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Page 758, results 18926 - 18950

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Phenology of hatching, emergence, and end-of-season body size in young-of-year Coho Salmon in thermally contrasting streams draining the Copper River Delta, Alaska
Emily Y. Campbell, Jason B. Dunham, Gordon H. Reeves, Steve M. Wondzell
2019, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (76) 185-191
Phenology can be linked to individual fitness, particularly in strongly seasonal environments where the timing of events have important consequences for growth, condition, and survival. We studied the phenology of Coho Salmon hatching and emergence in streams with contrasting thermal variability, but in close geographic proximity. Following emergence, we tracked...
Landscape structure and temporal dynamic effects on Wintering Mallard abundance and distributions in the Mississippi alluvial valley
John A. Herbert, Avishek Chakraborty, Luke W. Naylor, William S. Beattty, David G. Krementz
2019, Landscape Ecology (33) 1319-1334
Context Management of wintering waterfowl in North America requires adaptability because constant landscape and environmental change challenges existing management strategies regarding waterfowl habitat use at large spatial scales. Migratory waterfowl including mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) use the lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley (MAV) for wintering habitat, making this an important area of...
Capture versus tagging impacts on chum salmon freshwater spawning migration travel times
Suresh Sethi
2019, Fisheries Management and Ecology (25) 296-303
The spawning migration travel times of chum salmon, Oncorhynchus keta (Walbaum), fitted with gastrically implanted radio tags vs external spaghetti tags were tested for a short [≈60 river km (rkm)] and long migration route (≈730 rkm) on the Koyukuk River, Alaska, USA. Using a novel application of statistical arrival curve...
Recent advances in environmental flows science and water management—Innovation in the Anthropocene
Angela H Arthington, Jonathan Kennen, Eric D. Stein, J. Angus Webb
2019, Freshwater Biology (63) 1022-1034
The implementation of environmental flow regimes offers a promising means to protect and restore riverine, wetland and estuarine ecosystems, their critical environmental services and cultural/societal values.This Special Issue expands the scope of environmental flows and water science in theory and practice, offering 20 papers from academics, agency researchers and...
The multiple-comparison trap and the Raven’s paradox—perils of using null hypothesis testing in environmental assessment
Song S. Qian, Thomas F. Cuffney
2019, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (190)
Detecting and quantifying environmental thresholds is frequently an important step in understanding ecological responses to environmental stressors. We discuss two statistical issues often encountered in threshold detection and quantification when statistical null hypothesis testing is used as a main analytical tool.The hidden multiple-comparison trap (leading to a much higher risk...
Early mortality and freshwater forage fish recruitment: Nonnative alewife and native rainbow smelt interactions in Lake Champlain
Paul W. Simonin, Lars G. Rudstam, Patrick J. Sullivan, Donna L. Parrish, Bernard Pientka
2019, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (76) 806-814
We studied the consequences of a nonnative species introduction and changes in temperature on early mortality and recruitment of native rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) and nonnative alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) in Lake Champlain using a simulation model. Distribution patterns of adults and young-of-the-year (YOY) fish were predicted using a model based...
A dam passage performance standard model for American shad
Daniel S. Stitch, Timothy F. Sheehan, Joseph D. Zydlewski
2019, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (76) 762-779
Objectives for recovery of alosines commonly involve improving fish passage at dams during migration. However, a quantitative basis for dam passage performance standards is largely absent. We describe development of a stochastic life-history-based simulation model for American shad, Alosa sapidissima, to estimate effects of dam passage and migratory delay on abundance,...
Managing the vanishing North American hunter: A novel framework to address declines in hunters and hunter-generated conservation funds
J.L. Price-Tack, Conor P. McGowan, S.S. Ditchkoff, W.C. Morse, O.J. Robinson
2019, Human Dimensions of Wildlife: An International Journal (23) 515-532
As long as the funding mechanism supporting state wildlife conservation relies heavily on hunter-generated funds, declines in hunter participation are a threat to the conservation of both game and non-game species. To address options to bolster wildlife agency profit from the sale of hunting licenses, we developed a stage-based, stochastic...
Vertical zonation and niche breadth of tidal marsh plants along the Northeast Pacific coast
Christopher N. Janousek, Karen M. Thorne, John Y. Takekawa
2019, Estuaries and Coasts (42) 85-98
The distribution patterns of sessile organisms in coastal intertidal habitats typically exhibit vertical zonation, but little is known about variability in zonation among sites or species at larger spatial scales. Data on such heterogeneity could inform mechanistic understanding of factors affecting species distributions as well as efforts to assess and...
Multi-measurement approach for establishing the base of gas hydrate occurrence in the Krishna-Godavari Basin for sites cored during Expedition NGHP-02 in the offshore of India
William F. Waite, Carolyn D. Ruppel, Timothy S. Collett, P. Schultheiss, M. Holland, K.M. Shukla, P. Kumar
2019, Marine and Petroleum Geology (108) 296-320
The 2015 National Gas Hydrate Program of India's second expedition, NGHP-02, acquired logging and coring datasets for constraining the base of the gas hydrate occurrence zone (deepest GH) and the theoretical base of gas hydrate stability zone (BGHS). These data are used here for two primary goals: to constrain the deepest occurrence...
Accounting for location uncertainty in azimuthaltelemetry data improves ecological inference
Mevin Hooten, Brian D. Gerber, Christopher P. Peck, Mindy B. Rice, Anthony D. Apa, James H. Gammonley, Amy J. Davis
2019, Movement Ecology (6)
BackgroundCharacterizing animal space use is critical for understanding ecological relationships. Animal telemetry technology has revolutionized the fields of ecology and conservation biology by providing high quality spatial data on animal movement. Radio-telemetry with very high frequency (VHF) radio signals continues to be a useful technology because of...
Landscape pivot points and responses to water balance in national parks of the southwest US
David P. Thoma, Seth M. Munson, Dana L. Witwicki
2019, Journal of Applied Ecology (56) 157-167
A recent drying trend that is expected to continue in the southwestern US underscores the need for site‐specific and near real‐time understanding of vegetation vulnerability so that land management actions can be implemented at the right time and place.We related the annual integrated normalized difference vegetation index (iNDVI), a...
Macroinvertebrate sensitivity thresholds for sediment in Virginia streams
Heather Govenor, Leigh Anne H. Krometis, Lawrence Willis, Paul L. Angermeier, W. Cully Hession
2019, Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management (15) 77-92
Sediment is the most commonly identified pollutant associated with macroinvertebrate community impairments in freshwater streams nationwide. Management of this physical stressor is complicated by the multiple measures of sediment available (e.g., suspended, dissolved, bedded) and the variability in natural “healthy” sediment loadings across ecoregions. Here we...
Optimal treatment allocations in space and time for online control of anemerging infectious disease
Eric B. Laber, Nick J. Meyer, Brian J. Reich, Krishna Pacifici, Jaime A. Collazo, John M. Drake
2019, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series C: Applied Statistics (67) 743-789
A key component in controlling the spread of an epidemic is deciding where, when and to whom to apply an intervention. We develop a framework for using data to inform these decisions in realtime. We formalize a treatment allocation strategy as a sequence of functions, one...
Lions and leopards coexist without spatial, temporal or demographic effects of interspecific competition
Angela K. Fuller, Jennifer Miller, Ross Pittman, Gareth Mann, Guy Balme
2019, Journal of Animal Ecology (87) 1709-1726
1. Although interspecific competition plays a principle role in shaping species behaviour and demography, little is known about the population-level outcomes of competition between large carnivores, and the mechanisms that facilitate coexistence. 2. We conducted a multi-landscape analysis of two widely distributed, threatened large carnivore competitors to offer insight into coexistence...
Development of on-shore behavior among polar bears (Ursus maritimus) in the southern Beaufort Sea: Inherited or learned?
K. M. Lillie, E. M. Gese, Todd C. Atwood, Sarah A. Sonsthagen
2019, Ecology and Evolution (8) 7790-7799
Polar bears (Ursus maritimus) are experiencing rapid and substantial changes to their environment due to global climate change. Polar bears of the southern Beaufort Sea (SB) have historically spent most of the year on the sea ice. However, recent reports from Alaska indicate that the proportion of the SB subpopulation...
Importance of riparian forest corridors for the ocelot in agricultural landscapes
Roberta Paolino, Andy Royle, Natalia Versiani, Thiago F. Rodrigues, Nielson Pasqualotto, Victor Krepschi, Adriano Chiarello
2019, Journal of Mammalogy (99) 874-884
Worldwide, private lands have attracted increased attention from conservationists, not only because most of the globe is privately owned, but also because private lands can be an asset to the protected area conservation strategy. In Brazil, the riverine Areas of Permanent Protection (APPs) is a key instrument of the Forest...
Modeling framework to estimate spawning and hatching locations of pelagically-spawned eggs
Holly S. Embke, Patrick Kocovsky, Tatiana Garcia, Christine M. Mayer, Song S. Qian
2019, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (76) 597-607
Identifying spawning and hatching locations is vital to controlling invasive fish and conserving imperiled fish, which can be difficult for pelagically-spawning species with semi-buoyant eggs. In freshwater systems, this reproductive strategy is common among cyprinid species, such as Chinese carp species currently threatening the Great Lakes. Following the confirmation that...
Ecology and conservation of the American eel in the Caribbean region
Thomas J. Kwak, Augustin C. Engman, C.G. Lilyestrom
2019, Fisheries Management and Ecology (26) 42-52
The majority of American eel, Anguilla rostrata LeSueur, knowledge is derived from temperate regions in the United States and Canada, with little known from its tropical Caribbean distribution. Findings of original research on American eel distribution, abundance, population biology, habitat ecology and threats from the Caribbean island of...
Predicting species-habitat relationships: Does body size matter?
E.F. Stuber, L. Gruber, Joseph J. Fontaine
2019, Landscape Ecology (33) 1049-1060
Context. Allometric scaling laws are foundational to structuring processes from cellular to ecosystem levels. The idea that allometric relationships underlie species characteristic selection scales, the spatial scales at which species respond to landscape features, has recently been investigated, however, supporting empirical evidence is scarce. Objectives. Lack of pattern can be explained by inaccurate...
Effects of landscape characteristics on annual survival of Lesser Prairie-Chickens
Samantha G. Robinson, David A. Haukos, Reid T. Plumb, John D. Kraft, Daniel S. Sullins, Joseph M. Lautenbach, Jonathan D. Lautenbach, Brett K. Sandercock, Christian A. Hagen, Anne M. Bartuszevige, Mindy B. Rice
2019, American Midland Naturalist (180) 66-86
Agriculture and development have caused landscape change throughout the southwestern Great Plains in the range of the lesser prairie-chicken (Tympanuchus pallidicinctus). Landscape alteration within the lesser prairie-chicken range may contribute to range contraction and population losses through decreases in survival rates. Our objectives were to determine if: (1) landscape configuration...
Let’s agree to disagree: Comparing auto-acoustic identification programs for northeastern bats
W. Mark Ford, Tomás Nocera, Alexander Silvis, Christopher A. Dobony
2019, Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management (10) 346-361
With the declines in abundance and changing distribution of white-nose syndrome–affected bat species, increased reliance on acoustic monitoring is now the new “normal.” As such, the ability to accurately identify individual bat species with acoustic identification programs has become increasingly important. We assessed rates of...
The Santa Cruz Basin submarine landslide complex, southern California: Repeated failure of uplifted basin sediment
Daniel S. Brothers, Katherine L. Maier, Jared W. Kluesner, James E. Conrad, Jason Chaytor
2019, Book chapter, From the Mountains to the Abyss--The California Borderland as an archive of southern California geologic evolution
The Santa Cruz Basin (SCB) is one of several fault-bounded basins within the California Continental Borderland that has drawn interest over the years for its role in the tectonic evolution of the region, but also because it contains a record of a variety of modes of sedimentary mass transport (i.e.,...