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Page 3432, results 85776 - 85800

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Variations in growth of roseate tern (Sterna dougallii) chicks: II. Early growth as an index of parental quality
I.C.T. Nisbet, J. A. Spendelow, Jeff S. Hatfield, James M. Zingo, G.A. Gough
1998, Condor (100) 305-315
We measured growth of Roseate Tern (Sterna dougallii) chicks at a colony in Connecticut in 10 successive years. Data on body mass during the first three to four days of life were fitted to a quadratic regression model, yielding three parameters of early growth for each of 1,551 chicks:...
Increasing point-count duration increases standard error
W.P. Smith, D.J. Twedt, P.B. Hamel, R.P. Ford, D.A. Wiedenfeld, R.J. Cooper
1998, Journal of Field Ornithology (69) 450-456
We examined data from point counts of varying duration in bottomland forests of west Tennessee and the Mississippi Alluvial Valley to determine if counting interval influenced sampling efficiency. Estimates of standard error increased as point count duration increased both for cumulative number of individuals and species in both locations....
Key areas for wintering North American herons
T. Mikuska, J.A. Kushlan, S. Hartley
1998, Colonial Waterbirds (21) 125-134
Nearly all North American heron populations are migratory, but details of where they winter are little known. Locations where North American herons winter were identified using banding recovery data. North American herons winter from Canada through northern South America but especially in eastern North America south of New...
Estimating relative abundance from count data
William A. Link, John R. Sauer
1998, Austrian Journal of Statistics (27) 83-97
Much of the available information on large-scale patterns of animal abundance is based on count surveys. The data provided by such surveys are often influenced by nuisance factors affecting the numbers of animals counted, but unrelated to population size. Temporal and spatial patterns in nuisance factors may exist, causing simple...
Estimating rates of local species extinction, colonization and turnover in animal communities
James D. Nichols, T. Boulinier, J.E. Hines, K. H. Pollock, J.R. Sauer
1998, Ecological Applications (8) 1213-1225
Species richness has been identified as a useful state variable for conservation and management purposes. Changes in richness over time provide a basis for predicting and evaluating community responses to management, to natural disturbance, and to changes in factors such as community composition (e.g., the removal of a keystone...
Effects of 3,3′,4,4′,5-pentachlorobiphenyl and 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin injected into the yolks of double-crested cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus) eggs prior to incubation
D.C. Powell, R.J. Aulerich, J.C. Meadows, D. E. Tillitt, M.E. Kelly, K. L. Stromborg, M. J. Melancon, S.D. Fitzgerald, S.J. Bursian
1998, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (17) 2035-2040
Double-crested cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus) eggs were injected with either 3,3′,4,4′,5-pentachlorobiphenyl (polychlorinated biphenyl [PCB] 126; 70-698 μg/kg egg) or 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD; 1.3-11.7 μg/kg egg) prior to incubation. These compounds were injected into the yolks of cormorant eggs collected from incomplete clutches at isolated colonies on Lake Winnipegosis, Manitoba, Canada. Eggs were...
Inference methods for spatial variation in species richness and community composition when not all species are detected
J.D. Nichols, T. Boulinier, J.E. Hines, K. H. Pollock, J.R. Sauer
1998, Conservation Biology (12) 1390-1398
Inferences about spatial variation in species richness and community composition are important both to ecological hypotheses about the structure and function of communities and to community-level conservation and management. Few sampling programs for animal communities provide censuses, and usually some species in surveyed areas are not detected. Thus, counts of...
Effect of restrictive harvest regulations on survival and recovery rates of American black ducks
C.M. Francis, J.R. Sauer, J.R. Serie
1998, Journal of Wildlife Management (62) 1544-1557
Population management of waterfowl requires an understanding of the effects of changes in hunting regulations on harvest and survival rates. Mean survival and recovery rates of American black ducks (Anas rubripes) were estimated during 3 periods of increasingly restrictive harvest regulations: 1950-66, 1967-82, and 1983-93. From the first...
Effects of mercury and selenium on glutathione metabolism and oxidative stress in mallard ducks
D. J. Hoffman, G. H. Heinz
1998, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (17) 161-166
Earlier studies have reported on the toxicity and related oxidative stress of different forms of Se, including seleno- D,L-methionine, in mallards (Anas platyrhynchos). This study compares the effects of Se (seleno-D,L-methionine) and Hg (methylmercury chloride) separately and in combination. Mallard drakes received one of the following diets: untreated feed...
Induction of cytochrome P450-associated monooxygenases in northern leopard frogs, Rana pipiens, by 3,3′,4,4′,5-Pentachlorobiphenyl
Y.-W. Huang, M. J. Melancon, R.E. Jung, W. H. Karasov
1998, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (17) 1564-1569
Northern leopard frogs (Rana pipiens) were injected intraperitoneally either with a solution of polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) 126 in corn oil at a concentration of 0.2, 0.7, 2.3, or 7.8 mg/kg body weight or with corn oil alone. Appropriate assay conditions with hepatic microsomes were determined for four cytochrome P450-associated monooxygenases:...
Digital playback and improved trap design enhance capture of migrant Soras and Virginia Rails
Gregory D. Kearns, Nina B. Kwartin, David F. Brinker, G. Michael Haramis
1998, Journal of Field Ornithology (69) 466-473
We used playback of rail vocalizations and improved trap design to enhance capture of fall migrant Soras (Porzana carolina) and Virginia Rails (Rallus limicola) in marshes bordering the tidal Patuxent River, Maryland. Custom-fabricated microchip message repeating sound systems provided digitally recorded sound for long-life, high-quality playback. A single sound system...
Assemblage organization in stream fishes: Effects of environmental variation and interspecific interactions
Gary D. Grossman, R. E. Ratajczak Jr., M. M. Crawford, Mary C. Freeman
1998, Ecological Monographs (68) 395-420
We assessed the relative importance of environmental variation, interspecific competition for space, and predator abundance on assemblage structure and microhabitat use in a stream fish assemblage inhabiting Coweeta Creek, North Carolina, USA. Our study encompassed a 10–yr time span (1983–1992) and included some of the highest and lowest flows in...
Association of mercury and selenium with altered glutathione metabolism and oxidative stress in diving ducks from the San Francisco Bay region
D. J. Hoffman, H. M. Ohlendorf, C. M. Marn, G.W. Pendleton
1998, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (17) 167-172
Ault male greater scaup (Aythya marila), surf scoters (Melanitta perspicillata), and ruddy ducks (Oxyurajamaicensis) were collected from Suisun Bay and coastal Tomales Bay in the greater San Francisco Bay area to assess exposure to inorganic contaminants. Hepatic Se concentrations were highest in greater scaup (geometric mean = 67 ppm dry...
Mercury in alligators (Alligator mississippiensis) in the southeastern United States
C. H. Jagoe, B. Arnold-Hill, G. M. Yanochko, P. V. Winger, I. L. Brisbin Jr.
1998, Science of the Total Environment (213) 255-262
Mercury methylation may be enhanced in wetlands and humic-rich, blackwater systems that crocodiles and alligators typically inhabit. Given their high trophic level and long life-spans, crocodilians could accumulate significant burdens of Hg. Our objectives were to survey Hg concentrations in alligators from several areas in the southeastern United States to test their...
Dispersal of mimetic seeds of three species of Ormosia (Leguminosae)
M.S. Foster, L.S. DeLay
1998, Journal of Tropical Ecology (14) 389-412
Seeds with ‘imitation arils’ appear wholly or partially covered by pulp or aril but actually carry no fleshy material. The mimetic seed hypothesis to explain this phenomenon proposes a parasitic relationship in which birds are deceived into dispersing seeds that resemble bird-dispersed fruits, without receiving a nutrient reward. The hard-seed...
A new species of Bachia (Squamata: Gymnophthalmidae) with pleisomorphic limb morphology
D.A. Kizirian, R.W. McDiarmid
1998, Herpetologica (54) 245-253
We describe a new species of Bachia from the upper Rio Negro drainage of southeastern Colombia and southern Venezuela. The new taxon is diagnosed by a complement of phalanges that is unique among gymnophthalmid lizards and intermediate relative to other Bachia and closely related genera. Variation in limb...
Evaluation of age determination techniques for gray wolves
D.B. Landon, C.A. Waite, R. O. Peterson, L.D. Mech
1998, Journal of Wildlife Management (62) 674-682
We evaluated tooth wear, cranial suture fusion, closure of the canine pulp cavity, and cementum annuli as methods of age determination for known- and unknown-age gray wolves (Canis lupus) from Alaska, Minnesota, Ontario, and Isle Royale, Michigan. We developed age classes for...
Comparative developmental toxicity of planar polychlorinated biphenyl congeners in chickens, American kestrels, and common terns
D. J. Hoffman, M. J. Melancon, P. N. Klein, J.D. Eisemann, J. W. Spann
1998, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (17) 747-757
The effects of polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) congeners, PCB 126 (3,3′,4,4′,5-pentaCB) and PCB 77 (3,3′4,4′-tetraCB), were examined in chicken (Gallus gallus), American kestrel (Falco sparverius), and common tern (Sterna hirundo) embryos through hatching, following air cell injections on day 4. PCB 126 caused malformations and edema in chickens starting at 0.3...
Caribou antlers as nest materials for golden eagles in northwestern Alaska
D. H. Ellis, R.L. Bunn
1998, Journal of Raptor Research (32) 268
There are few published records of antlers in golden eagle (Aquila chrysaetos) nests. This note reports extensive use of caribou (Rangifer tarandus) antlers in three golden eagle nests in the Cape Kruzenstern region of northwestern Alaska. The importance of antlers to this population of eagles can be explained...
The North American Bird Banding Program: Into the 21st century
P. A. Buckley, C.M. Francis, P. Blancher, D.F. DeSante, C.S. Robbins, G. Smith, P. Cannell
1998, Journal of Field Ornithology (69) 511-529
The authors examined the legal, scientific, and philosophical underpinnings of the North American Bird Banding Program [BBP], with emphasis on the U.S. Bird Banding Laboratory [BBL], but also considering the Canadian Bird Banding Office [BBO]. In this report, we review the value of banding data, enumerate and expand on...