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Page 3514, results 87826 - 87850

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Response of Pacific walruses to disturbances from capture and handling activities at a haul-out in Bristol Bay, Alaska
C.V. Jay, Tamara L. Olson, G.W. Garner, Brenda E. Ballachey
1998, Marine Mammal Science (14) 819-828
Observations were made on hems of the Pacific walrus (Odobenus rosmarus divergens) to study their response during the capturing and handling of adult males in summer 1995 at a haul-out at Cape Peirce in southwestern Alaska. Three behaviors (alertness, displacement, and dispersal) were quantified from 16 capture sessions. Herd sizes...
From polar wander to dynamic planet: A tribute to Keith Runcorn
R.W. Girdler
1998, Physics and Chemistry of the Earth (23) 709-713
The evolution of Keith Runcorn's ideas from the static, elastic Earth of Jeffreys to a dynamic, convecting planet are presented based on discussions as his colleague over 25 years from 1963 to his retirement in 1988. Keith reached the concept of a dynamic planet by way of polar wander and...
Biochemical and conjugation studies of romet-resistant strains of Aeromonas salmonicida from salmonid rearing facilities in the eastern United States
C. E. Starliper, R.K. Cooper
1998, Journal of Aquatic Animal Health (10) 221-229
Strains of Aeromonas salmonicida (n = 585) were collected from covertly infected and diseased salmonid hosts from 12 hatcheries in the eastern United States. Strains and sites were selected because of their potential for harboring antimicrobial resistance, in particular, to Romet™. Resistance to Romet was displayed by 315...
Preliminary volcano-hazard assessment for Akutan Volcano, east-central Aleutian Islands, Alaska
Christopher F. Waythomas, John A. Power, Donlad H. Richter, Robert G. McGimsey
1998, Open-File Report 98-360
Akutan Volcano is a 1100-meter-high stratovolcano on Akutan Island in the east-central Aleutian Islands of southwestern Alaska. The volcano is located about 1238 kilometers southwest of Anchorage and about 56 kilometers east of Dutch Harbor/Unalaska. Eruptive activity has occurred at least 27 times since historical observations were recorded beginning in...
Relationships among environmental variables and distribution of tree species at high elevation in the Olympic Mountains
Andrea Woodward
1998, Northwest Science (72) 10-22
Relationships among environmental variables and occurrence of tree species were investigated at Hurricane Ridge in Olympic National Park, Washington, USA. A transect consisting of three plots was established down one north-and one south-facing slope in stands representing the typical elevational sequence of tree species. Tree species included subalpine fir (Abies lasiocarpa), Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii),...
Professionals in environmental education: Helping kids learn about forestry
D.H. Anderson, J.L. Thompson, P.J. Jakes
1998, Journal of Forestry (96) 25-29
A K--8 school in a suburb of St. Paul has formed a partnership with natural resource professionals to create a school forest for environmental education in the field. The university and agency professionals worked with students to teach them the skills necessary to map and inventory their school grounds....
Phytoplankton assemblages in high-elevation lakes in the northern Cascade Mountains, Washington State, USA
Gary L. Larson, C. D. McIntire, R.E. Truitt, W.J. Liss, Robert L. Hoffman, E. Deimling, G.A. Lomnicky
1998, Archiv fur Hydrobiologie (142) 71-93
Phytoplankton assemblages in high-elevation lakes of North Cascades National Park Service Complex were studied during the open-water period in 1989. Collectively, 93 taxa were identified in 55 samples from 51 lakes. Based on cell densities, cyanobacteria had the highest relative abundance (36.7 %), followed by chlorophytes (29.8 %), and chrysophytes...
A nowcast model for tides and tidal currents in San Francisco Bay, California
Ralph T. Cheng, Richard E. Smith
1998, Conference Paper
National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) installed Physical Oceanographic Real-Time System (PORTS) in San Francisco Bay, California to provide observations of tides, tidal currents, and meteorological conditions. PORTS data are used for optimizing vessel operations, increasing margin of safety for navigation, and guiding hazardous material spill prevention and response. Because...
Flow and suspended particulate transport in a tidal bottom layer, south San Francisco Bay, California
R. T. Cheng, J. W. Gartner, D.A. Cacchione, G. B. Tate
1998, Conference Paper, Physics of estuaries and coastal seas: Proceedings of the 8th International Biennial Conference on Physics of Estuaries and Coastal Seas
Field investigations of the hydrodynamics and the resuspension and transport of particulate matter in a bottom boundary layer were carried out in South San Francisco Bay, California during March-April 1995. The GEOPROBE, an instrumented bottom tripod, and broad-band acousti Doppler current profilers were used in this investigation. The instrument assemblage...
KERNELHR: A program for estimating animal home ranges
D.E. Seaman, B. Griffith, R. A. Powell
1998, Wildlife Society Bulletin (26) 95-100
Kernel methods are state of the art for estimating animal home-range area and utilization distribution (UD). The KERNELHR program was developed to provide researchers and managers a tool to implement this extremely flexible set of methods with many variants. KERNELHR runs interactively or from the command line on any personal...
Chemical gradients in sediment cores from an EPA reference site off the Farallon Islands - Assessing chemical indicators of dredged material disposal in the deep sea
Michael H. Bothner, P.W. Gill, W.S. Boothman, B.B. Taylor, Herman A. Karl
1998, Marine Pollution Bulletin (36) 443-457
Heavy metal and organic contaminants have been determined in undisturbed sediment cores from the US Environmental Protection Agency reference site for dredged material on the continental slope off San Francisco. As expected, the concentrations are significantly lower than toxic effects guidelines, but concentrations of PCBs, PAHs, Hg, Pb, and Clostridium...
Flow of river water into a karstic limestone aquifer: 2. Dating the young fraction in groundwater mixtures in the Upper Floridan aquifer near Valdosta, Georgia
Niel Plummer, E. Busenberg, S. Drenkard, P. Schlosser, B. Ekwurzel, R. Weppernig, J. B. McConnell, R. L. Michel
1998, Applied Geochemistry (13) 1017-1043
Tritium/helium-3 (3H/3He) and chlorofluorocarbon (CFCs, CFC–11, CFC–12, CFC–113) data are used to date the young fraction in groundwater mixtures from a karstic limestone aquifer near Valdosta, Georgia, where regional paleowater in the Upper Floridan aquifer receives recharge from two young sources—the flow of Withlacoochee River water through sinkholes in the...
Quantitative measure of the variation in fault rheology due to fluid-rock interactions
M.L. Blanpied, C.J. Marone, D.A. Lockner, J.D. Byerlee, D.P. King
1998, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (103) 9691-9712
We analyze friction data from two published suites of laboratory tests on granite in order to explore and quantify the effects of temperature (T) and pore water pressure (Pp) on the sliding behavior of faults. Rate-stepping sliding tests were performed on laboratory faults in granite containing “gouge” (granite powder), both...
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:...
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...
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...
Growth and survival of lake sturgeon larvae fed formulated diets
M. N. DiLauro, W. F. Krise, K. Fynn-Aikins
1998, Progressive Fish-Culturist (60) 293-296
We conducted a 60‐d experiment to ascertain diet‐related differences in survival and growth of larval lake sturgeon Acipenser fulvescens. We offered formulated diets to larval lake sturgeon 2 weeks after first‐feeding to find a suitable formulated diet. The five formulated diets were fed to larvae in combination with live brine shrimp Artemia sp., which...
Consideration of measurement error when using commercial indoor radon determinations for selecting radon action levels
G.M. Reimer, S.L. Szarzi, Michael P. Dolan
1998, Conference Paper, Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry
An examination of year-long, in-home radon measurement in Colorado from commercial companies applying typical methods indicates that considerable variation in precision exists. This variation can have a substantial impact on any mitigation decisions, either voluntary or mandated by law, especially regarding property sale or exchange. Both long-term exposure (nuclear track...
Earthquake triggering by transient and static deformations
J. Gomberg, N.M. Beeler, M.L. Blanpied, P. Bodin
1998, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (103) 24411-24426
Observational evidence for both static and transient near-field and far-field triggered seismicity are explained in terms of a frictional instability model, based on a single degree of freedom spring-slider system and rate- and state-dependent frictional constitutive equations. In this study a triggered earthquake is one whose failure time has been...
Sponges of the Permian Upper Capitan Limestone Guadalupe Mountains, New Mexico and Texas
J.K. Rigby, B. Senowbari-Daryan, H. Liu
1998, Brigham Young University Geology Studies (43) 19-89
Demosponge "sphinctozoans" and inozoid calcareous sponges are major constituents of the Upper Permian, Upper Capitan Limestone in the Guadalupe Mountains of New Mexico and Texas. Systematic description, taxonomy, and the stratigraphic distribution of these sponges are documented in collections from exposures of the Upper Capitan Limestone in the vicinity of...
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...
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...