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Page 3496, results 87376 - 87400

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Molecular approaches to fish vaccines
J. R. Winton
1998, Journal of Applied Ichthyology (14) 153-158
For more than 50 years, researchers have tested a variety of killed, attenuated, and subunit preparations for control offish diseases. The earliest fish vaccines used killed preparations containing whole bacteria, viruses, or parasites and today, several bacterins have become commercially successful with more expected as improved delivery systems and adjuvants...
The use of fields at night by wintering American woodcock
James Berdeen, D.G. Krementz
1998, Journal of Wildlife Management (62) 939-947
Because limited information is available regarding preferences for nocturnal habitat during winter, we studied use of nocturnal habitats by American woodcock (Scolopax minor) wintering in the Georgia Piedmont (1994-95). During the evening crepuscular period, woodcock on the wintering grounds move from forested...
Evidence that local land use practices influence regional climate, vegetation, and stream flow patterns in adjacent natural areas
T.J. Stohlgren, T.N. Chase, R.A. Pielke Sr., T.G.F. Kittel, Jill Baron
1998, Global Change Biology (4) 495-504
We present evidence that land use practices in the plains of Colorado influence regional climate and vegetation in adjacent natural areas in the Rocky Mountains in predictable ways. Mesoscale climate model simulations using the Colorado State University Regional Atmospheric Modelling System (RAMS) projected that modifications to natural vegetation in the...
Carbohydrate oxidation coupled to Fe(III) reduction, a novel form of anaerobic metabolism
J.D. Coates, T. Councell, D.J. Ellis, Derek R. Lovley
1998, Anaerobe (4) 277-282
An isolate, designated GC-29, that could incompletely oxidize glucose to acetate and carbon dioxide with Fe(III) serving as the electron acceptor was recovered from freshwater sediments of the Potomac River, Maryland. This metabolism yielded energy to support cell growth. Strain GC-29 is a facultatively anaerobic, Gram-negative motile rod which, in...
Movement, migration, and smolting of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)
S. D. McCormick, Lonnie P. Hansen, T.P. Quinn, R.L. Saunders
1998, Conference Paper, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
A variety of movements characterize the behavioral plasticity of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) in fresh water, including movements of fry from redds, establishment of feeding territories, spawning movements of sexually mature male parr, movement to and from winter habitat, and smolt migration in spring. Smolting is an adaptive specialization for...
A comparison of triploid induction validation techniques
R.M. Harrell, W. Van Heukelem, J.H. Kerby
1998, Progressive Fish-Culturist (60) 221-226
Triploidy induction is a technique that allows genetic manipulation of chromosome number to control reproduction and potentially create faster‐growing animals; however, most methods for inducing polyploidy are not 100% effective. Using sunshine bass (white bass Morone chrysops ♀ × striped bass M. saxatilis ♂) as a model, we cross‐validated the most common verification techniques:...
Analysis of the influence of spatial pattern in habitat selection studies
David L. Otis
1998, Journal of Agricultural, Biological, and Environmental Statistics (3) 254-267
Design and analysis of wildlife habitat selection studies typically do not assess the effect of spatial pattern on the habitat selection process. Effects of landscape scale pattern on habitat selection cannot be accomplished without replicate study areas, because pattern is a single, albeit multifaceted, attribute of an area. For a...
Measurement of stream channel habitat using sonar
Marshall Flug, Heather Seitz, John Scott
1998, Regulated Rivers: Research & Management (14) 511-517
An efficient and low cost technique using a sonar system was evaluated for describing channel geometry and quantifying inundated area in a large river. The boat-mounted portable sonar equipment was used to record water depths and river width measurements for direct storage on a laptop computer. The field data collected...
Landscape modeling for Everglades ecosystem restoration
D.L. DeAngelis, L.J. Gross, M.A. Huston, W.F. Wolff, D. M. Fleming, E.J. Comiskey, S.M. Sylvester
1998, Ecosystems (1) 64-75
A major environmental restoration effort is under way that will affect the Everglades and its neighboring ecosystems in southern Florida. Ecosystem and population-level modeling is being used to help in the planning and evaluation of this restoration. The specific objective of one of these modeling approaches, the Across Trophic Level...
Understory vegetation in old and young Douglas-fir forests of western Oregon
J. D. Bailey, C. Mayrsohn, P. S. Doescher, Elizabeth St. Pierre, J. C. Tappeiner
1998, Forest Ecology and Management (112) 289-302
We studied understory composition in thinned and unthinned Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco)/western hemlock (Tsuga heterophylla (Raf.) Sarg.) stands on 28 sites in western Oregon. These stands had regenerated naturally after timber harvest, 40–70 years before thinning. Commercial thinning had occurred 10–24 years previously, with 8–60% of the volume removed...
Landfalling Tropical Cyclones: Forecast Problems and Associated Research Opportunities
F.D. Marks, L.K. Shay, G. Barnes, P. Black, M. Demaria, B. McCaul, J. Mounari, M. Montgomery, M. Powell, J.D. Smith, B. Tuleya, G. Tripoli, Lingtian Xie, R. Zehr
1998, Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society (79) 305-323
The Fifth Prospectus Development Team of the U.S. Weather Research Program was charged to identify and delineate emerging research opportunities relevant to the prediction of local weather, flooding, and coastal ocean currents associated with landfalling U.S. hurricanes specifically, and tropical cyclones in general. Central to this theme are basic and...
Bacillus arsenicoselenatis, sp. nov., and Bacillus selenitireducens, sp. nov.: Two haloalkaliphiles from Mono Lake, California that respire oxyanions of selenium and arsenic
Blum J. Switzer, Bindi A. Burns, J. Buzzelli, J.F. Stolz, R.S. Oremland
1998, Archives of Microbiology (171) 19-30
Two gram-positive anaerobic bacteria (strains E1H and MLS10) were isolated from the anoxic muds of Mono Lake, California, an alkaline, hypersaline, arsenic-rich water body. Both grew by dissimilatory reduction of As(V) to As(III) with the concomitant oxidation of lactate to acetate plus CO2. Bacillus arsenicoselenatis (strain E1H) is a spore-forming...
Method determines vuggy carbonate permeability
Emmanuel O. Udegbunam
1998, Oil & Gas Journal (96) 41-44
An improved method determines vuggy carbonate permeability on the basis of specific surface area per unit pore volume and a flow zone indicator (FZI). Comparisons of fit standard error estimates show that this approach is superior to the multivariable empirical correlations of Chilingarian, et al., and to the ANN-estimated permeabilities....
Trace fossil analysis of lacustrine facies and basins
L.A. Buatois, M.G. Mangano
1998, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (140) 367-382
Two ichnofacies are typical of lacustrine depositional systems. The Scoyenia ichnofacies characterizes transitional terrestrial/nonmarine aquatic substrates, periodically inundated or desiccated, and therefore is commonly present in lake margin facies. The Mermia ichnofacies is associated with well oxygenated, permanent subaqueous, fine-grained substrates of hydrologically open, perennial lakes. Bathymetric zonations within the...
Pine nut use in the Early Holocene and beyond: The danger cave archaeobotanical record
D. Rhode, D.B. Madsen
1998, Journal of Archaeological Science (25) 1199-1210
Nuts of limber pine (Pinus flexilis) from Early Holocene strata in Danger Cave, Utah, are distinguishable by seed-coat sculpturing from pine nuts of single-needled pinyon (Pinus monophylla), which occur in strata dating <7000 years BP. Owls and other taphonomic agents may deposit pine nuts in archaeological sites, but the morphology...
Genetic features of petroleum systems in rift basins of eastern China
J. Qiang, P.J. McCabe
1998, Marine and Petroleum Geology (15) 343-358
Most oil-bearing basins in eastern China are Mesozoic-Cenozoic continental rifts which have played a habitat for oil and gas in China. Investigation of the petroleum systems may give a better understanding of the oil and gas habitats in these basins. Of the essential elements of the petroleum system, the source...
Nonpoint sources of volatile organic compounds in urban areas - Relative importance of land surfaces and air
T. J. Lopes, D.A. Bender
1998, Environmental Pollution (101) 221-230
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) commonly detected in urban waters across the United States include gasoline-related compounds (e.g. toluene, xylene) and chlorinated compounds (e.g. chloroform, tetrachloroethane [PCE], trichloroethene [TCE]). Statistical analysis of observational data and results of modeling the partitioning of VOCs between air and water suggest that urban land surfaces...
A king-sized theropod coprolite
K. Chin, T.T. Tokaryk, G.M. Erickson, L. C. Calk
1998, Nature (393) 680-682
Fossil faeces (coprolites) provide unique trophic perspectives on ancient ecosystems. Yet, although thousands of coprolites have been discovered, specimens that can be unequivocally attributed to carnivorous dinosaurs are almost unknown. A few fossil faeces have been ascribed to herbivorous dinosaurs, but it is more difficult to identify coprolites produced by...
The provenance and chemical variation of sandstones associated with the Mid-continent Rift System, U.S.A.
R.L. Cullers, P. Berendsen
1998, European Journal of Mineralogy (10) 987-1002
Sandstones along the northern portion of the Precambrian Mid-continent Rift System (MRS) have been petrographically and chemically analyzed for major elements and a variety of trace elements, including the REE. After the initial extrusion of the abundant basalts along the MRS, dominantly volcaniclastic sandstones of the Oronto Group were deposited....