[Book review] A guide to the birds of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands by H.A. Raffaele
J. W. Wiley
1984, Florida Field Naturalist (12) 75-76
No abstract available....
Occurrence and timing of second clutches in common terns
D.A. Wiggins, R.D. Morris, I.C.T. Nisbet, T. W. Custer
1984, The Auk (101) 281-287
Eighteen pairs of Common Terns (Sterna hirundo) at three different colonies laid second clutches while still feeding young from their first broods. Seven clutches were laid before the chicks from the first brood fledged, and 11 were laid after the chicks from the first brood fledged. In each case, parents...
[Book review] Marine Ecology. A Comprehensive Integrated Treatise on Life in Oceans and Coastal Waters. Vol. V. Ocean Management. Pt. 4: Pollution and Protection of the Seas: Pesticides, Domestic Wastes, and Thermal Deformations, O. Kinne, editor
R. Eisler
1984, Helgolander Meeresunters (38) 419
[Book review] A Guide to the Birds of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, by Herbert A. Raffaele
C.S. Robbins
1984, The Quarterly Review of Biology (59) 82
[Book review] West Virginia Birds--Distribution and Ecology, by G. A. Hall
C.S. Robbins
1984, Carnegie Magazine (57) 30-31
Formalin preservation of avian blood for metal and DDE analysis
Stanley N. Wiemeyer, John F. Moore, B.M. Mulhern
1984, Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (33) 525-532
Contaminants in wood stork eggs and their effects on reproduction, Florida, 1982
C.S. Robbins
1984, American Birds (38) 544
One egg was removed from five Wood Stork (Mycteria americana) nests at each of eight colonies in central and northern Florida in 1982. DDE and mercury were present in all eggs with concentrations ranging up to 9.4 and 0.73 ppm wet weight, respectively. PCBs occurred in 25 eggs with...
Biological survey [letter to the Editor]
A. L. Gardner
1984, Science (224) 1383
The eighty-fourth Audubon Christmas bird count. 464. Southern Dorchester County, Md
C.S. Robbins
1984, American Birds (38) 546-547
Field and laboratory evaluation of the influence of copper-diquat on apple snails in southern Florida
P. V. Winger, M.J. Imlay, W.E. McMillan, T.W. Martin, Jean E. Takekawa, W.W. Johnson
1984, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (3) 409-424
The recent decline of apple snail (Pomacea paludosa) populations in canals surrounding Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge in southern Florida coincided with the use of copper-diquat for the control of the aquatic weed hydrilla (Hydrilla verticillata). Field and laboratory studies were designed to assess the effects of copper-diquat on apple snails,...
Residues of organochlorine insecticides, polychlorinated biphenyls, and heavy metals in biota from Apalachicola River, Florida, 1978
P. V. Winger, C. Sieckman, T.W. May, W.W. Johnson
1984, Journal of the Association of Official Analytical Chemists (67) 325-333
Seventy-seven composite samples composed of largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides), channel catfish (Ictaluras punctatus), threadfin shad (Dorosoma petenense), Asiatic clam (Corbicula fluminea), burrowing mayfly (Hexagenia sp.), water snake (Natrix spp.), and little green heron (Butorides virescens) were collected from upper and lower reaches of the Apalachicola River, Florida, in 1978 for residue analysis...
Reproductive success of black skimmers in Texas relative to environmental pollutants
Donald H. White, C. A. Mitchell, D. M. Swineford
1984, Journal of Field Ornithology (55) 18-30
We studied the nesting ecology of Black Skimmers along the lower Texas coast during 1978-1981 to learn more of their reproductive status and to evaluate the effects of organochlorine pollutants, such as DDE, on productivity. For 542 nests, the average clutch size was 3.3 eggs. Flooding was the major...
DDE in birds: Lethal residues and loss rates
William H. Stickel, Lucille F. Stickel, R. A. Dyrland, Donald L. Hughes
1984, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (13) 1-6
Lethal brain residues of DDE2 were determined experimentally in four species of wild birds given dietary dosage of 1,500 ppm DDE until one-half had died, then sacrificing the survivors, chemically analyzing the tissues, and comparing results in dead birds and survivors. In all species, residues of 300 to 400 ppm of...
The eighty-fourth Audubon Christmas bird count. North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida
P.W. Sykes Jr.
1984, American Birds (38) 411-414
Sight record of band-rumped storm-petrel off the coast of Palm Beach County, Florida
P.W. Sykes Jr., H.P. Langridge, T. Trotsky
1984, Florida Field Naturalist (12) 17-18
No abstract available....
Comparison of methods of preserving tissues for pesticide analysis
W. H. Stickel, L.F. Stickel, R. A. Dyrland, D.L. Hughes
1984, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (4) 113-118
Formalin preservation, freezing, spoiling followed by freezing, and phenoxyethanol were compared in terms of concentrations of DDT, DDD, DDE, endrin, and heptachlor epoxide measured in brain, liver and carcass of birds fed dietary dosages of pesticides and in spiked egg homogenate. Phenoxyethanol proved to be an unsatisfactory preservative; the amount...
The range of the snail kite and its history in Florida
P.W. Sykes Jr.
1984, Bulletin of the Florida State Museum, Biological Sciences (29) 211-264
Trimorphodon tau
N.J. Scott Jr., R.W. McDiarmid
1984, Catalogue of American Amphibians and Reptiles (354) 1-2
Methyl parathion and fenvalerate toxicity in American kestrels: Acute physiological responses and effects of cold
Barnett A. Rattner, J. C. Franson
1984, Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology (62) 787-792
Physiological and toxicological effects of p.o. methyl parathion (0.375-3.0 mg/kg) or fenvalerate (1000-4000 mg/kg) were examined over a 10-h period in American kestrels (Falco sparverius) maintained in thermoneutral (22?C) and cold (-5?C) environments. Methyl parathion was highly toxic (estimated median lethal dose of 3.08 mg/kg, 95% confidence limits of 2.29...
Breeding biology of the blue-gray noddy
M.J. Rauson, S. Harrison, R. B. Clapp
1984, Journal of Field Ornithology (55) 309-321
Blue-gray Noddies, the smallest marine terns, are similar in many respects to all tropical terns in Hawaii: single-egg clutches are laid, growth and development take about 7 weeks, breeding is colonial. Its small size results in eggs that comprise over 27% of adult body weight, compared to 15-20% for...
Phenotypic variation of the Mexican duck (Anas platyrhynchos diazi) in Mexico
N.J. Scott Jr., R.P. Reynolds
1984, Condor (86) 266-274
A collection of 98 breeding Mexican Ducks (Anas platyrhynchos diazi) was made in Mexico from six areas between the United States border with Chihuahua and Lake Chapala, Jalisco, in order to study geographic variation. Plumage indices showed a relatively smooth clinal change from north to south; northern populations were most...
Chromosome numbers and ecological observations of ferns from El Tirol, Paraguay
A.R. Smith, M.S. Foster
1984, Fern Gazette (12) 321-329
Trimorphodon biscutatus
N.J. Scott Jr., R.W. McDiarmid
1984, Catalogue of American Amphibians and Reptiles (353) 1-4
Trimorphodon
N.J. Scott Jr., R.W. McDiarmid
1984, Catalogue of American Amphibians and Reptiles (352) 1-2
Avian species differences in the intestinal absorption of xenobiotics (PCB, dieldrin, Hg2+)
John A. Serafin
1984, Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part C: Comparative Pharmacology (78) 491-496
1. Intestinal absorption of a polychlorinated biphenyl, dieldrin, and mercury (from HgCl2) was measured in adult Northern bobwhites, Eastern screech owls, American kestrels, black-crowned night-herons and mallards in vivo by an in situ luminal perfusion technique.2. Bobwhites, screech owls and kestrels absorbed much more of each xenobiotic than black-crowned night-herons...