Case 3058. Arctocephalus F. Cuvier, 1826 and Callorhinus Gray, 1859 (Mammalia, Pinnipedia): Proposed conservation by the designation of Phoca pusilla Schreber, [1775] as the type species of Arctocephalus; and Otaria Peron, 1816 and Eumetopias Gill, 1866: proposed conservation by the designation of Phoca leonina Molina, 1782 as the type species of Otaria
A. L. Gardner, C. Brian Robbins
1999, Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature (56) 136-141
The purpose of this application is to conserve the accustomed understanding and usage of the fur seal name Arctocephalus F. Cuvier, 1826 by the designation of Phoca pusilia Schreber, [1775] as the type species, thus conserving also the name Callorhinus Gray, 1859. At present Phoca ursina Linnaeus, 1758 is...
Aspects of hatching success and chick survival in Gull-billed Terns in coastal Virginia
T.B. Eyler, R.M. Erwin, Daniel B. Stotts, Jeff S. Hatfield
1999, Waterbirds (22) 54-59
Because of a long-term population decline in Gull-billed Terns (Sterna nilotica) nesting along the coast of Virginia, we began a three year study in 1994 to monitor hatching success and survival of Gull-billed Tern chicks at several Virginia colony sites. Colonies were located on either small, storm-deposited shellpiles along...
Aspects of chick growth in Gull-billed Terns in coastal Virginia
R.M. Erwin, T.B. Eyler, Daniel B. Stotts, Jeff S. Hatfield
1999, Waterbirds (22) 47-53
Because of concerns about apparent population declines and low productivity of Gull-billed Terns (Sterna nilotica) along the coast of Virginia, we investigated whether food limitations may result in retarded growth rates of young. Several colonies of Gull-billed Terns were monitored from May to July each year from 1994 to...
On the decline of the Rusty Blackbird and the use of ornithological literature to document long-term population trends
R. Greenberg, Sam Droege
1999, Conservation Biology (13) 553-559
Unlike most North American blackbirds, Rusty Blackbirds (Euphagus carolensis) have shown steep population declines. Declines of approximately 90% are indicated for three recent decades from the Breeding Bird Survey, Christmas Bird Counts, and Quebec Checklist Program. Analyses of abundance classifications in bird distribution books and annotated checklists reveal an overlooked...
Factors influencing counts in an annual survey of Snail Kites in Florida
R.E. Bennetts, W.A. Link, J.R. Sauer, P.W. Sykes Jr.
1999, The Auk (116) 316-323
Snail Kites (Rostrhamus sociabilis) in Florida were monitored between 1969 and 1994 using a quasi-systematic annual survey. We analyzed data from the annual Snail Kite survey using a generalized linear model where counts were regarded as overdispersed Poisson random variables. This approach allowed us to investigate covariates that might have...
Identification of in vitro cytochrome P450 modulators to detect induction by prototype inducers in the mallard duckling (Anas platyrhynchos
A.E. Renauld, M. J. Melancon, L.M. Sordillo
1999, Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part C: Pharmacology, Toxicology and Endocrinology (122) 273-281
Seven modulators of mammalian monooxygenase activity were screened for their ability to selectively stimulate or inhibit in vitro monooxygenase activities of hepatic microsomes from mallard ducklings treated with phenobarbital, β-naphthoflavone, 3,3′,4,4′,5-pentachlorobiphenyl or vehicle. Microsomes were assayed fluorometrically for four monooxygenases: benzyloxy-, ethoxy-, methoxy-, and pentoxyresorufin-O-dealkylase, in combination with each of...
Annual survival of Snail Kites in Florida: Radio telemetry versus capture-resighting data
R.E. Bennetts, V.J. Dreitz, W.M. Kitchens, J.E. Hines, J.D. Nichols
1999, The Auk (116) 435-447
We estimated annual survival of Snail Kites (Rostrhamus sociabilis) in Florida using the Kaplan-Meier estimator with data from 271 radio-tagged birds over a three-year period and capture-recapture (resighting) models with data from 1,319 banded birds over a six-year period. We tested the hypothesis that survival differed among three age classes...
Role of banding in forest conservation strategy in eastern Guatemala
C.S. Robbins, B.A. Dowell, I. Arias, A. Cerezo B.
1999, North American Bird Bander (24) 93-94(abs)
In response to a request from FUNDAECO, a Guatemalan non-government organization, we worked with them to develop a conservation strategy for the Cerro San Gil Protected Area and surrounding private lands. Volunteer banders from a dozen states and Canadian provinces assisted in long-term monitoring of populations of resident and migratory...
Potential roadside biases due to habitat changes along Breeding Bird Survey routes
C.M.E. Keller, J.T. Scallan
1999, Condor (101) 50-57
Breeding Bird Surveys (BBS) are conducted along roadside routes to enable a large geographic area to be surveyed. Yet the potential biases of sampling populations only from roadsides have received little attention. We sampled aerial photography of BBS routes taken in the mid-1960s and late-1980s to evaluate whether...
Influence of deer abundance on the abundance of questing adult Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae)
H. S. Ginsberg, E. Zhioua
1999, Journal of Medical Entomology (36) 376-381
Nymphal and adult Ixodes scapularis Say were sampled by flagging at 2 sites on a barrier island, Fire Island, NY, and at 2 sites on the nearby mainland. Nymphal densities did not differ consistently between island and mainland sites, but adult densities were consistently lower on the island. We tested whether lower...
Identification, inheritance, and linkage of B-G-like and MHC class I genes in cranes
S.I. Jarvi, R.M. Goto, G.F. Gee, W.E. Briles, M.M. Miller
1999, Journal of Heredity (90) 152-159
We identified B-G-like genes in the whooping and Florida sandhill cranes and linked them to the major histocompatibility complex (MHC). We evaluated the inheritance of B-G-like genes in families of whooping and Florida sandhill cranes using restriction fragment patterns (RFPs). Two B-G-like genes, designated wcbg1 and wcbg2, were located within 8 kb of one another. The...
Temporal differences in point counts of bottomland forest landbirds
W.P. Smith, D.J. Twedt
1999, The Wilson Bulletin (111) 139-143
We compared number of avian species and individuals in morning and evening point counts during the breeding season and during winter in a bottomland hardwood forest in west-central Mississippi. USA. In both seasons, more species and individuals were recorded during morning counts than during evening counts. We also compared...
Fifty-year trends in a box turtle population in Maryland
R.J. Hall, P.F.P. Henry, C.M. Bunck
1999, Biological Conservation (88) 165-172
A survey conducted in 1995 investigated long term declines reported in a population of box turtles Terrapene Carolina monitored each decade since 1945 in bottomland hardwood forest at the Patuxent Wildlife Research Center, Maryland. Methods duplicated past surveys in most respects, but were supplemented by radiotelemetry and a survey of...
Contaminant exposure and effects database for wild terrestrial vertebrates: A source for information on endocrine disrupting chemicals
N. H. Golden, M. A. Ottinger, Barnett A. Rattner, J.B. Cohen, L.M. Loges, R.M. Erwin
1999, International Symposium on Environmental Endocrine Disruptors (1999) 241 (abs)
Trash-caused mortality in Mongolian raptors
D. H. Ellis, J.W. Lish
1999, Ambio (28) 536-537
On four expeditions (1994, 1995, 1997, and 1998) through Mongolia, we found two kinds of mortality associated with trash gathered by parent raptors as part of the nest building process. Our observations of actual mortality were limited to three species: the golden eagle (Aquila chrysaetos) (2 clutches of eggs),...
Abundance and reproduction of songbirds in burned and unburned pine forests of the Georgia Piedmont
Donald H. White, B.R. Chapman, J.H. Brunjes IV, R.V. Raftovich Jr., J.T. Seginak
1999, Journal of Field Ornithology (70) 414-424
We studied the abundance and productivity of songbirds in prescribed burned and unburned mature (>60 yr) pine forests at Piedmont National Wildlife Refuge, Georgia, during 1993-1995. We estimated species abundance, richness, and evenness using data from 312 point counts in 18 burned sites and six unburned sites. We...
Using endoscopy to diagnose hatching problems in cranes
Glenn H. Olsen
1999, Association of Avian Veterinarians Proceedings (1999) 147-148
[Book review] Wetland birds: Habitat resources and conservation implications, by Milton W. Weller
R.M. Erwin
1999, Waterbirds (22) 320-321
Milton Weller's love of wetlands and their inhabitants comes through in this book, and he continues a leadership role in a world of field ecologists where fewer and fewer are really experiencing the wet and wild....
Predicting chick survival and productivity of Roseate Terns from data on early growth
I.C.T. Nisbet, Jeff S. Hatfield, W.A. Link, J. A. Spendelow
1999, Waterbirds (22) 90-97
Early growth of Roseate Tern (Sterna dougallii) chicks is a strong predictor of chick survival and hence of productivity. We developed discriminant functions to predict chick survival from body-masses measured during the first 3 days of life. Productivity is estimated by assuming that almost all A-chicks (first-hatched in...
Controlling for varying effort in count surveys: An analysis of Christmas Bird Count data
W.A. Link, J.R. Sauer
1999, Journal of Agricultural, Biological, and Environmental Statistics (4) 116-125
The Christmas Bird Count (CBC) is a valuable source of information about midwinter populations of birds in the continental U.S. and Canada. Analysis of CBC data is complicated by substantial variation among sites and years in effort expended in counting; this feature of the CBC is common to many other...
Toxicity of lead-contaminated sediment to mallards
G. H. Heinz, D. J. Hoffman, L. Sileo, D. J. Audet, L. J. LeCaptain
1999, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (36) 323-333
Because consumption of lead-contaminated sediment has been suspected as the cause of waterfowl mortality in the Coeur d?Alene River basin in Idaho, we studied the bioavailability and toxicity of this sediment to mallards (Anas platyrhynchos). In experiment 1, one of 10 adult male mallards died when fed a pelleted commercial...
Species, habitat alterations affect bee pollinators in U.S. northeast
H. S. Ginsberg
1999, People, Land, and Water (6) 22
Foraminiferal faunal estimates of paleotemperature: Circumventing the no-analog problem yields cool ice age tropics
A.C. Mix, A.E. Morey, N. G. Pisias, S. W. Hostetler
1999, Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology (14) 350-359
The sensitivity of the tropics to climate change, particularly the amplitude of glacial-to-interglacial changes in sea surface temperature (SST), is one of the great controversies in paleoclimatology. Here we reassess faunal estimates of ice age SSTs, focusing on the problem of no-analog planktonic foraminiferal assemblages in the equatorial oceans that...
Stratigraphic relations of australites in the Port Campbell Embayment, Victoria
Eugene Merle Shoemaker, H. Ralph Uhlherr
1999, Meteoritics and Planetary Science (34) 369-384
In the Port Campbell Embayment of Victoria, australites have been found in situ in channel deposits of the Hanson Plain Sand of Pliocene and Pleistocene age. The large majority of the australites, however, occur as a lag deposit at the basal contact of the Sturgess Sand of late Pleistocene and Holocene age...
A petrographical and geochemical study of quartzose nodules, country rocks, and dike rocks from the Upheaval Dome structure, Utah
C. Koeberl, J. B. Plescia, C.L. Hayward, W.U. Reimold
1999, Meteoritics and Planetary Science (34) 861-868
Upheaval Dome, in Canyonlands National Park, Utah, USA, is a unique structure on the Colorado Plateau. It has earlier been interpreted as an impact structure or as a pinched-off salt diapir. Some subrounded quartzose fragments were found in a ring depression near the eastern margin of the structure and, based...