Perspectives on trans-Pacific biological invasions
Q. Guo
2002, Acta Phytoecologica Sinica (26) 724-730
Trans-Pacific biological invasion is one of the most striking and influential biological phenomena occurring in modern times and the process is still accelerating, and the associated invasives form neo-disjuncts (cf. many well-known paleo-disjuncts) between eastern Asia and North America. To better understand this phenomenon and the related taxa, I address...
Overlap in offshore habitat use by double-crested cormorants and boaters in western Lake Erie
Martin A. Stapanian, Michael T. Bur
2002, Journal of Great Lakes Research (28) 172-181
Double-crested cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) and boats of 2 length classes (≤ 8 m and > 8 m) were counted from a boat along 31 established strip transects in western Lake Erie from 24 April to 1 September 2000. Each transect included only one of the following habitats:...
Comparisons of likelihood and machine learning methods of individual classification
B. Guinand, A. Topchy, K.S. Page, M. K. Burnham-Curtis, W.F. Punch, K.T. Scribner
2002, Journal of Heredity (93) 260-269
Classification methods used in machine learning (e.g., artificial neural networks, decision trees, and k-nearest neighbor clustering) are rarely used with population genetic data. We compare different nonparametric machine learning techniques with parametric likelihood estimations commonly employed in population genetics for purposes of assigning individuals to their population...
Comparison of 5 benthic samplers to collect burrowing mayfly nymphs (Hexagenia spp.:Ephemeroptera:Ephemeridae) in sediments of the Laurentian Great Lakes
Don W. Schloesser, Thomas F. Nalepa
2002, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (21) 487-501
The recent return of burrowing mayfly nymphs (Hexagenia spp.) to western Lake Erie of the Laurentian Great Lakes has prompted a need to find a sampler to obtain the most accurate (i.e., highest mean density) and precise (i.e., lowest mean variance) abundance estimates of nymphs. The abundance of burrowing nymphs is...
Western Sandpipers (Calidris mauri) during the non-breeding season: Spatial segregation on a hemispheric scale
Silke Nebel, David B. Lank, Patrick D. O'Hara, Guillermo Fernandez, Ben Haase, Francisco Delgado, Felipe A. Estela, Lesley J. Evans Ogden, Brian A. Harrington, Barbara E. Kus, James E. Lyons, Francine Mercier, Brent Ortego, John Y. Takekawa, Nils Warnock, Sarah E. Warnock
2002, The Auk (119) 922-928
The nonbreeding distribution of Western Sandpipers (Calidris mauri) was documented using 19 data sets from 13 sites along the Pacific and Atlantic coasts of the Americas. Western Sandpipers showed latitudinal segregation with regard to sex and age. Females wintered farther south than males. A “U” shaped pattern was found with...
Use of satellite telemetry to identify common loon migration routes, staging areas and wintering range
Kevin P. Kenow, Michael W. Meyer, David Evers, David C. Douglas, J. Hines
2002, Waterbirds (25) 449-458
We developed a satellite transmitter attachment technique for adult Common Loons (Gavia immer) that would help in identifying important migration routes, staging areas, and the location of wintering grounds of birds that breed in the north central United States. During the autumn and winter of 1998, the migration of...
Nesting ecology of tundra swans on the coastal Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska
Colleen A. Babcock, A. C. Fowler, Craig R. Ely
2002, Waterbirds (25) 236-240
Nesting ecology of Tundra Swans (Cygnus columbianus columbianus) was studies the Kashunuk River near Old Chevak (61A?26a??N, 165A?27a??W), on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta of western Alaska from 1988-2000. Annual variation in snow-melt chronology, nesting phenology, nesting density, clutch size and nest success was examined. The same area (approximately 23 kmA?) was...
Sea otter population structure and ecology in Alaska
James L. Bodkin, Daniel H. Monson
2002, Arctic Research of the United States (16) 31-35
Sea otters are the only fully marine otter. They share a common ancestry with the Old World land otters, but their route of dispersal to the New World is uncertain. The historic range of the species is along the northern Pacific Ocean rim, between central Baja California and the islands...
IL-2 and IL-12 alter NK cell responsiveness to IFN-γ-inducible protein 10 by down-regulating CXCR3 expression
D. L. Hodge, William B. Schill, Ji Ming Wang, I. Blanca, D. A. Reynolds, J. R. Ortaldo, H. A. Young
2002, Journal of Immunology (168) 6090-6098
Cytokine treatment of NK cells results in alterations in multiple cellular responses that include cytotoxicity, cytokine production, proliferation, and chemotaxis. To understand the molecular mechanisms underlying these responses, microarray analysis was performed and the resulting gene expression patterns were compared between unstimulated, IL-2, IL-2 plus IL-12,...
Responses of Florida panthers to recreational deer and hog hunting
Michael W. Janis, Joseph D. Clark
2002, Journal of Wildlife Management (66) 839-848
Big Cypress National Preserve constitutes approximately one-third of the range of the endangered Florida panther (Puma concolor coryi). Because recreational hunting is allowed in Big Cypress National Preserve, we examined 8 response variables (activity rates, movement rates, predation success, home-range size, home-range shifts, proximity to off-road vehicle trails, use of...
Induction of skin ulcers in Atlantic menhaden by injection and aqueous exposure to the zoospores of Aphanomyces invadans
Yasu Kiryu, J. D. Shields, W. K. Vogelbein, D. E. Zwerner, H. Kator, Vicki S. Blazer
2002, Journal of Aquatic Animal Health (14) 11-24
The infectivity and role of Aphanomyces invadans in the etiology of skin ulcers in Atlantic menhaden Brevoortia tyrannus were investigated with two laboratory challenges. In the first experiment, Atlantic menhaden received subcutaneous injections with secondary zoospores from one of three cultures of Aphanomyces: WIC (an endemic isolate of A. invadans in Atlantic menhaden from the Wicomico River,...
Preliminary cellular-automata forecast of permit activity from 1998 to 2010, Idaho and Western Montana
G. L. Raines, M. L. Zientek, J. D. Causey, D. E. Boleneus
2002, Natural Resources Research (11) 167-180
For public land management in Idaho and western Montana, the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) has requested that the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) predict where mineral-related activity will occur in the next decade. Cellular automata provide an approach to simulation of this human activity. Cellular automata (CA) are defined by an...
Evaluation of 2-soft-release techniques to reintroduce black bears
Rick Eastridge, Joseph D. Clark
2002, Wildlife Society Bulletin (29) 1163-1174
Black bear (Ursus americanus) were extirpated from most of their range by the early 1900s by habitat destruction and unregulated hunting. Since then, bear habitat has recovered in many areas, but isolation may prevent natural recolonization. Black bear translocations often have limited success because of high mortality rates and low...
Parental care in Tundra Swans during the pre-fledgling period
Susan L. Earnst
2002, Waterbirds (25) 268-277
Among studies that have quantified the care of precocial young, few have investigated forms of parental care other than vigilance. During the pre-fledging period, Tundra Swan (Cygnus columbianus columbianus) parents provided simultaneous biparental care by foraging near each other and their cygnets, and cygnets spent more time foraging during bouts...
Bet-hedging applications for conservation
Mark S. Boyce, Eileen Kirsch, Christopher Servheen
2002, Journal of Biosciences (27) 385-392
One of the early tenets of conservation biology is that population viability is enhanced by maintaining multiple populations of a species. The strength of this tenet is justified by principles of bet-hedging. Management strategies that reduce variance in population size will also reduce risk of extinction. Asynchrony in population fluctuations...
Habitat and movement of lake sturgeon in the upper Mississippi River system, USA
Brent C. Knights, Jonathon M. Vallazza, Steven J. Zigler, Michael R. Dewey
2002, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (131) 507-522
Lake sturgeon Acipenser fluvescens, which are now protected from harvest, are considered rare in the upper Mississippi River and little information is available on the remaining populations. Transmitters were implanted into 31 lake sturgeon from two sites in the upper Mississippi River to describe their habitats and movement. The areas surrounding...
A baiting system for delivery of an oral plague vaccine to black-tailed prairie dogs
Terry E. Creekmore, Tonie E. Rocke, J. Hurley
2002, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (38) 32-39
Laboratory and field studies were conducted between July and October 1999 to identify bait preference, biomarker efficacy, and bait acceptance rates for delivering an oral plague vaccine to black-tailed prairie dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus). Twenty juvenile captive prairie dogs were offered alfalfa baits containing either alfalfa, alfalfa and 5% molasses, or...
Floristic quality assessment of one natural and three restored wetland complexes in North Dakota, USA
David M. Mushet, Ned H. Euliss Jr., Terry L. Shaffer
2002, Wetlands (22) 126-138
Floristic quality assessment is potentially an important tool for conservation efforts in the northern Great Plains of North America, but it has received little rigorous evaluation. Floristic quality assessments rely on coefficients assigned to each plant species of a region’s flora based on the conservatism of each species relative to...
Assemblages of breeding birds as indicators of grassland condition
S.F. Browder, Douglas H. Johnson, I.J. Ball
2002, Ecological Indicators (2) 257-270
We developed a measure of biological integrity for grasslands (GI) based on the most influential habitat types in the Prairie Pothole Region of North Dakota. GI is based on proportions of habitat types and the relationships of these habitat types to breeding birds. Habitat types were identified by digital aerial...
Spent shot availability and ingestion on areas managed for mourning doves
J.H. Schulz, J.J. Millspaugh, B.E. Washburn, G.R. Wester, J. T. Lanigan III, J. C. Franson
2002, Wildlife Society Bulletin (30) 112-120
Mourning dove (Zenaida macroura) hunting is becoming increasingly popular, especially in managed shooting fields. Given the possible increase in the availability of lead (Pb) shot on these areas, our objective was to estimate availability and ingestion of spent shot at the Eagle Bluffs Conservation Area (EBCA, hunted with nontoxic shot)...
Preface
M. Friend
2002, Hydrobiologia (473) vii-xii
This issue of Hydrobiologia brings together a series of papers resulting from an intensified effort to describe the current status of the physical and biological conditions present at California's Salton Sea. Most of the studies were contract investigations that were part of a project initiated in January 1998 to pursue...
Avian furcula morphology may indicate relationships of flight requirements among birds
Clifford Hui
2002, Journal of Morphology (251) 284-293
This study examined furcula (wishbone) shape relative to flight requirements. The furculae from 53 museum specimens in eight orders were measured: 1) three-dimensional shape (SR) as indicated by the ratio of the direct distance between the synostosis interclavicularis and the ligamentous attachment of one of its clavicles to the actual...
Evaluation of Light Detection and Ranging (LIDAR) for measuring river corridor topography
Z.H. Bowen, R.G. Waltermire
2002, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (38) 33-41
LIDAR is relatively new in the commercial market for remote sensing of topography and it is difficult to find objective reporting on the accuracy of LIDAR measurements in an applied context. Accuracy specifications for LIDAR data in published evaluations range from 1 to 2 m root mean square error (RMSEx,y)...
Drowned reefs and antecedent karst topography, Au'au channel, S.E. Hawaiian Islands
R.W. Grigg, E. E. Grossman, S.A. Earle, S.R. Gittings, D. Lott, J. McDonough
2002, Coral Reefs (21) 73-82
During the last glacial maximum (LGM), about 21,000 years ago, the Hawaiian Islands of Maui, Lanai, and Molokai were interconnected by limestone bridges, creating a super-island known as Maui-Nui. Approximately 120 m of sea-level rise during the Holocene Transgression flooded, and then drowned, these bridges separating the islands by inter-island...
Whirling disease among snake river cutthroat trout in two spring streams in Wyoming
W.A. Hubert, M. P. Joyce, R. Gipson, D. Zafft, D. Money, D. Hawk, B. Taro
2002, American Fisheries Society Symposium (2002) 181-193
We assessed endemic age-0 cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus clarki for evidence of pathology associated with Myxobolus cerebralis in two streams formed by springs in western Wyoming. We hypothesized that the location of spawning sites in spring streams would affect the extent of exposure of cutthroat trout fry to M. cerebralis triactinomyxons...