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Page 3802, results 95026 - 95050

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Dispersion of adult Cancer magister at Glacier Bay, Alaska: Variation with spatial scale, sex, and reproductive status
Charles E. O’Clair, Thomas C. Shirley, S. James Taggart
1996, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the international symposium on biology, management, and economics of crabs from high latitude habitats: Lowell Wakefield fisheries symposium
Patterns of micro- to mesoscale distribution of Dungeness crabs (Cancer magister) in nearshore habitats at five locations in and near Glacier Bay National Park were revealed using subtidal transects. Sampling was conducted in April and September 1992 and 1993 and April 1994. Divers censused crabs by sex and reproductive status...
Fluvial process and the establishment of bottomland trees
Michael L. Scott, Jonathan M. Friedman, Gregor T. Auble
1996, Geomorphology (14) 327-339
The effects of river regulation on bottomland tree communities in western North America have generated substantial concern because of the important habitat and aesthetic values of these communities. Consideration of such effects in water management decisions has been hampered by the apparent variability of responses of bottomland tree communities to...
Toxic phytoplankton in San Francisco Bay
Kristine M. Rodgers, David L. Garrison, James E. Cloern
1996, Report, 1995 Annual Report, San Francisco Estuary Regional Monitoring Program for Trace Substances
The Regional Monitoring Program (RMP) was conceived and designed to document the changing distribution and effects of trace substances in San Francisco Bay, with focus on toxic contaminants that have become enriched by human inputs. However, coastal ecosystems like San Francisco Bay also have potential sources of naturally-produced toxic substances...
Soil surface disturbances in cold deserts: Effects on nitrogenase activity in cyanobacterial-lichen soil crusts
Jayne Belnap
1996, Biology and Fertility of Soils (23) 362-367
CyanobacteriaMichen soil crusts can be a dominant source of nitrogen for cold-desert ecosystems. Effects of surface disturbance from footprints, bike and vehicle tracks on the nitrogenase activity in these crusts was investigated. Surface disturbances reduced nitrogenase activity by 30-100%. Crusts dominated by the cyanobacterium Microcoleus vaginatus on sandy soils were the most susceptible to disruption; crusts on...
The role of thermal stratification in tidal exchange at the mouth of San Diego Bay
D. B. Chadwick, J. L. Largier, R. T. Cheng, D.G. Aubrey, C.T. Friedrichs
D.G. Aubrey, C.T. Friedrichs, editor(s)
1996, Book chapter, Buoyancy effects on coastal and estuarine dynamics
We have examined, from an observational viewpoint, the role of thermal stratification in the tidal exchange process at the mouth of San Diego Bay. In this region, we found that both horizontal and vertical exchange processes appear to be active. The vertical exchange in this case was apparently due to...
Nesting success of Northern Pintails on the coastal Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska
Paul L. Flint, J. Barry Grand
1996, The Condor (98) 54-60
We studied nesting chronology and success of Northern Pintails (Anas acuta) on the coastal Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska during the summers of 1991-1993. We found a total of 795 nests during three annual searches of a 27.4 km2 area. Minimum nest density averaged 9.67 nests per km2. Nesting success varied among...
Evidence from cytochrome b sequences and allozymes for a new species of alcid: The long-billed murrelet (Brachyramphus perdix)
Vicki L. Friesen, John F. Piatt, Allan J. Baker
1996, The Condor (98) 681-690
Marbled Murrelets (Brachyramphus marmoratus) are coastal seabirds that breed predominantly in old-growth forest throughout the North Pacific. Presently they are classified into two phenotypically distinct subspecies: one in North America (B. m. marmoratus) and one in Asia (B. m. perdix). The Asian form was classified as a separate species in...
Renesting ecology of northern pintails on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska
J. Barry Grand, Paul L. Flint
1996, The Condor (98) 820-824
We used radio telemetry to study renesting by wild, free-ranging Northern Pintails (Anas acuta) on the coastal Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta in 1994 and 1995. Fifty-six percent of females (n = 39) renested at least once. Propensity to renest declined among females that initiated later first nests. Renesting interval was not related...
Survival of northern pintail ducklings on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska
J. Barry Grand, Paul L. Flint
1996, The Condor (98) 48-53
We studied survival rates of Northern Pintail (Anas acuta; hereafter pintail) broods and ducklings along the lower Kashunuk River on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska. Survival rates were determined for 770 ducklings in 111 broods. Brood sizes at hatch were smaller in 1993 versus 1991 and 1992. Duckling survival rates were...
Variation in egg size of the northern pintail
Paul L. Flint, J. Barry Grand
1996, The Condor (98) 162-165
Egg size is an important determinant of reproductive investment by birds. For many species, total investment in a clutch is limited by the size of stored reserves (Ankney and MacInnes 1978, Esler and Grand 1994a). Egg size determines the unit by which these stored reserves are partitioned. Individual females in...
Zebra mussel effects on benthic invertebrates: physical or biotic?
P. Silver Botts, Benjamin A. Patterson, Don W. Schloesser
1996, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (15) 179-184
In soft sediments, Dreissena spp. create firm substrate in the form of aggregates of living mussels (druses) that roll free on the sediments. Druses provide physical structure which increases habitat heterogeneity, and the mussels increase benthic organic matter through the production of pseudofeces and feces. Descriptive and experimental studies were...
Physiology of fish in intensive culture systems
Gary Wedemeyer
1996, Book
Fish culture in hatcheries and other aquacultural facilities is becoming much more intensive all over the world. The success of all kinds of fish rearing depends on the quality of management and this depends, in turn, on understanding the biology of fishes and the aquatic environment in which they live....
Quantum chemical parameters in QSAR: what do I use when?
James P. Hickey
Gary K. Ostrander, editor(s)
1996, Book chapter, Techniques in aquatic toxicology
This chapter provides a brief overview of the numerous quantum chemical parameters that have been/are currently being used in quantitative structure activity relationships (QSAR), along with a representative bibliography. The parameters will be grouped according to their mechanistic interpretations, and representative biological and physical chemical applications will be...
The risk of disease and threats to the wild population. Special Issue: Conservation and Management of the Southern Sea Otter
Nancy J. Thomas, Rebecca A. Cole
1996, Endangered Species UPDATE (13) 23-27
The growth of the southern sea otter population has been steady, but slow in comparison to Alaskan subspecies, and range expansion in California has faltered. Slower growth is occurring in California despite birth rates comparable to those in Alaska, so biologists have reasoned that mortality is hindering the growth of...
The stable oxygen and carbon isotopic record from a coral growing in Florida Bay: a 160 year record of climatic and anthropogenic influence
Peter K. Swart, Genevieve F. Healy, Richard E. Dodge, Philip Kramer, J. Harold Hudson, Robert B. Halley, Michael B. Robblee
1996, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (123) 219-237
A 160 year record of skeletal δ13C and δ18O was examined in a specimen of the coral Solenastrea bournonigrowing in Florida Bay. Variations in the δ18O of the skeleton can be correlated to changes in salinity while changes in the δ13C reflect cycling of organic material within the Bay. Based on...