First report of the Maryland/DC Records Committee
B. Peterjohn, P. Davis
1996, Maryland Birdlife (52) 3-43
Ultrastructure of the haemocytes of Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae)
E. Zhioua, R.A. LeBrun, P.W. Johnson, H. S. Ginsberg
1996, Acarologia (37) 173-179
Haemocytes of Ixodes scapularis were characterized on the basis of their ultrastructure by transmission electron microscopy of thin sections. Three types of haemocytes were identified: prohaemocytes, plasmatocytes, and granulocytes. Prohaemocytes are undifferentiated cells containing very little cytoplasm (high nucelo-cytoplasmic ratio). Plasmatocytes are rich in free ribosomes, mitochondria, rough endoplasmic reticulum,...
Effects of Silv-Ex? on terrestrial wildlife
N.B. Vyas, J. W. Spann, E. F. Hill
1996, Proceedings of the North Dakota Academy of Science (50) 150-151
No abstract available....
Managing designated campsites: Survey implications from Great Smoky Mountains National Park
J. L. Marion, Y.-F. Leung
1996, Master Network (13) 13-14
Productivity of the spruce grouse in fragmented habitat at the edge of its range
S.D. Whitcomb, A.F. O'Connell Jr., F. A. Servello
1996, Journal of Field Ornithology (67) 422-427
We measured productivity of the Spruce Grouse (Dendragapusc anadensicsa nadensis) in patchy black spruce (Picea mariana) habitat along the southeastern limit of its range in mid-coastal Maine. We captured grouse and attached necklace-mounted radio transmitters to hens prior to nesting. Of 19 females monitored, only 26% raised chicks to the...
Predator management to protect endangered avian species
G.W. Witmer, J.L. Bucknall, T. H. Fritts, D.G. Moreno
1996, Transactions of the North American Wildlife and Natural Resources Conference (61) 101-107
New nesting area of Puerto Rican parrots
J.M. Meyers
1996, The Wilson Bulletin (108) 164-166
Survival of breeding male American woodcock in Maine
J. R. Longcore, D.G. McAuley, G.F. Sepik, G.W. Pendleton
1996, Canadian Journal of Zoology (74) 2046-2054
The authors investigated the survival of breeding male American woodcock in Washington County, Maine. A total of 150 birds were radio-arked during 1987-1989 and relationships were evaluated between survival, body mass, predation, weather, and habitat use. Survival varied from 0.690 (1989) to 0.924 (1988), with a...
In memoriam: Robert Earl Stewart, Sr., 1913-1993
Chandler S. Robbins, M.B. Meanley
1996, The Auk (113) 680-682
Robert Earl Stewart, Sr., our colleague, close friend, and mentor, was born on 16 April 1913 in Kansas City, Missouri. He graduated from high school in Grimes, Iowa, received his B.S. in Biology from the University of Iowa in 1936, and his M.S. in Zoology from the University of Michigan...
Effects of boron and selenium on mallard reproduction and duckling growth and survival
T.R. Stanley Jr., G. J. Smith, D. J. Hoffman, G. H. Heinz, R. Rosscoe
1996, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (15) 1124-1132
Boron (B) and selenium (Se) sometimes occur together in high concentrations in the environment and can accumulate in plants and invertebrates consumed by waterfowl. One hundred twenty-six pairs of breeding mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) were fed diets supplemented with B (as boric acid) at 0, 450, or 900 ppm, in...
A new era for carnivore conservation
L.D. Mech
1996, Wildlife Society Bulletin (24) 397-401
Restoration has become an important technique in carnivore management. As the public becomes increasingly interested in carnivores, their management may become more contentious. Nevertheless, the value of this charismatic group of animals is high. Although they will have to be controlled where interfering too much with human...
A resource conservative procedure for comparison of dose-response relationships
W.A. Link, E. F. Hill, J.E. Hines, P.F.P. Henry
1996, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (15) 1612-1617
The evaluation of effects of toxicants on a wildlife community can be complicated by varying responses among the community's constituent populations. Even within populations, considerable variability in dose-response relations may result from different avenues of exposure to the toxicant. Full-scale investigations of the dose-response relations among a variety of species...
Prevalence and histopathology of shell disease in turtles from Lake Blackshear, Georgia
J.E. Lovich, S.W. Gotte, C.H. Ernst, J. Harshbarger, A.F. Laemmerzahl
1996, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (32) 259-265
Turtles in Lake Blackshear, Crisp County, Georgia (USA) were evaluated for shell disease during intensive trapping efforts on 8 and 9 May 1990. The disease was most prevalent in Pseudemys concinna (74%) and Trachemys scripta (35%). The degree of necrosis on the carapace was significantly positively correlated...
Regional cholinesterase activity in white-throated sparrow brain is differentially affected by acephate (Orthene®)
N.B. Vyas, Wayne J. Kuenzel, E. F. Hill, G.A. Romo, M.V.S. Komaragiri
1996, Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part C: Pharmacology, Toxicology and Endocrinology (113) 381-386
Effects of a 14-day dietary exposure to an organophosphorus pesticide, acephate (acetylphosphoramidothioic acid O,S-dimethyl ester), were determined on cholinesterase activity in three regions (basal ganglia, hippocampus, and hypothalamus) of the white-throated sparrow, Zonotrichia albicollis, brain. All three regions experienced depressed cholinesterase activity between 0.5–2 ppm acephate. The regions exhibited cholinesterase...
Nutritional value of winter foods for whooping cranes
J.T. Nelson, R.D. Slack, G.F. Gee
1996, The Wilson Bulletin (108) 728-739
We measured metabolizable energy and digestibility of Whooping Crane (Grus americana) winter foods (blue crab [Callinectes sapidus]), common Rangia clam (Rangia cuneata), wolfberry fruit (Lycium carolinianurn [wolfberry]), and live oak acorn (Ouercus virginiana [acorn])] with feeding trials to captive-reared Whooping Cranes. Apparent metabolizable energy coefficients (expressed as %) were for...
Limitations of captive breeding in endangered species recovery
N.F.R. Snyder, S.R. Derrickson, S.R. Beissenger, J. W. Wiley, T.B. Smith, W.D. Toone, B. Miller
1996, Conservation Biology (10) 338-348
The use of captive breeding in species recovery has grown enormously in recent years, but without a concurrent growth in appreciation of its limitations. Problems with (1) establishing self-sufficient captive populations, (2) poor success in reintroductions, (3) high costs, (4) domestication, (5) preemption of other recovery techniques, (6) disease outbreaks,...
Leave no trace outdoor skills and ethics: An educational solution for reducing visitor impacts
J. L. Marion, S.C. Brame
1996, Park Science (16) 24-26
Surveys of Puerto Rican screech-owl populations in large-tract and fragmented forest habitats
K.L. Pardieck, J.M. Meyers, M. Pagan
1996, The Wilson Bulletin (108) 776-782
We conducted road surveys of Puerto Rican Screech-Owls (Otus nudipes) by playing conspecific vocalizations in secondary wet forest and fragmented secondary moist forest in rural areas of eastern Puerto Rico. Six paired surveys were conducted bi-weekly beginning in April. We recorded number of owl responses, cloud cover, wind speed,...
Waterfowl habitat management in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley
K. J. Reinecke, C.K. Baxter
1996, International Waterfowl Symposium (7) 159-167
Fregata minor, great frigatebird, in Oklahoma
J.S. Tomer, R. B. Clapp, J.C. Hoffman
1996, Bulletin of the Oklahoma Ornithological Society (29) 34-35
Wetlands mitigation: Partnership between an electric power company and a federal wildlife refuge
Matthew C. Perry, C.B. Sibrel, G.A. Gough
1996, Environmental Management (20) 933-939
Twenty-three acres of a degraded section of Patuxent Research Refuge in Laurel, Maryland were converted to wetland habitat by the Baltimore Gas and Electric Company in 1994. The wetlands were created as mitigation for 14 acres of wetlands that were impacted as part of the construction of a 5.3...
Seed deterioration in flooded agricultural fields during winter
C.O. Nelms, D.J. Twedt
1996, Wildlife Society Bulletin (24) 85-88
We determined rate of seed deterioration for 3 crops (corn, rice, and soybean) and 8 weeds commonly found in agricultural fields and moist-soil management units in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley (MAV). The weeds were broadleaf signalgrass (Brachiaria platyphylla), junglerice barnyardgrass (Echinochloa colonum), morningglory (Ipomoea sp.), panic grass (Panicum sp.), bull...
Breeding bird census: Planted cottonwood forest -inside levee
Daniel J. Twedt
1996, Journal of Field Ornithology (67) 39-40
No abstract available....
Wolf management in the 21st century: From public input to sterilization
L.D. Mech, S. H. Fritts, M.E. Nelson
1996, Journal of Wildlife Research (1) 195-198
Human-population increase and land development portend increasing conflict with large predators. Concurrently, changes and diversification of human attitudes are bringing increased disagreement about wildlife management. Animal-rights advocacy resulting from urbanization of human populations conflicts with traditional wildlife management. These forces focus more on wolves than on other...
Survival of radio-collared nestling Puerto Rican parrots
J.M. Meyers, W.J. Arendt, G.D. Lindsey
1996, The Wilson Bulletin (108) 159-163