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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Subcutaneous anchor attachment increases retention of radio transmitters on Xantus' and marbled murrelets
Scott H. Newman, John Y. Takekawa, Darrell L. Whitworth, Esther E. Burkett
1999, Journal of Field Ornithology (70) 520-534
We modified a subcutaneous anchor attachment and achieved transmitter reten- tion times that exceeded those reported previously for other attachments used on alcids. Traditional suture and epoxy attachment methods were used on Xantus' Murrelets in 1995 and 1996, while the modified attachment was used for Xantus' Murrelets in 1996 and...
Reexamining fire suppression impacts on brushland fire regimes
Jon E. Keeley, C. J. Fotheringham, Marco Morais
1999, Science (284) 1829-1832
California shrubland wildfires are increasingly destructive, and it is widely held that the problem has been intensified by fire suppression, leading to larger, more intense wildfires. However, analysis of the California Statewide Fire History Database shows that, since 1910, fire frequency and area burned have not declined, and fire size...
Geology of the Barite Hill gold-silver deposit in the southern Carolina slate belt
Sandra H. B. Clark, Karen J. Gray, Judith M. Back
1999, Economic Geology (94) 1329-1346
Barite Hill is a stratiform gold-silver deposit associated with base metal sulfides and barite in greenschist facies rocks. The deposit, southernmost of four recently mined gold deposits in the Carolina slate belt, is located in the Lincolnton-McCormick district of Georgia and South Carolina, which includes several known gold-silver and base...
Growth patterns of Hawaiian Stilt chicks
J.M. Reed, E.M. Gray, D. Lewis, L.W. Oring, R. Coleman, T. Burr, P. Luscomb
1999, The Wilson Bulletin (111) 478-487
We studied chick growth and plumage patterns in the endangered Hawaiian Stilt (Himantopus mexicanus knudseni). Body mass of captive chicks closely fit a Gompertz growth curve, revealing a growth coefficient (K) of 0.065 day-1 and point of inflection (T) of 17 days. When chicks fledged about 28 days after hatching,...
Survival of postfledging mallards in northcentral Minnesota
Ronald E. Kirby, Glen A. Sargeant
1999, Journal of Wildlife Management (63) 403-408
Effective, economical management of waterfowl populations requires an understanding of age-, sex-, and cause-specific forces of mortality. We used radio telemetry to estimate survival rates of immature mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) from fledging to autumn migration in northcentral Minnesota. We monitored 48 females and 42 males during 1972-74 and observed 31...
Galileo's Multiinstrument Spectral View of Europa's Surface Composition
F. P. Fanale, J. C. Granahan, T. B. McCord, G. Hansen, C. A. Hibbitts, R. Carlson, D. Matson, A. Ocampo, L. Kamp, W. Smythe, F. Leader, R. Mehlman, R. Greeley, R. Sullivan, P. Geissler, C. Barth, A. Hendrix, B. Clark, P. Helfenstein, J. Veverka, M. J. S. Belton, K. Becker, T. Becker
1999, Icarus (139) 179-188
We have combined spectral reflectance data from the Solid State Imaging (SSI) experiment, the Near-Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (NIMS), and the Ultraviolet Spectrometer (UVS) in an attempt to determine the composition and implied genesis of non-H2O components in the optical surface of Europa. We have considered four terrains: (1) the "dark...
Dissolved sulfide distributions in the water column and sediment pore waters of the Santa Barbara Basin
J.S. Kuwabara, A. VanGeen, D.C. McCorkle, J.M. Bernhard
1999, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (63) 2199-2209
Dissolved sulfide concentrations in the water column and in sediment pore waters were measured by square-wave voltammetry (nanomolar detection limit) during three cruises to the Santa Barbara Basin in February 1995, November–December 1995, and April 1997. In the water column, sulfide concentrations measured outside...
Effects of fire retardant chemical and fire suppressant foam on shrub steppe vegetation in northern Nevada
Diane L. Larson, Wesley E. Newton, Patrick J. Anderson, Steven J. Stein
1999, International Journal of Wildland Fire (9) 115-127
The objectives of this study were to determine the effects of fire retardantchemical (Phos-Chek G75-F*) and fire suppressant foam (Silv-Ex) application,alone and in combination with fire, on Great Basin shrub steppe vegetation. Wemeasured growth, resprouting, flowering, and incidence of galling insects onChrysothamnus viscidiflorusandArtemisia tridentata. These characteristics were notaffected by any...
Influence of agriculture on aquatic invertebrate communities of temporary wetlands in the Prairie Pothole Region of North Dakota, USA
Ned H. Euliss Jr., David M. Mushet
1999, Wetlands (19) 578-583
We evaluated the influence of intensive agriculture on invertebrate communities of temporary wetlands as indicated by aquatic invertebrate resting eggs, shells, and cases remaining after wetlands dried. To facilitate the comparison, we sampled 19 wetlands within cropland areas and 19 wetlands within grassland areas. We found resting eggs, shells, and...
Recent advances in life history of Gulf of Mexico sturgeon, Acipenser oxyrinchus desotoi, in the Suwannee River, Florida, USA: A synopsis
K. J. Sulak, James P. Clugston
1999, Conference Paper, Journal of Applied Ichthyology
Gulf sturgeon spawn on portions of three sites in the upper Suwannee River, which may appropriately be described as spawning reefs. The same areas are utilized from year to year. Habitat factors important in spawning site determination include gravel/cobble substrate, the presence of eddy fields, a neutral to slightly alkaline...
Characterization of branch complexity by fractal analyses
C.L. Alados, J. Escos, J.M. Emlen, D.C. Freeman
1999, International Journal of Plant Sciences (160) S147-S155
The comparison between complexity in the sense of space occupancy (box‐counting fractal dimension Dc and information dimension DI) and heterogeneity in the sense of space distribution (average evenness index ‾J and evenness variation coefficient JCV) were investigated in mathematical fractal objects and natural branch structures. In general, increased fractal dimension was paired with low heterogeneity....
The effect of temperature on experimental and natural chemical weathering rates of granitoid rocks
A. F. White, A.E. Blum, T.D. Bullen, D.V. Vivit, M. Schulz, J. Fitzpatrick
1999, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (63) 3277-3291
The effects of climatic temperature variations (5-35??C) on chemical weathering are investigated both experimentally using flow-through columns containing fresh and weathered granitoid rocks and for natural granitoid weathering in watersheds based on annual solute discharge. Although experimental Na and Si effluent concentrations are significantly higher in the fresh relative to...
Ground water
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1999, Report
Some water underlies the Earth's surface almost everywhere, beneath hills, mountains, plains, and deserts. It is not always accessible, or fresh enough for use without treatment, and it's sometimes difficult to locate or to measure and describe. This water may occur close to the land surface, as in a marsh,...
Landscape pattern metrics and regional assessment
Robert V. O’Neill, Kurt H. Riitters, James D. Wickham, K. Bruce Jones
1999, Ecosystem Health (5) 225-233
The combination of remote imagery data, geographic information systems software, and landscape ecology theory provides a unique basis for monitoring and assessing large-scale ecological systems. The unique feature of the work has been the need to develop and interpret quantitative measures of spatial pattern-the landscape indices. This article reviews what...
Regional variation in muscle metabolic enzymes in individual American shad (Alosa sapidissima)
J. B. K. Leonard
1999, Canadian Journal of Zoology (77) 1322-1326
Evaluation of the activity of metabolic enzymes is often used to assess metabolic capacity at the tissue level, but the amount of regional variability within a tissue in an individual fish of a given species is frequently unknown. The activities of four enzymes (citrate synthase (CS), phosphofructokinase, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH),...
Hydroxyatrazine in soils and sediments
R.N. Lerch, E.M. Thurman, P.E. Blanchard
1999, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (18) 2161-2168
Hydroxyatrazine (HA) is the major metabolite of atrazine in most surface soils. Knowledge of HA sorption to soils, and its pattern of stream water contamination suggest that it is persistent in the environment. Soils with different atrazine use histories were collected from four sites, and sediments were collected from an...
Nektonic invertebrate dynamics and prolonged summer flooding on the lower Illinois River
Charles H. Theiling, John K. Tucker
1999, Journal of Freshwater Ecology (14) 499-510
Prolonged extreme flooding during mid-summer 1993 provided an opportunity to investigate nektonic invertebrate dynamics in lower Illinois River floodplains and backwater lakes. We used plankton nets to sample flooded grass shorelines, flooded forests, and open water habitats during rising and falling stages of the flood. Transects oriented perpendicular to shore...
Transport and attenuation of carboxylate-modified latex microspheres in fractured rock laboratory and field tracer tests
M.W. Becker, P.W. Reimus, P. Vilks
1999, Ground Water (37) 387-395
Understanding colloid transport in ground water is essential to assessing the migration of colloid‐size contaminants, the facilitation of dissolved contaminant transport by colloids, in situ bioremediation, and the health risks of pathogen contamination in drinking water wells. Much has been learned through laboratory and field‐scale colloid...
Relationships between hydraulic parameters in a small stream under varying flow and seasonal conditions
D.R. Hart, P. J. Mulholland, E.R. Marzolf, D.L. DeAngelis, S.P. Hendricks
1999, Hydrological Processes (13) 1497-1510
Twenty conservative tracer injections were carried out in the same reach of a small woodland stream in order to determine how variation in discharge and leaf accumulation affect stream hydraulic parameters. The injections were made at various discharge rates ranging from 2-6 to 40 1/s. Five of the injections were...
Picking up the pieces: Conserving remnant natural areas in the post-industrial landscape of the Calumet Region
Paul Labus, Richard L. Whitman, Meredith Becker Nevers
1999, Natural Areas Journal (19) 180-187
The Calumet Region was shaped by geologic forces, succession, and interacting biomes converging on a unique natural landscape. Over the past 4500 years, a strand plain has formed to the north of a geologic area called Toleston Beach. Sequential and differential primary succession of dune and swale communities in this...
Evaluating adequacy of the representative stream reach used in invertebrate monitoring programs
C.F. Rabeni, N. Wang, R.J. Sarver
1999, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (18) 284-291
Selection of a representative stream reach is implicitly or explicitly recommended in many biomonitoring protocols using benthic invertebrates. We evaluated the adequacy of sampling a single stream reach selected on the basis of its appearance. We 1st demonstrated the precision of our...
Geographic distribution of chromosome and microsatellite DNA polymorphisms in Oncorhynchus mykiss native to western Washington
C.O. Ostberg, G.H. Thorgaard
1999, Copeia (1999) 287-298
Chromosome studies of native populations of Oncorhynchus mykiss (steelhead and rainbow trout) in western Washington and southern British Columbia revealed the presence of two evolutionarily distinct chromosome lineages. Populations between, and including, the Elwha River, Washington, and Chilliwack River, British Columbia, contained 2n = 60 chromosomes. Populations on the central...