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Page 3828, results 95676 - 95700

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Taxonomy of the genus Lycalopex (Carnivora: Canidae) in Argentina
G.E. Zunino, O.B. Vaccaro, M. Canevari, A. L. Gardner
1995, Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington (108) 729-747
Previously treated as species of Pseudalopex, Argentine members of the genus Lycalopex (L. griseus, L. gymnocercus, and L. culpaeus) are examined to clarify the taxonomic status of each named form. Principal components analyses of 26 cranial measurements of 151 adult specimens and 11 pelage characters of 111 specimens, clearly...
Hydrologic modeling as a predictive basis for ecological restoration of salt marshes
C. T. Roman, R.W. Garvine, J. W. Portnoy
1995, Environmental Management (19) 559-566
Roads, bridges, causeways, impoundments, and dikes in the coastal zone often restrict tidal flow to salt marsh ecosystems. A dike with tide control structures, located at the mouth of the Herring River salt marsh estuarine system (Wellfleet, Massachusetts) since 1908, has effectively restricted tidal exchange, causing changes in marsh vegetation...
Summer movements and behavior of an Arctic wolf, Canis lupus, pack without pups
L.D. Mech
1995, Canadian Field-Naturalist (109) 473-475
A pupless arctic Wolf pack (two adults, three yearlings) studied 5-30 July 1993 on Ellesmere Island, Northwest Territories, traveled nomadically around an area >381 km2 but the alpha pair sometimes left the yearlings at a rendezvous site. All pack members hunted Arctic hares. The alpha pair sometimes fed...
Minnesota wolf dispersal to Wisconsin and Michigan
L.D. Mech, S. H. Fritts, D. Wagner
1995, American Midland Naturalist (133) 368-370
Records are presented of three wolves that dispersed ≥200 km from northern Minnesota to the Minnesota-Wisconsin border, to southern Wisconsin, and to Michigan. This report documents that wolves cross major highways and other developed areas and that the recently recolonized wolf population in Wisconsin and Michigan could have originated from...
A 24-hour remote surveillance system for terrestrial wildlife studies
P.W. Sykes Jr., W.E. Ryman, C. B. Kepler, J.W. Hardy
1995, Journal of Field Ornithology (66) 199-211
The configuration, components, specifications and costs of a state-of-the-art closed-circuit television system with wide application for wildlife research and management are described. The principal system components consist of color CCTV camera with zoom lens, pan/tilt system, infrared illuminator, heavy duty tripod, coaxial cable, coaxitron system, half-duplex equalizing video/control amplifier, timelapse...
Winter range arrival and departure of white-tailed deer in northeastern Minnesota
M.E. Nelson
1995, Canadian Journal of Zoology (73) 1069-1076
I analyzed 364 spring and 239 fall migrations by 194 white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) from 1975 to 1993 in northeastern Minnesota to determine the proximate cause of arrivals on and departures from winter ranges. The first autumn temperatures below -7?C initiated fall migrations for 14% (95% confidence interval (CI)...
Sediment toxicity in Savannah Harbor
P. V. Winger, P. J. Lasier
1995, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (28) 357-365
Savannah Harbor, located near the mouth of the Savannah River, Georgia and South Carolina, is impacted by industrial and municipal effluents. Potential release of contaminants stored in harbor sediments through dredging and shipping operations requires that contaminated areas be identified for proper management of the system and protection of wildlife...
Responses of amphibian populations to water and soil factors in experimentally-treated aquatic macrocosms
D. W. Sparling, T. P. Lowe, Daniel D. Day, K. Dolan
1995, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (29) 455-461
Survival of anuran embryos and tadpoles is reduced in acidic (pH<5.0) waters under laboratory conditions. However, field data on the presence-absence of amphibian species and acidity are equivocal. This study attempts to reconcile some of this discrepancy by using macrocosms to examine the interaction of soil type and water acidification...
Acephate affects migratory orientation of the white-throated sparrow (Zonotrichia albicollis)
N.B. Vyas, E. F. Hill, J.R. Sauer, Wayne J. Kuenzel
1995, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (14) 1961-1965
Migratory white-throated sparrows (Zonotrichia albicollis) were exposed to acephate (acetylphosphoramidothioic acid O, S-dimethyl ester), an organophosphorus pesticide, to determine its effects on migratory orientation and behavior. Birds were also exposed to polarizer sheets to determine the mechanism by which acephate may affect migratory orientation. Adult birds exposed to 256 ppm acephate...
Application of brain cholinesterase reactivation to differentiate between organophosphorus and carbamate pesticide exposure in wild birds
W. R. Smith, N. J. Thomas, C. Hulse
1995, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (31) 263-267
Brain cholinesterase activity was measured to evaluate pesticide exposure in wild birds. Thermal reactivation of brain cholinesterase was used to differentiate between carbamate and organophosphorus pesticide exposure. Brain cholinesterase activity was compared with gas chromatography and mass spectrometry of stomach contents. Pesticides were...
Estimating annual survival and movement rates of adults within a metapopulation of roseate terns
Jeffrey A. Spendelow, James D. Nichols, Ian C. T. Nisbet, Helen Hays, Grace Cormons, Joanna Burger, C. Safina, James E. Hines, Michael Gochfeld
1995, Ecology (76) 2415-2428
Several multistratum capture—recapture models were used to test various hypotheses about possible geographic and temporal variation in survival, movement, and recapture/resighting probabilities of 2399 adult Roseate Terns (Sterna dougallii) color—banded from 1988 to 1992 at the sites of the four largest breeding colonies of this species in the northeastern USA....