Statistical methods for estimating normal blood chemistry ranges and variance in rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri), Shasta Strain
Gary A. Wedemeyer, Nancy C. Nelson
1975, Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada (32) 551-554
Gaussian and nonparametric (percentile estimate and tolerance interval) statistical methods were used to estimate normal ranges for blood chemistry (bicarbonate, bilirubin, calcium, hematocrit, hemoglobin, magnesium, mean cell hemoglobin concentration, osmolality, inorganic phosphorus, and pH for juvenile rainbow (Salmo gairdneri, Shasta strain) trout held under defined environmental conditions. The percentile estimate...
The pathology of the major diseases of catfishes
F. P. Meyer
W.E. Ribelin, G. Migaki, editor(s)
1975, Book chapter, The pathology of fishes
Abstract not submitted to date...
Preliminary description and interpretation of cores and radiographs from Clear Lake, Lake County, California: Core 7
John D. Sims, Michael J. Rymer
1975, Open-File Report 75-144
Clear Lake, California is located in the California Coast Ranges about 120 km north of San Francisco and is the largest freshwater lake wholly within California. The lake basin is tectonically controlled (Anderson, 1936; Brice, 1953, Sims and Rymer, 1974) and the area seismically active (Coffman and von Hake, 1973).Interest...
Method for assessment of toxicity or efficacy of mixtures of chemicals
L. L. Marking, V. K. Dawson
1975, Investigations in Fish Control 67
Abstract not submitted to date...
A comprehensive list of the most important diseases of fishes and the drugs and chemicals used for their control
S. F. Snieszko
1975, Tropical Fish Hobbyist (24) 14-15, 19
Chemicals used most frequently for control of infectious diseases of fishes
S. F. Snieszko
1975, Fish Health News (4) 2-7
Heavy minerals in stream sands of the southern Hazara District, Pakistan
Karl W. Stauffer
1975, Open-File Report 75-360
The areal distribution of heavy minerals in 99 samples from stream sands in the southern Hazara District, West Pakistan, indicates that the metamorphic grade of the rocks in the area increases toward the northwest. Minerals of potential economic value in the heavy-mineral samples include scheelite from the Oghi-Batgram-Battal area and...
Interstitial solutions and diagenesis in deeply buried marine sediments: Results from the Deep Sea Drilling Project
F.L. Sayles, F.T. Manheim
1975, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (39) 103-127
Through the Deep Sea Drilling Project samples of interstitial solutions of deeply buried marine sediments throughout the World Ocean have been obtained and analyzed. The studies have shown that in all but the most slowly deposited sediments pore fluids exhibit changes in composition upon burial. These changes can be grouped...
Utilization of algae by fish: Final report to Hercules Incorporated, Wilmington, Delaware
J.G. Stanley, James E. Ellis, Jack B. Jones, W.H. Hastings
1975, Report
No abstract available at this time...
Duck plague: carrier state and gross pathology in black ducks
Jorge E. Ossa
1975, Thesis
Duck plague (UP) is a highly fatal disease of ducks, geese, and swans (family Anatidae), produced by a reticulo-endotheliotrophic virus classified as a member of the Herpesvirus group. The disease was recognized in Europe in 1949. On the American continent, the disease was first diagnosed in the United States in...
Fitting Richards' curve to data of diverse origins
Douglas H. Johnson, A.B. Sargeant, S.H. Allen
1975, Growth (39)
Published techniques for fitting data to nonlinear growth curves are briefly reviewed, most techniques require knowledge of the shape of the curve. A flexible growth curve developed by Richards (1959) is discussed as an alternative when the shape is unknown. The shape of this curve is governed by a specific...
Mineral upplementation of diets containing soybean meal as a source of protein for rainbow trout
H. G. Ketola
1975, Progressive Fish-Culturist (37) 73-75
No abstract available....
Water development for irrigation in northwestern Kansas
Edward D. Jenkins, Marilyn E. Pabst
1975, Report
Northwestern Kansas, an area of 8,050 square miles (21,000 square kilometres), is a flat to gently rolling plain that is dissected by the Smoky Hill and Republican Rivers. Loessial soils underlying the plain are ideal for cultivation.The climate is semiarid with the mean annual precipitation ranging from 16 to 21...
Determining earthquake recurrence intervals from deformational structures in young lacustrine sediments
John D. Sims
1975, Tectonophysics (29) 141-152
Examination of the silty sediments in the lower Van Normal reservoir after the 1971 San Fernando, California earthquake revealed three zones of deformational structures in the 1-m-thick sequence of sediments exposed over about 2 km2 of the reservoir bottom. These zones are correlated with moderate earthquakes that shook the San Fernando...
Rare earths in the Leadville Limestone and its marble derivates
J.C. Jarvis, T.R. Wildeman, N.G. Banks
1975, Chemical Geology (16) 27-37
Samples of unaltered and metamorphosed Leadville Limestone (Mississippian, Colorado) were analyzed by neutron activation for ten rare-earth elements (REE). The total abundance of the REE in the least-altered limestone is 4–12 ppm, and their distribution patterns are believed to be dominated by...
Productivity and flowering of winter ephemerals in relation to Sonoran Desert shrubs
William L. Halvorson, Duncan T. Patten
1975, American Midland Naturalist (93) 311-319
Ephemeral plant biomass and density on a Sonoran Desert hill near Cave Creek, Arizona, vary relative to shrub canopy type and shrub density. Higher shrub density associated with increased elevation appears to decrease both ephemeral biomass productivity and density, while ephemeral growth is enhanced under a shrub canopy if it...
A spring aerial census of red foxes in North Dakota
A.B. Sargeant, W.K. Pfeifer, S.H. Allen
1975, Journal of Wildlife Management (39) 30-39
Systematic aerial searches were flown on transects to locate adult red foxes (Vulpes vulpes), pups, and rearing dens on 559.4 km2 (six townships) in eastern North Dakota during mid-May and mid-June each year from 1969 through 1973 and during mid-April 1969 and early May 1970. The combined sightings of foxes...
Earthquake history of New Mexico
C. A. von Hake
1975, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (7) 23-26
Most of New Mexico's historical seismcity has been concentrated in the Rio Grande Valley between Socorro and Albuquerque. About half of the earthquakes of intensity V or greater (Modified Mercalli intensity) that occurred in teh State between 1868 and 1973 were centered in this region. ...
Sandrewia, n. gen., a problematical plant from the Lower Permian of Texas and Kansas
S.H. Mamay
1975, Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology (20) 75-83
Sandrewia, n. gen., monotypified by S. texana, n. sp., is a plant from Lower Permian beds of north-central Texas and east-central Kansas. It is characterized by stout axes with spirally disposed, laxly inserted, petiolate leaves; the laminae are broadly flabelliform with coarse, open venation....
Hydrologic data of the coastal drainage basins of southeastern Massachusetts, Weir River, Hingham, to Jonas River, Kingston
John R. Williams, Richard E. Willey, Gary D. Tasker
1975, Massachusetts Hydrologic - Data Report 16
The principal basins are those of Weir River, James Brook, Bound Brook, North River, South River, and Jones River, all draining to Massachusetts Bay and Cape Cod Bay. These basins are bounded on the north by the Weymouth River basins, on the west by the Taunton River basin, and on...
Trace element evaluation of a suite of rocks from Reunion Island, Indian Ocean
R. A. Zielinski
1975, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (39) 713-734
Reunion Island consists of an olivine-basalt shield capped by a series of flows and intrusives ranging from hawaiite through trachyte. Eleven rocks representing the total compositional sequence have been analyzed for U, Th and REE. Eight of the rocks (group 1) have positive-slope, parallel, chondrite-normalized REE fractionation patterns. Using a...
Search for blood protozoans in the American woodcock
W.B. Krohn, J.R. Hynson
1975, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (11) 107-108
Smears were prepared from heart blood of 55 woodcock collected in central Maine between spring and fall, 1972 and 1973. Peripheral blood taken from the wings of 41 of these birds also was examined. Examination of stained films revealed no infected blood cells. Samples of heart blood from 35 of...
Simplified bedrock geologic map of the Hartford New York-Connecticut 2 degrees quadrangle
John P. D’Agostino
1975, Open-File Report 78-896
No abstract available....
Modes of fossil preservation
J. M. Schopf
1975, Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology (20) 27-53
The processes of geologic preservation are important for understanding the organisms represented by fossils. Some fossil differences are due to basic differences in organization of animals and plants, but the interpretation of fossils has also tended to be influenced by modes of preservation....
Survival of wood duck and mallard broods in north-central Minnesota
I.J. Ball, D.S. Gilmer, L.M. Cowardin, J. H. Riechmann
1975, Journal of Wildlife Management (39) 776-780
Duckling survival in wood duck (Aix sponsa) and mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) broods was estimated from data obtained from 71 radio-marked brood hens on a study area in north-central Minnesota. Radio-marked hens produced 30 broods during the study, and 41 hens already leading broods were captured and radio-marked. Production estimates based...