Intra-lake variation in maturity, fecundity, and spawning of slimy sculpins (Cottus cognatus) in southern Lake Ontario
Randall W. Owens, George E. Noguchi
1998, Journal of Great Lakes Research (24) 383-391
Knowledge of the spawning cycle and factors affecting fecundity of slimy sculpins (Cottus cognatus) are important in understanding the population dynamics of this species in large lake systems, like Lake Ontario. Fecundity and the spawning cycle of slimy sculpins were described...
Serum biochemistry of captive and free-ranging gray wolves (Canis lupus)
Peter Constable, Ken Hinchcliff, Nick Demma, Margaret Callahan, B.W. Dale, Kevin Fox, Layne G. Adams, Ray Wack, Lynn Kramer
1998, Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine (29) 435-440
Normal serum biochemistry values are frequently obtained from studies of captive sedentary (zoo) or free-ranging (wild) animals. It is frequently assumed that values from these two populations are directly referable to each other. We tested this assumption using 20 captive gray wolves (Canis lupus) in Minnesota, USA, and 11 free-ranging...
Flow-cytometric determination of genotoxic effects of exposure to petroleum in mink and sea otters
J. W. Bickham, J.A. Mazet, J. Blake, M.J. Smolen, Y. Lou, Brenda E. Ballachey
1998, Ecotoxicology (7) 191-199
Three experiments were conducted to investigate the genotoxic effects of crude oil on mink and sea otters, In the first experiment, the effects on mink of chronic exposure to weathered Prudhoe Bay crude oil were studied, Female mink were fed a diet that included weathered crude oil for a period...
Relationships among environmental variables and distribution of tree species at high elevation in the Olympic Mountains
Andrea Woodward
1998, Northwest Science (72) 10-22
Relationships among environmental variables and occurrence of tree species were investigated at Hurricane Ridge in Olympic National Park, Washington, USA. A transect consisting of three plots was established down one north-and one south-facing slope in stands representing the typical elevational sequence of tree species. Tree species included subalpine fir (Abies lasiocarpa), Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii),...
Short-term influence of tank tracks on vegetation and microphytic crusts in shrubsteppe habitat
Stephen E. Watts
1998, Environmental Management (22) 611-616
Nutt.) habitat within the Idaho Army National Guard Orchard Training Area in southwestern Idaho. The purpose of this study was to determine the short-term (1–2 years) influence of tank tracks on vegetation and microphytic crusts in shrubsteppe habitat. The two types of tank tracks studied were...
Monitoring species richness and abundance of shorebirds in the western Great Basin
Nils Warnock, Susan M. Haig, Lewis W. Oring
1998, The Condor (100) 589-600
Broad-scale avian surveys have been attempted within North America with mixed results. Arid regions, such as the Great Basin, are often poorly sampled because of the vastness of the region, inaccessibility of sites, and few ornithologists. In addition, extreme variability in wetland habitat conditions present special problems for conducting censuses...
Checklist and "Pollard Walk" butterfly survey methods on public lands
Ronald A. Royer, Jane E. Austin, Wesley E. Newton
1998, American Midland Naturalist (140) 358-371
Checklist and “Pollard Walk” butterfly survey methods were contemporaneously applied to seven public sites in North Dakota during the summer of 1995. Results were compared for effect of method and site on total number of butterflies and total number of species detected per hour. Checklist searching produced significantly more butterfly...
Pathology of diseases in wild desert tortoises from California
B.L. Homer, K.H. Berry, Mary E. Brown, G. Ellis, E.R. Jacobson
1998, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (34) 508-523
Twenty-four ill or dead desert tortoises (Gopherus agassizii) were received between March 1992 and July 1995 for necropsies from the Mojave and Colorado deserts of California (USA). Diseases observed in these animals included cutaneous dyskeratosis (n = 7); shell necrosis (n = 2); respiratory diseases...
Microbial diversity in a hydrocarbon- and chlorinated-solvent- contaminated aquifer undergoing intrinsic bioremediation
M.A. Dojka, P. Hugenholtz, S.K. Haack, N.R. Pace
1998, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (64) 3869-3877
A culture-independent molecular phylogenetic approach was used to survey constituents of microbial communities associated with an aquifer contaminated with hydrocarbons (mainly jet fuel) and chlorinated solvents undergoing intrinsic bioremediation. Samples were obtained from three redox zones: methanogenic, methanogenic-sulfate reducing, and iron or sulfate reducing. Small-subunit rRNA genes were amplified directly...
Sensitivity of condition indices to changing density in a white-tailed deer population
M.G. Sams, R.L. Lochmiller, C.W. Qualls Jr., David M. Leslie Jr.
1998, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (34) 110-125
The ways in which comprehensive condition profiles, incorporating morphometric, histologic, physiologic, and diet quality indices, responded to changes in density of a white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) population were examined. Changes in these condition indices were monitored in a northeastern Oklahoma deer herd as...
Riparian zones as havens for exotic plant species in the central grasslands
T.J. Stohlgren, K.A. Bull, Yuka Otsuki, C.A. Villa, M. Lee
1998, Plant Ecology (138) 113-125
In the Central Grasslands of the United States, we hypothesized that riparian zones high in soil fertility would contain more exotic plant species than upland areas of low soil fertility. Our alternate hypothesis was that riparian zones high in native plant species richness and cover would monopolize available resources and...
Using sediment 'fingerprints' to assess sediment-budget errors, north Halawa Valley, Oahu, Hawaii, 1991-92
B. R. Hill, E.H. DeCarlo, C. C. Fuller, M.F. Wong
1998, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (23) 493-508
Reliable estimates of sediment-budget errors are important for interpreting sediment-budget results. Sediment-budget errors are commonly considered equal to sediment-budget imbalances, which may underestimate actual sediment-budget errors if they include compensating positive and negative errors. We modified the sediment 'fingerprinting' approach to qualitatively evaluate compensating errors in an annual (1991) fine...
Spawning ecology of flannelmouth sucker, Catostomus lattipinnis (Catostomidae), in two small tributaries of the lower Colorado river
S.J. Weiss, E.O. Otis, O.E. Maughan
1998, Environmental Biology of Fishes (52) 419-433
We report the first published accounts of spawning behavior and spawning site selection of the flannelmouth sucker in two small tributaries of the lower Colorado River in the Grand Canyon, Arizona. Spawning was observed on 20 March 1992 and from 28 March to 10 April 1993 in the Paria River,...
Simulating cholinesterase inhibition in birds caused by dietary insecticide exposure
M.S. Corson, M.A. Mora, W.E. Grant
1998, Ecological Modelling (105) 299-323
We describe a stochastic simulation model that simulates avian foraging in an agricultural landscape to evaluate factors affecting dietary insecticide exposure and to predict post-exposure cholinesterase (ChE) inhibition. To evaluate the model, we simulated published field studies and found that model predictions of insecticide decay and ChE inhibition reasonably approximated...
Stable isotopes and sediments from Pickerel Lake, South Dakota, USA: A 12ky record of environmental changes
A. Schwalb, W.E. Dean
1998, Journal of Paleolimnology (20) 15-30
Sedimentological parameters and stable O- and C-isotopic composition of marl and ostracode calcite selected from a 17.7-m-long core from the 8-m-deep center of Pickerel Lake, northeastern South Dakota, provide one of the longest (ca. 12ky) paleoenvironmental records from the northern Great Plains. The late Glacial to early Holocene climate in...
The Cascadia Subduction Zone: Two contrasting models of lithospheric structure
T.V. Romanyuk, R. Blakely, Walter D. Mooney
1998, Physics and Chemistry of the Earth (23) 297-301
The Pacific margin of North America is one of the most complicated regions in the world in terms of its structure and present day geodynamic regime. The aim of this work is to develop a better understanding of lithospheric structure of the Pacific Northwest, in particular the Cascadia subduction zone...
Chemistry, isotopic composition, and origin of a methane-hydrogen sulfide hydrate at the Cascadia subduction zone
M. Kastner, K.A. Kvenvolden, T.D. Lorenson
1998, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (156) 173-183
Although the presence of extensive gas hydrate on the Cascadia margin, offshore from the western U.S. and Canada, has been inferred from marine seismic records and pore water chemistry, solid gas hydrate has only been found at one location. At Ocean...
Tectonic setting of synorogenic gold deposits of the Pacific Rim
R.J. Goldfarb, G.N. Phillips, W. J. Nokleberg
1998, Ore Geology Reviews (13) 185-218
More than 420 million oz of gold were concentrated in circum-Pacific synorogenic quartz loades mainly during two periods of continental growth, one along the Gondwanan margin in the Palaeozoic and the other in the northern Pacific basin between 170 and 50 Ma. These ores have many features in common and...
Radiogenic heat production in sedimentary rocks of the Gulf of Mexico basin, south Texas
Thomas E. Mckenna, J. M. Sharp Jr.
1998, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (82) 484-496
Radiogenic heat production within the sedimentary section of the Gulf of Mexico basin is a significant source of heat. Radiogenic heat should be included in thermal models of this basin (and perhaps other sedimentary basins). We calculate that radiogenic heat may contribute up to 26% of the overall surface heat-flow...
Effect of enhanced manganese oxidation in the hyporheic zone on basin-scale geochemical mass balance
Judson W. Harvey, Christopher C. Fuller
1998, Water Resources Research (34) 623-636
We determined the role of the hyporheic zone (the subsurface zone where stream water and shallow groundwater mix) in enhancing microbially mediated oxidation of dissolved manganese (to form manganese precipitates) in a drainage basin contaminated by copper mining. The fate of manganese is of overall importance to water quality in...
The tectonic significance of pre-Scandian 40Ar/39Ar phengite cooling ages in the Caledonides of western Norway
T.B. Andersen, H. N. Berry IV, D. R. Lux, A. Andresen
1998, Journal of the Geological Society (155) 297-309
Pre-Silurian continental-margin deposits in western Norway, non-conformably overlying allochthonous continental orthogneisses retain Ordovician 40Ar/39Ar cooling ages for phengites, implying either rapid cooling immediately after a Late Ordovician orogenic event, or less likely, a slow cooling following an Early Ordovician or older orogeny. The Dalsfjord Suite–Høyvik Group basement–cover pair are probably a...
Reproductive success of Belding's Savannah Sparrows in a highly fragmented landscape
A.N. Powell, Christine L. Collier
1998, The Auk (115) 508-513
Habitat fragmentation can influence the abundance and distribution of birds. Decreases in patch size increase the amount of edge habitat, which can allow greater invasion by exotic species, predators, and brood parasites (Hagan and Johnston 1992, Donovan et al., 1995). Fragmented habitats may act as population sinks and result in...
Effects of a beaver pond on runoff processes: comparison of two headwater catchments
Douglas A. Burns, Jeffery J. McDonnell
1998, Journal of Hydrology (205) 248-264
Natural variations in concentrations of 18O, D, and H4SiO4 in two tributary catchments of Woods Lake in the west-central Adirondack Mountains of New York were measured during 1989–1991 to examine runoff processes and their implications for the neutralization of acidic precipitation by calcium carbonate treatment. The two catchments are similar except that...
An expandable radiocollar for elk calves
B.L. Smith, W.P. Burger, F. J. Singer
1998, Wildlife Society Bulletin (26) 113-117
Expandable radiocollars, designed to monitor juvenile survival and movements, were placed on 132 neonatal elk (Cervus elaphus) in Yellowstone National Park during 1987-1990. A modified design of the same collar was placed on 164 neonates of the Jackson elk herd in northwest Wyoming during 1990-1992. One of the Yellowstone calves...
Results from the Mars global surveyor thermal emission spectrometer
P. R. Christensen, D.L. Anderson, S.C. Chase, R.T. Clancy, R. N. Clark, B.J. Conrath, H. H. Kieffer, R.O. Kuzmin, M. C. Malin, J.C. Pearl, T. L. Roush, M. D. Smith
1998, Science (279) 1692-1696
The Thermal Emission Spectrometer spectra of low albedo surface materials suggests that a four to one mixture of pyroxene to plagioclase, together with about a 35 percent dust component provides the best fit to the spectrum. Qualitative upper limits can be placed on the concentration of carbonates (<10 percent), olivine...