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Page 31, results 751 - 775

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Effects of harmful algal blooms and associated water-quality on endangered Lost River and shortnose suckers
Summer M. Burdick, David A. Hewitt, Barbara A. Martin, Liam N. Schenk, Stewart A. Rounds
2020, Harmful Algae (97)
Anthropogenic eutrophication contributes to harmful blooms of cyanobacteria in freshwater ecosystems worldwide. In Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon, massive blooms of Aphanizomenon flos-aquae and smaller blooms of other cyanobacteria are associated with cyanotoxins, hypoxia, high pH, high concentrations of ammonia, and potentially hypercapnia. Recovery of the endangered Lost River sucker Deltistes luxatus and shortnose sucker Chasmistes...
Habitat associations and distributions of two endemic crayfishes, Cambarus (Erebicambarus) maculatus Hobbs & Pflieger, 1988 and Faxonius (Billecambarus) harrisonii (Faxon, 1884) (Decapoda: Astacoidea: Cambaridae), in the Meramec River drainage, Missouri, USA
J. Chilton, Amanda E. Rosenberger, Robert J. DiStefano
2020, Article
Understanding the habitat associations and distributions of rare species is important to inform management and policy decisions. Cambarus (Erebicambarus) maculatus  Hobbs & Pflieger, 1988, the freckled crayfish, and Faxonius (Billecambarus) harrisonii (Faxon, 1884), the belted crayfish, are two of Missouri’s endemic crayfish species. Both...
Subspecies differentiation in an enigmatic chaparral shrub species
Yi Huang, Glen R. Morrison, Alan Brelsford, Janet Franklin, Diana D Jolles, Jon Keeley, V Thomas Parker, Natalie Saavedra, Andrew C Sanders, Thomas Stoughton, Gregory A. Wahlert, Amy Litt
2020, American Journal of Botany (107) 923-940
PremiseDelimiting biodiversity units is difficult in organisms in which differentiation is obscured by hybridization, plasticity, and other factors that blur phenotypic boundaries. Such work is more complicated when the focal units are subspecies, the definition of which has not been broadly explored in the era of modern...
Safe work practices for working with wildlife
Tegwin Taylor, Danielle Buttke
Katherine L. D. Richgels, Samantha E.J. Gibbs, Margaret A. Wild, editor(s)
2020, Techniques and Methods 15-C2
Most wildlife biologists, technicians, and veterinarians complete their tasks safely and uneventfully every day. However, some significant risks exist in this line of work, and injuries, illnesses, and accidental deaths among wildlife workers do occur. Aviation accidents (airplane and helicopter), drownings, and car and truck accidents are the most common...
Panmixia in a sea ice-associated marine mammal: evaluating genetic structure of the Pacific walrus (Odobenus rosmarus divergens) at multiple spatial scales
William S. Beatty, Patrick R. Lemons, Suresh Sethi, Jason Everett, Cara J. Lewis, Robert J. Lynn, Geoffrey M. Cook, Joel L. Garlich-Miller, John K. Wenburg
2020, Journal of Mammalogy (101) 755-765
The kin structure of a species at relatively fine spatial scales impacts broad-scale patterns in genetic structure at the population level. However, kin structure rarely has been elucidated for migratory marine mammals. The Pacific walrus (Odobenus rosmarus divergens) exhibits migratory behavior linked to seasonal patterns in sea ice dynamics. Consequently,...
Immigration does not offset harvest mortality in groups of a cooperatively breeding carnivore
S. B. Bassing, David Edward Ausband, Michael S. Mitchell, M. K. Schwartz, J. J. Nowak, G. Hale, L. P. Waits
2020, Animal Conservation (23) 750-761
The effects of harvest on cooperatively breeding species are often more complex than simply subtracting the number of animals that died from the group count. Changes in demographic rates, particularly dispersal, could offset some effects of harvest mortality in groups but this is rarely explored with...
Estimation of metademographic rates and landscape connectivity for a conservation-reliant anuran
Adam Duarte, James T. Peterson, Christopher Pearl, Jennifer Christine Rowe, Brome McCreary, Stephanie Galvan, Michael J. Adams
2020, Landscape Ecology (35) 1459-1479
ContextAmphibian conservation efforts commonly assume populations are tied to waterbodies that collectively function as a metapopulation. This assumption is rarely evaluated, and there is a need to understand the degree of connectivity among patches to appropriately define, manage, and conserve biological populations.ObjectivesOur objectives were to quantify...
Looking where it’s hard to see: A case study documenting rare Eucyclogobius newberryi presence in a California lagoon
Terra L Dressler, Kevin D. Lafferty, Christopher L. Jerde, Tom L. Dudley
2020, Journal of Fish Biology (97) 572-576
Environmental DNA (eDNA) analysis is increasingly used for biomonitoring and research of fish populations and communities by environmental resource managers and academic researchers. Although managers are much interested in expanding the use of eDNA as a survey technique, they are sceptical about both its utility (given that information is often...
Sediments and the sea floor of the continental shelves and coastal waters of the United States—About the usSEABED integrated sea-floor-characterization database, built with the dbSEABED processing system
Brian J. Buczkowski, Jane A. Reid, Chris J. Jenkins
2020, Open-File Report 2020-1046
Since the second half of the 20th century, there has been an increase in scientific interest, research effort, and information gathered on the geologic sedimentary character of the continental margins of the United States. Data and information from thousands of sources have increased our scientific understanding of the character of...
Food web controls on mercury fluxes and fate in the Colorado River, Grand Canyon
David Walters, Wyatt F. Cross, Theodore Kennedy, Colden V. Baxter, R. O. Hall Jr., Emma J. Rosi
2020, Science Advances (6)
Mercury (Hg) biomagnification in aquatic food webs is a global concern; yet, the ways species traits and interactions mediate these fluxes remain poorly understood. Few pathways dominated Hg flux in the Colorado River despite large spatial differences in food web complexity, and fluxes were mediated by one functional trait, predation...
Effects of climate change on plague exposure pathways and resulting disease dynamics
Tonie E. Rocke, Robin E. Russell, Michael D. Samuel, Rachel C. Abbott, Julia Poje
2020, Final Report 16 RC01-012
Introduction and Objectives: Sylvatic plague, a zoonotic flea-borne disease, caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis, is relevant to the Department of Defense (DOD), because prairie dogs and other susceptible rodents are present on military installations in several western states. Arthropod-borne diseases, like plague, are thought to be particularly sensitive to...
Introduction to resource allocation
James E. Lyons
2020, Book chapter, Structured decision making: Case studies in natural resource management
With ongoing habitat loss and degradation, ever-increasing threats to biodiversity, and limited funding for conservation and management, nearly every natural resource manager routinely faces difficult resource allocation problems. Funding and capacity for natural resource management rarely meet the need, and informed resource allocations are increasingly important. These decision problems include...
The future of landslides’ past—A framework for assessing consecutive landsliding systems
A. Temme, F. Guzzetti, J. Samia, Benjamin B. Mirus
2020, Landslides (17) 1519-1528
Landslides often happen where they have already occurred in the past. The potential of landslides to reduce or enhance conditions for further landsliding has long been recognized and has often been reported, but the mechanisms and spatial and temporal scales of these processes have previously received little specific attention. Despite...
Are environmental DNA methods ready for aquatic invasive species management?
Adam J. Sepulveda, Nanette M Nelson, Christopher L. Jerde, Gordon Luikart
2020, Trends in Ecology and Evolution (35) 668-678
Multiple studies have demonstrated environmental (e)DNA detections of rare, invasive species. However, invasive species managers struggle with using eDNA results because detections might not indicate species presence. We evaluated if eDNA methods have matured to a point where they can be widely applied to aquatic invasive species management. We found...
Mast seeding patterns are asynchronous at a continental scale
J. M. LaMontagne, Ian Pearse, David A. Greene, W. D. Koenig
2020, Nature Plants (6) 460-465
Resource pulses are short duration, high magnitude, rare events that drive the dynamics of both plant and animal populations and communities1. Mast seeding is perhaps the most common type of resource pulse occurring in terrestrial ecosystems2, is characterized by the synchronous and highly variable production of seed crops by a...
Lessons from a post-eruption landscape
Jon J. Major, Charles M. Crisafulli, Frederick J. Swanson
2020, Eos, Earth and Space Science News (101) 34-40
From March to May 1980, magma rose high into Mount St. Helens (MSH), swelling and—as it turned out—destabilizing its north flank. Scientists knew the volcano had been highly active at times over the past 40,000 years, but the mountain, located amid the Cascade Range in southwestern Washington, had been mostly...
Preliminary investigation of the critically imperiled Caney Mountain cave crayfish Orconectes stygocaneyi Hobbs III, 2001 (Decapoda: Cambaridae) in Missouri, USA
Robert J. DiStefano, D.C. Ashley, Shannon K. Brewer, J.B. Mouser, M. Neimiller
2020, Freshwater Crayfish (25) 47-57
The Caney Mountain cave crayfish (Orconectes stygocaneyi) is one of North America's rarest crayfish, endemic to one cave in southern Missouri, USA. The species is listed as 'critically imperiled' by Missouri, and 'threatened' by the American Fisheries Society. Previously, only 15 crayfish have been observed in Mud Cave, and only...
Sea-level rise exponentially increases coastal flood frequency
Mohsen Taherkhani, Sean Vitousek, Patrick L. Barnard, L Neil Frazer, Tiffany Anderson, Charles Fletcher
2020, Scientific Reports (10)
Sea-level rise will radically redefine the coastline of the 21st century. For many coastal regions, projections of global sea-level rise by the year 2100 (e.g., 0.5–2 meters) are comparable in magnitude to today’s extreme but short-lived increases in water level due to storms. Thus, the 21st century will...
Dietary patterns in black abalone (Haliotis cracherodii Leach, 1814) as indicated by observation of drift algal and seagrass capture at San Nicolas Island, California USA, 1982‒2019
Michael C. Kenner, Glenn Van Blaricom
2020, Journal of Shellfish Research (39) 113-124
Black abalone Haliotis cracherodii Leach, 1814 are known to feed on drift plant macrodetritus moved about in the intertidal zone by waves and currents. Drift capture is a trait shared by at least several other abalone species. Drift materials are entrapped beneath the anterior foot and held...
Monazite and cassiterite Usingle bondPb dating of the Abu Dabbab rare-metal granite, Egypt: Late Cryogenian metalliferous granite magmatism in the Arabian-Nubian Shield
Bernd Lehmann, Basem Zoheir, Leonid A. Neymark, Armin Zeh, Ashraf Emam, Abdelhady Radwan, Rongqing Zhang, Richard J. Moscati
2020, Gondwana Research (84) 71-80
The Abu Dabbab rare-metal granite in the Eastern Desert of Egypt is a highly-evolved alkali-feldspar granite with transitional magmatic-hydrothermal features. Extreme geochemical fractionation and the associated significant TaSn resource make the Abu Dabbab intrusion an important feature in the metallogenic...
Sea turtle conservation: 10 ways you can help
Jessica E. Swindall, Holly K. Ober, Margaret Lamont, Raymond R. Carthy
2020, EDIS (2020)
Five species of sea turtle rely on Florida’s coastal and nearshore habitats for nesting during the summer months and foraging throughout the year (Figure 1). - Loggerhead turtles, named for their large, block-shaped heads with strong jaw muscles for crushing benthic invertebrates, are the most common sea turtle species...
Using ultrasonic acoustics to detect cryptic flying squirrels: Effects of season and habitat suitability
Corinne A. Diggins, L. Michelle Gilley, Christine A. Kelly, W. Mark Ford
2020, Wildlife Society Bulletin (44) 300-308
New technologies allow for more efficient and effective monitoring of rare or elusive species. However, standardizing protocol to ensure high detection rates is important prior to widespread use of a new technique. The use of ultrasonic acoustic detectors to survey for flying squirrels (Glaucomys spp.) is a novel method that is...
Can genetic assignment tests provide insight on the influence of captive egression on epizootiology of chronic wasting disease?
William L. Miller, W. David Walter
2020, Evolutionary Applications (13) 715-726
Identifying the sources of ongoing and novel disease outbreaks is critical for understanding the diffusion of epizootic diseases. Identifying infection sources is difficult when few physical differences separate individuals with different origins. Genetic assignment procedures show great promise for assessing transmission dynamics in such situations. Here, we use genetic assignment...
Flea parasitism and host survival in a plague-relevant system: Theoretical and conservation implications
David A. Eads, Rachel C. Abbott, Dean E. Biggins, Tonie E. Rocke
2020, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (56) 378-387
Plague is a bacterial zoonosis of mammalian hosts and flea vectors. The disease is capable of ravaging rodent populations and transforming ecosystems. Because plague mortality is likely to be predicted by flea parasitism, it is critical to understand vector dynamics. It has been hypothesized that paltry precipitation and reduced vegetative...