Mallard egg quality: Enhancement by low levels of petroleum and chlorinated hydrocarbons
L.D. Vangilder, T.J. Peterle
1983, Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (30) 17-23
Effects on egg quality of mallards fed low concentrations of South Louisiana crude oil and DDE alone or in combination....
The eighty-third Audubon Christmas bird count. North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida
P.W. Sykes Jr.
1983, American Birds (37) 386-390
Halogenated diphenyl ethers identified in avian tissues and eggs by GC/MS
C. J. Stafford
1983, Chemosphere (12) 1487-1495
Chlorinated and brominated diphenyl ether compounds (DPEs) have been detected by gas Chromatography/ mass spectrometry (GC/MS) in eggs and carcasses of fish-eating birds from Louisiana, Michigan, Ohio, Rhode Island, Texas, Virginia, and Ontario, Canada. Three of these compounds were quantified; the highest concentration of 0.90 ppm tetrachloro DPE was...
Hawaiian goose research and management - Where do we go from here?
C.P. Stone, R.L. Walker, J. M. Scott, P.C. Banko
1983, 'Elepaio (44) 11-15
No abstract available....
Hemorrhagic enteritis in captive American kestrels (Falco sparverius)
L. Sileo, J. C. Franson, D.L. Graham, C.H. Domermuth, Barnett A. Rattner, O. H. Pattee
1983, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (19) 244-247
Hemorrhagic enteritis and hepatitis of suspected adenovirus etiology were the apparent cause of death of nine captive American kestrels. Cloacal hemorrhage was the only prominent gross lesion: disseminated hepatocellular necrosis, and intranuclear inclusion bodies were evident microscopically. Electron microscopy revealed numerous adenovirus-like particles associated with the hepatic lesions. Attempts to...
Effects of PCBs on mourning dove courtship behavior
G.M. Tori, T.J. Peterle
1983, Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (30) 44-49
No abstract available....
Recent population trend of the snail kite in Florida and its relationship to water levels
P.W. Sykes Jr.
1983, Journal of Field Ornithology (54) 237-246
Late summer food habits of three heron species in northeastern Louisiana
K. R. Niethammer, M.S. Kaiser
1983, Colonial Waterbirds (6) 148-153
Yellow-crowned Night-Herons (Nycticorax violaceus), Little Blue Herons (Egretta caerulea), and Green-backed Herons (Butorides striatus) collected in northeastern Louisiana from July-September 1980 exhibited different diets. Yellow-crowned Night-Herons fed mostly on crayfish (74% by weight) and Green-backed Herons fed primarily on fish (93% by weight). The diet of Little Blue...
Azodrin poisoning of waterfowl in rice fields in Louisiana
Donald H. White, C. A. Mitchell, E. J. Kolbe, W.H. Ferguson
1983, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (19) 373-375
During the period 2-4 April 1981 about 100 birds, mostly ducks and geese, were found dead and dying in a rice field near Sweet Lake, Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana. Fresh specimens were collected to determine the cause of mortality. Birds were placed individually in polyethylene freezer bags, tagged, and frozen soon...
Factors affecting the distribution of mallards wintering in the Mississippi alluvial valley
James D. Nichols, Kenneth J. Reinecke, James E. Hines
1983, The Auk (100) 932-946
The Mississippi Alluvial Valley (MAV) is the principal wintering area for Mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) in the Mississippi Flyway. Here, we consider it a distinct habitat (sensu Fretwell 1972), i.e. fitness is relatively homogeneous among ducks within the MAV but different from that of ducks in other such habitats. We analyzed...
Rationale and suggestions for a hemispheric color-marking scheme for shorebirds: A way to avoid chaos
J.P. Myers, J.E. Maron, E. Ortiz, G. Castro, M.A. Howe, R. I. G. Morrison, B. A. Harrington
1983, Wader Study Group Bulletin (No. 38) 30-32
Nest site characteristics of three coexisting Accipiter hawks in northeastern Oregon
K.R. Moore, Charles J. Henny
1983, Raptor Research (17) 65-76
Habitat data were evaluated at 34 Goshawk (Accipiter gentilis), 31 Cooper's Hawk (A. cooperii), and 15 Sharp-shinned Hawk (A. striatus) nest sites in coniferous forests of northeastern Oregon. Crown volume profiles indicate a strong similarity in vegetative structure at nest sites of cooperii and striatus; both commonly nest in...
DDE and organochlorines in eggs of black-crowned night-herons nesting in Colorado and Wyoming
L. C. McEwen
1983, Journal of the Colorado-Wyoming Academy of Science (15) 53-54
Estimating taxonomic diversity, extinction rates, and speciation rates from fossil data using capture-recapture models
J.D. Nichols, K. H. Pollock
1983, Paleobiology (9) 150-163
Methods currently used to estimate taxonomic extinction probabilities from fossil data generally assume that the probability of encountering a specimen in a particular stratum, given that the taxon was extant in the time period and location represented by the stratum, either equals 1.0 or else is a constant for all...
Impacts of forest herbicides on wildlife: Toxicity and habitat alteration
M.L. Morrison, E. Charles Meslow
1983, Transactions of the North American Wildlife and Natural Resources Conference (48) 175-185
This paper begins with a review of both laboratory and field studies on tbe possible direct toxic effects of herbicides on terrestrial vertebrates, primarily birds and mammals. Alteration of the palatability of forage and changes in reproductive success are also discussed. Emphasis is placed on the use of...
An eight-year demography of a Minnesota wolf pack
L.D. Mech, H.H. Hertel
1983, Acta Zoologica Fennica (174) 249-250
Estimation methodology in contemporary small mammal capture-recapture studies
J.D. Nichols, K. H. Pollock
1983, Journal of Mammalogy (64) 253-260
Estimators of population size and survival rate based on the Jolly-Seber capture-recapture model and the “enumeration method” are described. Enumeration estimators are shown to estimate complicated functions of capture and survival probabilities and, in the case of the population size estimator, population size. Frequently-listed reasons for preferring enumeration estimators...
Wolf pack spacing: Howling as a territory-independent spacing mechanism in a territorial population
F.H. Harrington, L.D. Mech
1983, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology (12) 161-168
Howling is a principle means of spacing in wolf populations. The relationship between a pack's responses to howling (replies, movements) and its location within its home range, was studied using human-simulated howling in a territorial population in northeastern Minnesota. The results indicated the responses were independent of the...
A first record of the nest and chicks of the small Kauai thrush
C. B. Kepler, A.K. Kepler
1983, Condor (85) 497-499
No abstract available....
Response of American black ducks to dietary uranium: A proposed substitute for lead shot
Susan D. Haseltine, Louis Sileo
1983, Journal of Wildlife Management (47) 1124-1129
Lead (Pb) shot has been associated with mortality in waterfowl (Trainer and Hunt 1965, Anderson 1975, Stout and Cornwell 1976) and other avian species (Benson et al. 1974, Kaiser et al. 1980, Pattee et al. 1981). Bellrose (1959) indicated that between 2 and 3% of waterfowl populations may be lost...
Organochlorine and metal residues in royal terns nesting on the central Texas coast
Kirk A. King, C.A. LeFever, B.M. Mulhern
1983, Journal of Field Ornithology (54) 295-303
Royal Tern eggs collected from Pelican and Sundown islands on the central Texas coast in 1978 contained relatively low levels of organochlorine and metal pollutants. DDE and PCBs were found most frequently, but levels were below those known to have an adverse effect on avian reproduction and survival. Average metal...
Pack size and wolf pup survival: their relationship under varying ecological conditions
Fred H. Harrington, L. David Mech, Steven H. Fritts
1983, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology (13) 19-26
The relationship between pack size and two parameters of reproductive success (litter size at 7–8 months and pup weights at 5–6 months) were determined for two wolf (Canis lupus) populations in northern Minnesota. Pup weights were not correlated with pack size for either population. Litter size, however,...
Distribution of submersed aquatic macrophytes in the tidal Potomac River
G.M. Haramis, V. Carter
1983, Aquatic Botany (15) 65-79
Results of a 3-year survey (1978?1980) and review of historic trends have shown a major decline in the number of species and the distribution of submersed aquatic macrophytes in the tidal Potomac River since the early 1900's. The freshwater tidal river is essentially devoid of plants and only very sparse...
Toxicity of copper to Gastropoda with notes on the relation to the apple snail: A review
M.J. Imlay, P. V. Winger
1983, Malacological Review (16) 11-15
Altered avoidance behavior of young black ducks fed cadmium
G. H. Heinz, S. D. Haseltine, L. Sileo
1983, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (2) 419-421
Pairs of adult black ducks (Anas rubripes) were fed a diet containing 0, 4 or 40 ppm cadmium as cadmium chloride. One-week-old ducklings that had been fed the same dietary concentrations of cadmium as had their parents were tested for avoidance of a fright stimulus. Ducklings fed 4 ppm cadmium...