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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Fungal life-styles and ecosystem dynamics: biological aspects of plant pathogens, plant endophytes and saprophytes
R. J. Rodriguez, R. S. Redman
1997, Advances in Botanical Research (24) 169-193
This chapter discusses various biochemical, genetic, ecological, and evolutionary aspects of fungi that express either symbiotic or saprophytic life-styles. An enormous pool of potential pathogens exists in both agricultural and natural ecosystems, and virtually all plant species are susceptible to one or more fungal pathogens. Fungal pathogens have the potential...
Ephemeral lekking behavior in the buff-breasted sandpiper, Tryngites subruficollis
Richard B. Lanctot, Patrick J. Weatherhead
1997, Behavioral Ecology (8) 268-278
We studied male reproductive behavior of the buff-breasted sandpiper Tryngites subruficoills for three yean on a 16-km2 study site in northern Alaska to document variation in male lekking behavior and to explore the causes of that variation. During the breeding season, about 75% of males on the study area displayed...
Progressive deformation of the Chugach accretionary complex, Alaska, during a paleogene ridge-trench encounter
Timothy M. Kusky
1997, Journal of Structural Geology (19) 139-157
The Mesozoic accretionary wedge of south-central Alaska is cut by an array of faults including dextral and sinistral strike-slip faults, synthetic and antithetic thrust faults, and synthetic and antithetic normal faults. The three fault sets are characterized by quartz ± calcite ± chlorite ± prehnite slickensides, and are all relatively...
Book review: Riparian ecosystem recovery in arid lands: Strategies and references
Julie C. Stromberg, Patrick B. Shafroth, Caitlin Cornwall
1997, Restoration Ecology (5) 271-271
Increasingly, ecosystem managers are attempting to restore riparian ecosystems in the arid West that have been degraded by land and water management practices. This book will fill a vacant niche in the library of these practitioners. Briggs emphasizes several concepts that should be fundamental to restoration projects but that too...
Variation in incubation periods and egg metabolism in mallards: Intrinsic mechanisms to promote hatch synchrony
Margaret C. MacCluskie, Paul L. Flint, James S. Sedinger
1997, The Condor (99) 224-228
We investigated factors affecting incubation time and metabolic rates of Mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) eggs incubated under constant environmental conditions. Time required to reach the star-pipped stage of hatch varied significantly among females, but not with laying sequence or egg size. Metabolic rate of eggs varied positively with position in the...
Plagioclase zonation styles in hornblende gabbro inclusions from Little Glass Mountain, Medicine Lake volcano, California: Implications for fractionation mechanisms and the formation of composition gaps
J. G. Brophy, M. J. Dorais, J. Donnelly-Nolan, B. S. Singer
1997, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (126) 121-136
The rhyolite of Little Glass Mountain (73–74% SiO2) is a single eruptive unit that contains inclusions of quenched andesite liquid (54–61% SiO2) and partially crystalline cumulate hornblende gabbro (53–55% SiO2). Based on previous studies, the quenched andesite inclusions and host rhyolite lava are related to one another through fractional crystallization...
Geochemical characteristics and K-Ar ages of rare-metal bearing pegmatites from the Birimian of southeastern Ghana
C.I. Chalokwu, M.A. Ghazi, E.E. Foord
1997, Journal of African Earth Sciences (24) 1-9
The pegmatite-aplite rocks at Mankwadzi (Ejisimanku Hills) in southeastern Ghana are part of the pegmatite district that extends from Cape Coast to Winneba along the Atlantic coastline. The pegmatites are associated with the Cape Coast granite complex and were intruded during the waning phase of the...
Terbuthylazine and deethylterbuthylazine in rain and surface water: Determination by enzyme immunoassay and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry
A. Dankwardt, E.M. Thurman, B. Hock
1997, Acta Hydrochimica et Hydrobiologica (25) 5-10
Rain and surface water samples from Southern Germany were investigated from 1991 to 1995 for terbuthylazine and one of its major metabolites, deethylterbuthylazine. The concentrations observed were compared to the concentrations found for atrazine and deethylatrazine in the same water samples. Concentrations ranged from < 0.02 μg/L to 0.7 μg/L...
Demographic patterns of Ferocactus cylindraceus in relation to substrate age and grazing history
Janice E. Bowers
1997, Plant Ecology (133) 37-48
Three subpopulations of Ferocactus cylindraceus, a short-columnar cactus of the Sonoran and Mojave deserts, were sampled in Grand Canyon, Arizona, USA, at sites representing a range of substrate ages and different grazing histories. Age-height relations were determined from annual growth, then used to estimate probable year of establishment for each...
AVHRR imagery used to identify hurricane damage in a forested wetland of Louisiana
Elijah W. Ramsey III, D.K. Chappell, D.G. Baldwin
1997, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (63) 293-297
Certain events provide a unique opportunity to test the monitoring capability of AVHBR imagery. On 26 August 1992, Hurricane Andrew passed through Louisiana, impacting a large area of forested wetlands. One response to the widespread defoliation resulting from the hurricane impact was an abnormal bloom of new leaves and new...
Assessing hydrogeochemical heterogeneity in natural and constructed wetlands
R. J. Hunt, D. P. Krabbenhoft, Marilyn P. Anderson
1997, Biogeochemistry (39) 271-293
While 'water quality function' is cited as an important wetland function to design for and preserve, we demonstrate that the scale at which hydrochemical samples are collected can significantly influence interpretations of biogeochemical processes in wetlands. Subsurface, chemical profiles for both nutrients and major ions were determined at a site...
Synthesis and revision of groups within the Newark Supergroup, eastern North America
R.E. Weems, P.E. Olsen
1997, Geological Society of America Bulletin (109) 195-209
The Newark Supergroup currently includes nine stratigraphic groups, each of which applies to part or all of the rock column of only one or a few basins. Because the group nomenclature within the Newark Supergroup is neither inclusive nor parallel in its concepts, nearly half of the strata within the...
Late quaternary temporal and event classifications, Great Lakes region, North America
W.H. Johnson, A.K. Hansel, E. Arthur Bettis III, P.F. Karrow, G.J. Larson, T.V. Lowell, Allan F. Schneider
1997, Quaternary Research (47) 1-12
Several temporal and event classifications are used for the Quaternary glacial and interglacial record in the Great Lakes region of North America. Although based on contrasting principles, the classifications, as practiced, are similar to one another in most respects and they differ little from the classification proposed by Chamberlin a...
Ambiguity in measuring matrix diffusion with single-well injection/recovery tracer tests
S.C. Lessoff, Leonard F. Konikow
1997, Ground Water (35) 166-176
Single-well injection/recovery tracer tests are considered for use in characterizing and quantifying matrix diffusion in dual-porosity aquifers. Numerical modeling indicates that neither regional drift in homogeneous aquifers, nor heterogeneity in aquifers having no regional drift, nor hydrodynamic dispersion significantly affects these tests. However, when drift is coupled simultaneously with heterogeneity,...
Correcting for diffusion in carbon-14 dating of ground water
W. E. Sanford
1997, Groundwater (35) 357-361
It has generally been recognized that molecular diffusion can be a significant process affecting the transport of carbon-14 in the subsurface when occurring either from a permeable aquifer into a confining layer or from a fracture into a rock matrix. An analytical solution that is...
Nest materials as a source of genetic data for avian ecological studies
John M. Pearce, R.L. Fields, Kim T. Scribner
1997, Journal of Field Ornithology (68) 471-481
We examined the utility of feathers and egg shell membranes, deposited in the nests of Spectacled Eiders (Somateria fischeri), as a source of DNA for genetic studies at both the population and individual level. The potential for feather DNA contamination as a result of female behavioral interactions (e.g. nest parasitism),...
Rapid extension in an Eocene volcanic arc: Structure and paleogeography of an intra-arc half graben in central Idaho
S. U. Janecke, B.F. Hammond, L.W. Snee, J. W. Geissman
1997, Geological Society of America Bulletin (109) 253-267
A study of extension, volcanism, and sedimentation in the middle Eocene Panther Creek half graben in central Idaho shows that it formed rapidly during an episode of voluminous volcanism. The east-southeast-tilted Panther Creek half graben developed across the northeast edge of the largest cauldron complex of the Challis volcanic field...
Production of activated char from Illinois coal for flue gas cleanup
A.A. Lizzio, J.A. DeBarr, C.W. Kruse
1997, Energy and Fuels (11) 250-259
Activated chars were produced from Illinois coal and tested in several flue gas cleanup applications. High-activity chars that showed excellent potential for both SO2 and NOx removal were prepared from an Illinois No. 2 bituminous coal. The SO2 (120 °C) and NOx (25 °C) removal performance of one char compared...
Protistan communities in aquifers: A review
G. Novarino, A. Warren, H. Butler, G. Lambourne, A. Boxshall, J. Bateman, N.E. Kinner, R.W. Harvey, R.A. Mosse, B. Teltsch
1997, FEMS Microbiology Reviews (20) 261-275
Eukaryotic microorganisms (protists) are a very important component of microbial communities inhabiting groundwater aquifers This is not unexpected when one considers that many protists feed heterotrophically, by means of either phagotrophy (bacterivory) or osmotrophy. Protistan numbers are usually low (<102 per g dw of aquifer material) in pristine, uncontaminated aquifers...
Complexities of plinian fall deposition at vent: An example from the 1912 Novarupta eruption (Alaska)
J. Fierstein, Bruce F. Houghton, C. J. N. Wilson, W. Hildreth
1997, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (76) 215-227
An extremely proximal ejecta ring, with exposures to within 100 m of vent, was deposited during later-stage plinian fall activity during the 1912 Novarupta eruption in Alaska. One bed in the ejecta ring (bed S) contains predominantly andesitic clasts which serve to delineate the striking contrast in thinning rates along...
Physical stratigraphy and hydrostratigraphy of Upper Cretaceous and Paleocene sediments, Burke and Screven Counties, Georgia
W. F. Falls, J. S. Baum, D.C. Prowell
1997, Southeastern Geology (36) 153-176
Six geologic units are recognized in the Cretaceous and the Paleocene sediments of eastern Burke and Screven Counties in Georgia on the basis of lithologic, geophysical, and paleontologic data collected from three continuously cored testholes in Georgia and one testhole in South Carolina. The six geologic units are separated by...
U-Th-Pb zircon ages of some Keweenawan Supergroup rocks from the south shore of Lake Superior
R. E. Zartman, S. W. Nicholson, W.F. Cannon, G. B. Morey
1997, Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (34) 549-561
New single-crystal zircon U–Th–Pb ages for plutonic and rhyolitic Keweenawan Supergroup rocks from the south shore of Lake Superior provide geochronological constraints on magmatic evolution associated with the 1.1 Ga Midcontinent rift. Analyses of a granophyric phase of the Mineral Lake intrusion and the Mellen granite, both parts of the Mellen...
Paleogeographic significance of Clavohamulus hintzei Miller (Conodonta) and other Ibexian conodonts in an early Paleozoic carbonate platform facies of the Argentine Precordillera
O. Lehnert, J.F. Miller, J.E. Repetski
1997, Geological Society of America Bulletin (109) 429-443
Pre-Tremadocian conodonts and trilobites and Tremadocian conodonts are reported from the Cambrian and Ordovician La Silla Formation in the Cerro La Silla section in east-southeast Ja??chal, San Juan Province, Argentina. A shallow marine conodont fauna contains elements of Clavohamulus hintzei Miller, a common species in North America, but reported for...
Comparative sensitivity of Selenastrum capricornutum and Lemna minor to sixteen herbicides
J.F. Fairchild, D. S. Ruessler, P.S. Haverland, A.R. Carlson
1997, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (32) 353-357
Aquatic plant toxicity tests are frequently conducted in environmental risk assessments to determine the potential impacts of contaminants on primary producers. An examination of published plant toxicity data demonstrates that wide differences in sensitivity can occur across phylogenetic groups of plants. Yet relatively few studies have been conducted with the...