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Page 2884, results 72076 - 72100

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The Sohagpur Coalfield Project - A collaborative study of potential coking coal resources by the Geological Survey of India and the U.S. Geological Survey
Robert C. Milici, Abhijit Mukhopadhyay, Peter D. Warwick, S. Adhikari, Edwin R. Landis, S.K. Mukhopadhyay
Ajoy K. Ghose, L.K. Bose, editor(s)
2003, Conference Paper, Mining in the 21st century - Quo vadis? Proceedings of the 19th World Mining Congress
The Geological Survey of India (GSI), Coal Wing, and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), Energy Resources Team, conducted a collaborative study of the potential for coking coal resources within the Sohagpur coalfield, Madhya Pradesh, India from 1995 to 2001. The coalfield is located within an extensional basin that contains Permian-...
Genetic concepts and uncertainties in restoring fish populations and species
R.R. Reisenbichler, F.M. Utter, C.C. Krueger
2003, Book chapter, Strategies for restoring river ecosystems: Sources of variability and uncertainty in natural and managed systems
Genetic considerations can be crucially important to the success of reintroductions of lotic species. Current paradigms for conservation and population genetics provide guidance for reducing uncertainties in genetic issues and for increasing the likelihood of achieving restoration. Effective restoration is facilitated through specific goals and objectives developed from the definition that a restored or...
Estimating mortality rates of adult fish from entrainment through the propellers of river towboats
S. Gutreuter, John M. Dettmers, David H. Wahl
2003, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (132) 646-661
We developed a method to estimate mortality rates of adult fish caused by entrainment through the propellers of commercial towboats operating in river channels. The method combines trawling while following towboats (to recover a fraction of the kills) and application of a hydrodynamic model of diffusion (to estimate the fraction...
Small mammals within riparian habitats of a regulated and unregulated aridland river
M.J. Falck, K.R. Wilson, D.C. Andersen
2003, Western North American Naturalist (63) 35-42
In northwestern Colorado, flow regulation on the Green River has created a transitional plant community that features encroachment by upland vegetation into cottonwood (Populus fremontii)-dominated, riparian forest on topographically high floodplain sites and reduced cottonwood regeneration on low floodplain sites. To assess how these changes might have affected small mammal...
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...
Comparison of helicopter and ground surveys for North American elk Cervus elaphus and mule deer Odocoileus hemionus population composition
Louis C. Bender, Woodrow L. Myers, William R. Gould
2003, Wildlife Biology (9) 199-205
Both ground and helicopter surveys are commonly used to collect sex and age composition data for ungulates. Little attention has been paid, however, to whether data collected by each technique are similar. We compared helicopter and ground composition data for both elk Cervus elaphus and mule deer Odocoileus hemionus across a variety of habitats...
Lessons from monitoring water quality in San Francisco Bay
J. E. Cloern, T.S. Schraga, C.B. Lopez, R. Labiosa
2003, Report
San Francisco Bay is the defining landscape feature of the place we call ‘The Bay Area,’ but most of us only experience the Bay as we view it from an airplane window or drive across one of its bridges. These views from afar suggest that the Bay is static and...
Snorkeling as an alternative to depletion electrofishing for assessing cutthroat trout and brown trout in stream pools
M. P. Joyce, W.A. Hubert
2003, Journal of Freshwater Ecology (18) 215-222
We compared abundance and length structure estimates of cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus clarki) and brown trout (Salmo trutta) of 15 cm total length or greater obtained by snorkeling in stream pools with estimates obtained by depletion electrofishing. We sampled 12 pools in each of two streams formed by large springs in the Salt River Valley of western Wyoming. Snorkeling counts provided a relatively accurate index of depletion electrofishing estimates of abundance of cutthroat trout, but not brown trout....
Identification of larval Pacific lampreys (Lampetra tridentata), river lampreys (L. ayresi), and western brook lampreys (L. richardsoni) and thermal requirements of early life history stages of lampreys. Annual report 2002-2003
M.H. Meeuwig, J.M. Bayer, J.G. Seelye, R.A. Reiche
2003, Report
Two fundamental aspects of lamprey biology were examined to provide tools for population assessment and determination of critical habitat needs of Columbia River Basin (CRB) lampreys (the Pacific lamprey, Lampetra tridentata, and the western brook lamprey, L. richardsoni). We evaluated the usefulness of current diagnostic characteristics for identification of larval...
Bisphenol A is released from used polycarbonate animal cages into water at room temperature
Kembra L. Howdeshell, Paul H. Peterman, Barbara M. Judy, Julia A. Taylor, Carl E. Orazio, Rachel L. Ruhlen, Frederick S. vom Saal, Wade V. Welshons
2003, Environmental Health Perspectives (111) 1180-1187
Bisphenol A (BPA) is a monomer with estrogenic activity that is used in the production of food packaging, dental sealants, polycarbonate plastic, and many other products. The monomer has previously been reported to hydrolyze and leach from these products under high heat and alkaline conditions, and the amount of leaching...
Amphibian conservation genetics
C.M. Bridges, C. L. Rowe, W. A. Hopkins
2003, Book chapter, Amphibian decline: An integrated analysis of multiple stressor effects
No abstract available....
Sea otter population declines in the Aleutian Archipelago
Angela M. Doroff, James A. Estes, M. Tim Tinker, Douglas M. Burn, Thomas J. Evans
2003, Journal of Mammalogy (84) 55-64
Sea otter (Enhydra lutris) populations were exploited to near extinction and began to recover after the cessation of commercial hunting in 1911. Remnant colonies of sea otters in the Aleutian archipelago were among the first to recover; they continued to increase through the 1980s but declined abruptly during the 1990s....
Desert tortoise (Gopherus agassizii) survival at two eastern Mojave Desert sites: Death by short-term drought?
Kathleen M. Longshore, Jef R. Jaeger, J. Mark Sappington
2003, Journal of Herpetology (37) 169-177
Survival of adult Desert Tortoises (Gopherus agassizii) appears related to site-specific variation in precipitation and productivity of annual plants. We studied adult tortoise survival rates at two closely situated, but physiographically different, sites in the eastern Mojave Desert over a nine-year period (spring 1992 to spring 2001). Survival rates were...
Capture methods for Musk Ducks
K. G. McCracken, J. Hemmings, D.C. Paton, A. D. Afton
2003, Wildfowl (54) 211-241
Musk Ducks Biziura lobata are endemic to wetlands, river systems and coastal oceanic waters of temperate Australia. Individuals of this species are difficult to capture because of their excellent swimming and diving abilities and frequent use of deep-water habitats. Night-lighting, baited clover-leaf traps and walk-in-nest-traps were used to capture Musk...
Improving size estimates of open animal populations by incorporating information on age
Bryan F.J. Manly, Trent L. McDonald, Steven C. Amstrup, Eric V. Regehr
2003, BioScience (53) 666-669
Around the world, a great deal of effort is expended each year to estimate the sizes of wild animal populations. Unfortunately, population size has proven to be one of the most intractable parameters to estimate. The capture-recapture estimation models most commonly used (of the Jolly-Seber type) are complicated and require...
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...