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Page 41, results 1001 - 1025

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Denning black bear response to anthropogenic disturbance and implications for cub survival in Florida
Darcy Doran-Myers, Kaili Gregory, Conor P. McGowan, Vanessa Hull, Brian K. Scheick
2025, Ursus (2525) 1-20
Wildlife research and management can be disruptive to wildlife. By advancing our understanding of the impacts of these activities, we can reduce adverse effects, improve decision-making, and enhance the outcomes of research and management. During 2017–2019, we observed the responses of denning female American black bears (Ursus americanus) to 3...
Reproductive output of the rare plant Arctomecon californica does not appear to be limited by its floral visitor community
Kelsey K. Graham, Lesley A. DeFalco, Terry Griswold
2025, Plant Ecology
The majority of plants rely on animal-mediated pollination for reproduction. Reductions in pollinator visitations can lead to pollen limitation and declines in seed production. Arctomecon californica, the Las Vegas bearpoppy, is a rare plant native to the northeastern Mojave Desert. It is pollinator dependent for reproduction as it is self-incompatible, but associated...
Coexistence beyond disciplinary silos: Five dimensions of analysis for more convivial human-predator interactions
Judith E. Krauss, Valentina Fiasco, Silvio Marchini, Michael C Mcinturff, Laila T. Sandroni, Peter S. Alagona, Dan Brockington, Bram Büscher, Rosaleen Duffy, Katia Maria P.M. de Barros Ferraz, Rob Fletcher, Wilhelm Andrew Kiwango, Sanna Komi, Mathew Bukhi Mabele, Kate Massarella, Anja Nygren
2025, Biological Conservation (308)
Understanding human-predator interactions has been a central goal of conservation for decades, yet many previous efforts have approached this challenge from disciplinary perspectives focused on single case studies. There is a need for more transdisciplinary and multi-sited research to enrich our understandings of the complexity of human-nonhuman interactions and to...
The functional traits behind fish rarity in an impounded river basin
Leandro E. Miranda, Hayden G. Funk, Kevin W. Jones, Corey Garland Dunn, Kurt M. Lakin
2025, Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries (35) 1279-1299
Reservoirs alter flows and aquatic habitats, reordering rarity patterns of reservoir ichthyofauna by allowing certain fish traits to flourish while filtering others. We reviewed the composition of fish species in an impounded river basin (Tennessee River, USA) to identify traits that influence rarity. We delineate levels of rarity based on...
Combining acoustic telemetry and side-scan sonar to estimate abundance of endangered shortnose sturgeon in the Hudson River, New York
Amanda Higgs, Shannon L. White, John Madsen, David C. Kazyak, Dewayne Fox, Richard Pendleton, Adam Bonemery, Tomasz Smolinski, Amanda Simmonds, Patrick Sullivan
2025, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (82) 1-12
For endangered shortnose sturgeon (Acipenser brevirostrum), the ability to estimate and monitor population size is critical for tracking species’ recovery. Yet, contemporary abundance estimates have not been completed for many shortnose sturgeon populations, largely owing to the difficulty in using traditional abundance estimators for sturgeons. Here, we estimate the adult...
Visioning and conceptual framework for coordinating Great Lakes connecting waters research and monitoring
Robin L. DeBruyne, Edward F. Roseman, Ashley H. Moerke, Lauren M Fry, Michael R. Twiss, Samantha N. Tank
2025, Journal of Great Lakes Research
The Laurentian Great Lakes are connected via naturally occurring straits and rivers: St. Marys River, Straits of Mackinac, St. Clair-Detroit River System, Niagara River, and the St. Lawrence River. Despite the historical ecological and economic importance of these waters, international agreements (e.g., Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement) only recently explicitly...
Leisure boat harbours, hidden alien species, and pollution: A case study of Hinsholmskilen harbour (Gothenburg, Sweden)
Irina Polovodova Asteman, Emilie Jaffre, Agata Olejnik, Maria Holzmann, Mary McGann, Kjell Nordberg, Jean-Charles Pavard, Delia Rosel, Magali Schweizer
2025, Journal of Micropalaeontology (44) 119-143
Small leisure boat harbours have important aesthetic and recreational values in any country with a coastline. In Sweden, there are about 860 000 leisure boats, which is one of the world's highest numbers in relation to the country's population. However, small boat harbours also present a wide range of environmental problems,...
Mobile radar provides insights into hydrologic responses in burn areas
Jonathan J. Gourley, Yagmur Derin, Pierre-Emmanuel Kirstetter, John W, Fulton, Laura A. Hempel, Braden White
2025, International Journal of Wildland Fire (34)
BackgroundWildfires often occur in mountainous terrain, regions that pose substantial challenges to operational meteorological and hydrologic observing networks.AimsA mobile, post-fire hydrometeorological observatory comprising remote-sensing and in situ instrumentation was developed and deployed in a burnt area to provide unique insights into rainfall-induced post-fire hazards.MethodsMobile radar-based rainfall...
Evidence for petit-spot volcanism in the Puerto Rico Trench
Nicholas Harmon, William W. Danforth, Uri S. ten Brink, J. Pablo Canales, Shuoshuo Han, Elizabeth Vanacore, Jose-Luis Granja-Bruna, Wayne E. Baldwin, Seth D. Ackerman, Liam Moser, Elisaveta Sokolkova
2025, Geophysical Research Letters (52)
Petit-spot volcanism occurs in intraplate settings along the outer rise of subducting plates. Here we present evidence for petit-spot type of volcanism from multibeam bathymetry and backscatter data from the Puerto Rico Trench (PRT). It is the first report of such volcanism in the Atlantic basin. Up to 34 possible...
The perspective of youth: Envisioning transformative pathways and desirable futures for people and nature
Thomas M. Schmitt, Juliette Aminian–Biquet, Polina Blinova, Yohana G. Jimenez, Lider Sinav, Hana Vašková, Ana Sofia Lorda Dumont, Pham Trung Kien, Vinamra Mathur, Brenda Mwale, Deign Frolley Soriano, Nopparat Anantaprayoon, Abdul Wahid Arimiyaw, Sheila Koech, Kantuta Conde Choque, HyeJin Kim, Jan J. Kuiper, Laura M. Pereira, Brian W. Miller
2025, Sustainability Science
This paper examines the pathways to desirable nature futures as envisioned by 22 young people from all United Nations regions and diverse cultural backgrounds who participated in the second edition of the IPBES Youth workshop (2022). The workshop employed the Three Horizons framework and the Nature Futures Framework (NFF) to...
Integrating multiple indices of habitat quality to inform habitat management for a sagebrush indicator species
Megan C. Milligan, Peter S. Coates, Shawn T. O’Neil, Brianne E Brussee, Michael P. Chenaille, Derek Friend, Kathleen Steele, Justin R. Small, Timothy S. Bowden, Arlene D. Kosic, Katherine Miller, Michael L. Casazza
2025, Ecological Informatics (90)
Robust science is needed to inform national resource management and policy decisions. Predictive species habitat maps are frequently employed in conservation decision-making but are often based on a single metric representing habitat quality. We outlined a framework that combines multiple spatially explicit indices of potential habitat quality that could be...
Factors associated with survival, recovery, and movements in the western Gulf Coast population of mottled ducks
Christopher P. Malachowski, William L. Kendall, Daniel P. Collins, Kevin J. Kraai, Jason Olszak, Larry Reynolds
2025, Journal of Wildlife Management (89)
The mottled duck (Anas fulvigula) is nonmigratory and a priority species for regional conservation and management because of its limited range and declining population trajectory in the western Gulf Coast (WGC) of Louisiana and Texas, USA. We developed multistate dead-recovery models for banding and recovery data (1997–2020) to evaluate potential...
Insights from megacryst-included zircon dates on the spatial extent of magma mixing in the Tuolumne Intrusive Suite, California, USA
Elena Watts, Julia Ye, Sean Patrick Gaynor, Valbone Memeti, Blair Schoene
2025, Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems (26)
The spatial extent of mixing between separately emplaced batches of magma is a key component in understanding the incremental assembly of plutons. Potassium feldspar megacrysts (>3 cm length) in granodioritic rocks are hypothesized to record magma mixing and transport over hundred kyr timescales. CA-ID-TIMS U-Pb dates from zircon inclusions within 11...
Ecological scenarios: Embracing ecological uncertainty in an era of global change
Kyra Clark-Wolf, Wynne Emily Moss, Brian W. Miller, Imtiaz Rangwala, Helen Sofaer, Gregor W. Schuurman, Dawn Magness, Amy Symstad, Jonathan Coop, Dominique M. Bachelet, Joseph Barsugli, A. Ciocco, Shelley D. Crausbay, Tyler Hoecker, Jena Lewinsohn, Meagan Ford Oldfather, Orien Richmond, Renee Rondeau, Amber C Runyon, Robin Russell, Jennifer L. Wilkening
2025, Ecosphere (16)
Scenarios, or plausible characterizations of the future, can help natural resource stewards plan and act under uncertainty. Current methods for developing scenarios for climate change adaptation planning are often focused on exploring uncertainties in future climate, but new approaches are needed to better represent uncertainties in ecological responses. Scenarios that...
Reliability of satellite-based vegetation maps for planning wildfire-fuel treatments in shrub steppe: Inferences from two contrasting national parks
Samuel J. Price, Chad Raymond Kluender, Matthew J. Germino, Thomas Rodhouse
2025, Journal of Environmental Management (387)
Protecting habitat threatened by increasing wildfire size and frequency requires identifying the spatial intersection of wildfire behavior and ecological conditions that favor positive management outcomes. In the perennial sagebrush steppe of Western North America, invasions by fire-prone annual grasses are a key concern, and management of them requires reliable maps...
Effects of restoration thinning on live tree carbon in northern secondary coastal redwood forests
Phillip J. van Mantgem, Micah C. Wright, Jason Teraoka
2025, Forest Ecology and Management (591)
At Redwood National and State parks restoration efforts are underway to promote the recovery of forests following a history of intense logging. Unmanaged secondary forests at the parks have high stem density with slow stand development. Restoration thinning treatments of these stands are designed to promote the representation of redwood...
Using subducting plate motion to constrain Cascadia slab geometry and interface strength
Menno Fraters, Magali Billen, John Naliboff, Lydia M. Staisch, Janet Watt, Haoyuan Li
2025, Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems (26)
Subduction zones are home to multiple geohazards driven by the evolution of the regional tectonics, including earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and landslides. Past evolution builds the present-day structure of the margin, while the present-day configuration of the system determines the state-of-stress in which individual hazardous events manifest. Regional simulations of subduction...
Modeling individual-level and population-level nest success of California Condors from movement data
Andrea Blackburn, Joseph Michael Eisaguirre, Joseph C. Brandt, Arianna Punzalan, Laura Mcmahon, Molly Astell, Nadya E. Seal Faith, David J. Meyer, Estelle A. Sandhaus
2025, Journal of Raptor Research (59)
The California Condor (Gymnogyps californianus) is a critically endangered species with populations that are not currently self-sustaining. Although understanding nest success is key to understanding trends in their populations, field monitoring of condor nests has become increasingly challenging as the number of nesting condors has increased and their range has...
Northward migrations of nonbreeding Bald Eagles from Arizona, USA.
Caroline D. Cappello, Kenneth V. Jacobson, James T. Driscoll, Kyle M. McCarty, Javan Mathias Bauder
2025, Journal of Raptor Research (59) 1-16
Knowledge of the spatiotemporal patterns of migratory and nonbreeding-season movements by animals is critical for conservation, but can be difficult to obtain if animals move far from known breeding territories and across administrative and country borders. To understand the migratory movements of Bald Eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) originating from a demographically...
Comparing surgery time and short-term incision healing for Largemouth Bass using smooth- and barbed-absorbable sutures
Jeffery N. Stevens, Mariaguadalupe Vilchez, Daniel M. Bryant, Samuel D. Delaney, Lisa R. Fermin, Zane W. Fuqua, Aiden S. Maddux, Jamie L. Rogers, Blake A. Rummage, Shannon K. Brewer
2025, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (45) 502-508
ObjectiveBarbed sutures have become increasingly favored over traditional smooth sutures in human medicine but remain understudied in fisheries biotelemetry applications. Our objectives were to (1) compare surgery time and recovery time for Largemouth Bass Micropterus nigricans when using smooth- versus barbed-absorbable sutures to close the incisions and (2) compare the short-term healing...
Optimizing the effectiveness of connectivity modifiers to reduce dryland degradation
Kristina E. Young, Brandon L. Edwards, Michael C. Duniway, Nicholas P. Webb
2025, Restoration Ecology (33)
Dryland degradation from unsustainable land use and increasing aridity often manifests as bare, interconnected areas that facilitate the loss or redistribution of resources (soil, seeds, and nutrients) through wind and run-off. Physical structures like branches and stick bundles, which disrupt these pathways and retain resources, are crucial for rehabilitation and...
Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Units Program—2023 Year-in-Review
Elise R. Irwin, Caroline E. Murphy, Dawn E. Childs, Donald E. Dennerline, Jonathan R. Mawdsley
2025, Circular 1545
Introduction Established in 1935, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Units Program is a unique cooperative partnership among State fish and wildlife agencies, host universities, the Wildlife Management Institute, USGS, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Designed to meet the scientific needs of natural resource management...
Using high-resolution geospatial imagery and data to document the evolution of the Wilderness Breach that was created by Hurricane Sandy in 2012 at Fire Island National Seashore, New York
Gary B. Fisher
2025, Open-File Report 2025-1020
The U.S. Geological Survey’s National Civil Applications Center obtained remote sensing data and imagery collected from 1939 through 2023 to monitor changes at Fire Island National Seashore, New York. On October 29, 2012, an inlet was created during Hurricane Sandy on Fire Island that remained open for 10 years. This...
Effects of nonmotorized recreation on ungulates in the western United States—A science synthesis to inform National Environmental Policy Act analyses
Samuel E. Jordan, Taylor R. Ganz, Tait K. Rutherford, Matthew J. Blocker, Christopher T. Domschke, Frederick L. Klasner, Elroy H. Masters, Tye A. Morgan, Daryl R. Ratajczak, Elisabeth C. Teige, Sarah K. Carter
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5014
The U.S. Geological Survey is working with Federal land management agencies to develop a series of science syntheses to support National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) analyses. This report synthesizes science information about the potential effects of nonmotorized recreation on ungulates in the western United States. We conducted a structured literature...
Quality assessment of past spawning mark estimations from a long-term survey in the Connecticut River watershed
Jacqueline B. Stephens, Adrian Jordaan, David Perkins, Kenneth Sprankle, Allison H. Roy
2025, Cooperator Science Series CSS-168-2025
The calcified structures of fishes provide insight into their periodic growth rates and can be combined with other biological variables to identify metrics such as size or age at maturity and mortality rates. Collecting this information on growth and life history can help evaluate the success of conservation efforts and...