73) 567-583
We analyzed and radiocarbon-dated 205 fossil woodrat middens from 14 sites in central and northern Wyoming and adjacent Utah and Montana to document spatiotemporal patterns of Holocene invasion by Utah juniper (Juniperus osteosperma). Holocene migration into central and northern Wyoming and southern Montana from the south proceeded by a series...