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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Water velocity regulates macro-consumer herbivory on the benthic macrophyte Podostemum ceratophyllum Michx.
James L Wood, Jon W Skaggs, Caitlin C Conn, Mary Freeman
2019, Freshwater Biology (64) 2037-2045
1) Macrophytes influence aquatic ecosystems by increasing habitat complexity and providing trophic resources for aquatic fauna. While herbivory on freshwater macrophytes is widely documented in lakes, low-velocity riverine habitats, the influence of herbivory on macrophytes in higher-velocity habitats has rarely been examined. 2) We investigated the hypothesis that high...
Strategic conservation for lesser prairie-chickens among landscapes of varying anthropogenic influence
Daniel S. Sullins, David A. Haukos, Joseph M. Lautenbach, Jonathan Lautenbach, Samantha G. Robinson, Mindy B. Rice, Brett K. Sandercock, John D. Kraft, Reid T. Plumb, Jonathan H. Reitz, J. M. Shawn Hutchinson, Christian A. Hagen
2019, Biological Conservation (238)
For millennia grasslands have provided a myriad of ecosystem services and have been coupled with human resource use. The loss of 46% of grasslands worldwide necessitates the need for conservation that is spatially, temporally, and socioeconomically strategic. In the Southern Great Plains of the United States, conversion of native grasslands...
Influence of climate change and postdelisting management on long-term population viability of the conservation-reliant Kirtland's Warbler
Donald J. Brown, Deahn M. Donner, Christine Ribic, Carol I. Bocetti
2019, Ecology and Evolution (9) 10263-10276
Rapid global climate change is resulting in novel abiotic and biotic conditions and interactions. Identifying management strategies that maximize probability of long-term persistence requires an understanding of the vulnerability of species to environmental changes. We sought to quantify the vulnerability of Kirtland's Warbler (Setophaga kirtlandii), a...
An evaluation of sedatives for use in transport of juvenile endangered fishes in plastic bags
Laura A. Tennant, Ben M. Vaage, David L. Ward
2019, Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management (10) 532-543
Trucks and aircraft typically transport rare or endangered fishes in large unsealed tanks containing large volumes of water (typically hundreds of liters) during conservation efforts. Ornamental fishes, however, are commonly sent by mail in small sealed plastic bags filled with oxygen, minimal water, and a small amount of sedative to...
The Yellow-billed Loon
Brian D. Uher-Koch, Mike North, Joel A. Schmutz
2019, Report
The Yellow-billed Loon, known in Europe as the White-billed Diver, is a relatively rare bird nesting in arctic tundra regions of North America and Eurasia. This species was first described by G. R. Gray in 1859 (1), and named (Gavia adamsii) after the surgeon Dr. Edward Adams...
Airborne radiometric maps of Mountain Pass, California
David A. Ponce, Kevin M. Denton
David A. Ponce, editor(s)
2019, Scientific Investigations Map 3412-C
Geophysical investigations of Mountain Pass and vicinity were begun as part of an effort to study regional crustal structures as an aid to understanding the geologic framework and mineral resources of the eastern Mojave Desert. The study area encompasses Mountain Pass, host to one of the world’s largest rare earth...
New insights into the ecology of adfluvial Bull Trout and the population response to the Endangered Species Act in the North Fork Lewis River, Washington
Robert K. Al-Chokhachy, Jeremiah Doyle, James Lampierth
2019, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (148) 1102-1116
Like many other salmonids, Bull Trout Salvelinus confluentus migratory life-history expressions are becoming increasingly rare. A critical step in effectively refining management and conservation strategies is a robust assessment of the effectiveness of such strategies and key biological information used in monitoring and recovery planning. To address this...
Eviction notice: Observation of a Common Tern (Sterna hirundo) usurping an active Least Tern (Sternula antillarum) Nest
Georgia J. Riggs, Jeffery D. Sullivan, Kayla M. Harvey, Dimitri A. Pappas, Jennifer L. Wall, Peter C. McGowan, Carl R. Callahan, Craig A. Koppie, Diann Prosser
2019, Northeastern Naturalist (26) 609-615
Although nest usurpation is common in some species and orders of birds, usurpation has rarely been reported for Sterninae. We observed a Sterna hirundo (Common Tern) egg in an active Sternula antillarum(Least Tern) nest with a complete clutch in a mixed-species Sterninae colony in Chesapeake Bay, MD, in May 2018. Based on observations...
Confronting models with data: The challenges of estimating disease spillover
Paul C. Cross, Diann Prosser, Andrew M. Ramey, Ephraim M. Hanks, Kim M. Pepin
2019, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences (374)
For pathogens known to transmit across host species, strategic investment in disease control requires knowledge about where and when spillover transmission is likely. One approach to estimating spillover is to directly correlate observed spillover events with covariates. An alternative is to mechanistically combine information on host density, distribution, and pathogen...
Evidence of limited recruitment of Pallid Sturgeon in the Lower Missouri River
Kirk D. Steffensen, Kimberly Chojnacki, Jeffery A. Kalie, Meredith L. Bartron, Edward J. Heist, Kyle R. Winders, Nathan C. Loecker, Wyatt J. Doyle, Timothy L. Welker
2019, Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management (10) 336-34
Pallid Sturgeon Scaphirhynchus albus are endemic to the Missouri and Mississippi river basins and are rare throughout their range. The species was listed as federally endangered with little to no evidence of natural recruitment. Since population augmentation was initiated as a recovery objective in the early 1990s, thousands of hatchery-origin...
The effects of management practices on grassland birds — An introduction to North American grasslands and the practices used to manage grasslands and grassland birds
Jill A. Shaffer, John P. DeLong
2019, Professional Paper 1842-A
The Great Plains of North America is defined as the land mass that encompasses the entire central portion of the North American continent that, at the time of European settlement, was an unbroken expanse of primarily herbaceous vegetation. The Great Plains extend from central Saskatchewan and Alberta to central Mexico...
Demographic factors affecting population growth in giant gartersnakes
Jonathan P. Rose, Julia Ersan, Glenn D. Wylie, Michael L. Casazza, Brian J. Halstead
2019, Journal of Wildlife Management (83) 1540-1551
Demographic models provide insight into which vital rates and life stages contribute most to population growth. Integral projection models (IPMs) offer flexibility in matching model structure to a species’ demography. For many rare species, data are lacking for key vital rates, and uncertainty might dissuade researchers from attempting to build...
Ecological health indicators
Paul L. Angermeier
2019, Book chapter, Encyclopedia of Ecology
Contemporary policymakers rarely stress ecological knowledge, and yet this knowledge remains crucial—just as it was in prehistory—to protecting overall human well-being. Measuring carefully selected ecological health indicators—that is, signs or symptoms, especially those focused on biotic assemblages—can provide insights into the ecological condition of...
Linking demographic and food-web models to understand management trade-offs
Martina Kadin, Morten Frederiksen, Susa Niiranen, Sarah J. Converse
2019, Ecology and Evolution (9) 8587-8600
Alternatives in ecosystem-based management often differ with respect to trade-offs between ecosystem values. Ecosystem or food-web models and demographic models are typically employed to evaluate alternatives, but the approaches are rarely integrated to uncover conflicts between values. We applied multi-state models to a capture-recapture dataset on common guillemots Uria aalge...
Biocrust science and global change
Sasha C. Reed, Manuel Delgado-Baquerizo, Scott Ferrenberg
2019, New Phytologist (223) 1047-1051
Global environmental changes such as climate and land‐use change affect ecosystems worldwide, and this New Phytologist Virtual Issue brings together fundamental research questions and novel approaches associated with the study of biological soil crusts in the context of such shifts. In a changing world, organisms can display a limited set...
Crustal architecture beneath the southern Midcontinent (USA) and controls on Mesoproterozoic iron-oxide mineralization from 3D geophysical models
Anne E. McCafferty, Jeffrey D. Phillips, Albert H. Hofstra, Warren C. Day
2019, Ore Geology Reviews (111)
Several types of critical mineral-bearing ore deposits in the southern Midcontinent region of the U.S. are hosted in Mesoproterozoic igneous rocks largely concealed beneath Paleozoic cover. Discerning the architecture of igneous intrusions and volcanic centers in the crust is fundamental to understanding the geologic evolution of this vast region and...
The antiquity of the Sahara Desert: New evidence from the mineralogy and geochemistry of Pliocene paleosols on the Canary Islands, Spain
Daniel R. Muhs, Joaquin Meco, James R. Budahn, Gary L. Skipp, Juan F. Betancort, Alejandro Lomoschitz
2019, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (533)
The Sahara is the largest warm desert in the world, but its age has been controversial, with estimates ranging from Miocene to Holocene. Mineralogical and geochemical data show that paleosols of Pliocene to mid-Pleistocene age on Fuerteventura and Gran Canaria in the Canary Islands have developed in part from inputs...
A novel host-adapted strain of Salmonella Typhimurium causes disease in olive ridley turtles (Lepidochelys olivacea) in the Pacific.
Thierry M. Work, Julie Dagenais, Brian A. Stacy, Jason T. Ladner, Jeffrey M. Lorch, George H. Balazs, Elias Barquero-Calvo, Brenda M. Berlowski-Zier, Renee Breeden, Natalia Corrales-Gomez, Rocio Gonzalez-Barrientos, Heather Harris, Gabriela Hernandez-Mora, Angel Herrera-Ulloa, Shoreh Hesami, T. Todd Jones, Juan Alberto Morales, Terry M. Norton, Robert Rameyer, Daniel Taylor, Thomas B. Waltzek
2019, Scientific Reports (9)
Salmonella spp. are frequently shed by wildlife including turtles, but S. enterica subsp. enterica serovar Typhimurium or lesions associated with Salmonella are rare in turtles. Between 1996 and 2016, we necropsied 127 apparently healthy pelagic olive ridley turtles (Lepidochelys olivacea) that died from drowning bycatch in fisheries and 44 live...
Improved detection of rare, endangered and invasive trout using a new large-volume sampling method for eDNA capture
Adam J. Sepulveda, Jenna Schabacker, Seth Smith, Robert Al-Chokhachy, Gordon Luikart, Stephen J. Amish
2019, Environmental DNA (1) 227-237
Environmental DNA (eDNA) detection probability increases with volume of water sampled. Common approaches for collecting eDNA samples often require many samples since these approaches usually use fine filters, which restrict the volume of water that can be sampled. An alternative to collecting many, small volume water samples using fine filters...
The evolving threat of rapid Ohia death (ROD) to Hawaii’s native ecosystems and rare plant species
Lucas B. Fortini, Lauren R. Kaiser, Lisa Keith, Jonathan Price, R. Flint Hughes, James D. Jacobi, J. B. Friday
2019, Forest Ecology and Management (448) 376-385
Hawai‘i’s most widespread native tree, ‘ōhi‘a lehua (Metrosideros polymorpha), has been dying across large areas of Hawai‘i Island mainly due to two fungal pathogens (Ceratocystis lukuohia and Ceratocystis huliohia) that cause a disease collectively known as Rapid ‘Ōhi‘a Death (ROD). Here we examine patterns of positive detections of C. lukuohia as it has been...
Extreme site fidelity as an optimal strategy in an unpredictable and homogeneous environment
Brian D. Gerber, Mevin Hooten, Christopher P. Peck, Mindy B. Rice, James H. Gammonley, Anthony D. Apa, Amy J. Davis
2019, Functional Ecology (33) 1695-1707
1.Animal site fidelity structures space use, population demography and ultimately gene flow. Understanding the adaptive selection for site fidelity patterns provides a mechanistic understanding to both spatial and population processes. This can be achieved by linking space use with environmental variability (spatial and temporal) and demographic parameters. However, rarely is...
USGS critical minerals review
Steven M. Fortier, Jane M. Hammarstrom, Sarah J. Ryker, Warren C. Day, Robert R. Seal, II
2019, Mining Engineering (71) 35-47
The United States’ supply of critical minerals has been a concern and a source of potential strategic vulnerabilities for U.S. economic and national security interests for decades (for example, see Strategic and Critical Minerals Stockpiling Act, 1939). More recently, with the rapid increase in the types of materials being used...
Negative impacts of summer heat on Sierra Nevada tree seedlings
Emily V. Moran, Adrian J. Das, Jon Keeley, Nathan L. Stephenson
2019, Ecosphere (10)
Understanding the response of forests to climate change is important for predicting changes in biodiversity and ecosystem services, including carbon storage. Seedlings represent a key demographic stage in these responses, because seedling establishment is necessary for population persistence and spread, and because the conditions allowing seedlings to survive and grow...
Concurrent assessment of epidemiological and operational uncertainties for optimal outbreak control: Ebola as a case study
Shou-Li Li, Matthew J. Ferrari, Ottar N. Bjornstad, Michael C. Runge, Christopher J Fonnesbeck, Michael J. Tildesley, David Pannell, Katriona Shea
2019, Proceedings of the Royal Society B (286)
Determining how to best manage an epidemiological outbreak may be hindered by both epidemiological uncertainty (i.e. about epidemiological processes) and operational uncertainty (i.e. about the effectiveness of candidate interventions). These two uncertainties are rarely addressed concurrently in epidemic studies, impeding decision-making. We present an approach to simultaneously address both...
A 4000-year history of debris flows in north-central Washington State, U.S.A.: Preliminary results from trenching and surficial geologic mapping at the Pope Creek fan
Jeffrey A. Coe, Erin Bessette-Kirton, Stephen Slaughter, Francis K. Rengers, Trevor A. Contreras, Katherin A Michelson, Emily M. Taylor, Jason W. Kean, Kara Jacobacci, Molly A Hanson
2019, Conference Paper
Long-term records of the magnitude and frequency of debris flows on fans are rare, but such records provide critical information needed for debris-flow hazard and risk assessments. This study explores the history of debris flows on a fan with seasonally inhabited cabins at Pope Creek along the Entiat River about...