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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Comparisons of likelihood and machine learning methods of individual classification
B. Guinand, A. Topchy, K.S. Page, M. K. Burnham-Curtis, W.F. Punch, K.T. Scribner
2002, Journal of Heredity (93) 260-269
Classification methods used in machine learning (e.g., artificial neural networks, decision trees, and k-nearest neighbor clustering) are rarely used with population genetic data. We compare different nonparametric machine learning techniques with parametric likelihood estimations commonly employed in population genetics for purposes of assigning individuals to their population...
Tampa Bay Integrated Science Pilot Study: wetland characterization
Carole C. McIvor, Ellen Raabe, Kimberly Yates, Bill Carter, Mike Crane, Mario Fernandez, Brandt Henningsen, Sara Kruse, Rich Oches, Ed Proffitt, Randy Runnels, Ramesh Shrestha, Tom Smith, Steve Travis
2001, Open-File Report 2001-390
Coastal wetlands in Tampa Bay consist of mangrove forest and tidal salt marsh. Wetlands buffer storm surges, provide fish and wildlife habitat, and enhance water quality through the removal of water-borne nutrients and contaminants. Substantial areas of both mangrove and salt marsh have been lost to agricultural, residential and industrial...
Landscape determinants of nonindigenous fish invasions
Robert M. Ross, William A. Lellis, Randy M. Bennett, Connie S. Johnson
2001, Biological Invasions (3) 347-361
Much has been written about the influence of exotic or nonindigenous species on natural habitats and communities of organisms, but little is known of the physical or biological conditions that lead to successful invasion of native habitats and communities by exotics. We studied invasivity factors in headwater streams of the...
Impact of the Conservation Reserve Program on duck recruitment in the U.S. Prairie Pothole Region
Ronald E. Reynolds, Terry L. Shaffer, Randy W. Renner, Wesley E. Newton, Bruce D.J. Batt
2001, Journal of Wildlife Management (65) 765-780
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)'s Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) resulted in the conversion of about 1.9 million ha of cropland to perennial grass cover in the Prairie Pothole Region of North Dakota, South Dakota, and northeastern Montana by 1992. Many wildlife managers believed this cover would provide benefits to...
Nutrient and suspended-sediment concentrations and loads and benthic-invertebrate data for tributaries to the St. Croix River, Wisconsin and Minnesota, 1997-99
Bernard N. Lenz, Dale M. Robertson, James D. Fallon, Randy Ferrin
2001, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2001-4162
Nutrient and suspended-sediment data were collected on major tributaries to the St. Croix River during 1997-99 as part of three studies. The first study, done in 1997 as part of the U.S. Geological Survey?s National Water-Quality Assessment Program Upper Mississippi Study Unit, was a widespread synoptic survey of nutrient and...
Creating a standardized watersheds database for the Lower Rio Grande/Río Bravo, Texas
J.R. Brown, Randy L. Ulery, Jean W. Parcher
2000, Open-File Report 00-065
This report describes the creation of a large-scale watershed database for the lower Rio Grande/Río Bravo Basin in Texas. The watershed database includes watersheds delineated to all 1:24,000-scale mapped stream confluences and other hydrologically significant points, selected watershed characteristics, and hydrologic derivative datasets.<span size="3" data-mce-style="font-size:...
Creating a standardized watersheds database for the lower Rio Grande/Rio Bravo, Texas
Julie R. Brown, Randy L. Ulery, Jean W. Parcher
2000, Open-File Report 2000-65
This report describes the creation of a large-scale watershed database for the lower Rio Grande/Rio Bravo Basin in Texas. The watershed database includes watersheds delineated to all 1:24,000-scale mapped stream confluences and other hydrologically significant points, selected watershed characteristics, and hydrologic derivative datasets. Computer technology allows generation of preliminary watershed boundaries...
Overview of the Texas Source Water Assessment Project
Randy L. Ulery
2000, Fact Sheet 101-00
The 1996 Amendments to the Safe Drinking Water Act require, for the first time, that each state prepare a source water assessment for all PWS. Previously, Federal regulations focused on sampling and enforcement with emphasis on the quality of delivered water. These Amendments emphasize the importance of protecting the source...
Relationship of Eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis) to the ecology of small streams in Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area
David P. Lemarie, John A. Young, Craig D. Snyder, Robert M. Ross, David Smith, Randy M. Bennett
2000, General Technical Report NE-267
Hemlock ravines in Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area (DEWA) are highly valued because of their distinctive aesthetic, recreational and ecological qualities. We conducted a comparative study designed to determine the potential long-term consequences to aquatic communities of the suspected transition from hemlock-dominated forests to mixed hardwood forests as a result of hemlock woolly adelgid (HWA; Adelges...
Hydrology, geomorphology, and flood profiles of the Mendenhall River, Juneau, Alaska
Edward G. Neal, Randy H. Host
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4150
Water-surface-profile elevations for the 2-, 20-, 25-, 50-, and 100-year floods were computed for the Mendenhall River near Juneau, Alaska, using the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Hydrologic Engineering Center River Analysis System model. The peak discharges for the selected recurrence intervals were determined using the standard log-Pearson type III...
Water quality in the Trinity River basin, Texas, 1992-95
Larry F. Land, J. Bruce Moring, Peter C. Van Metre, David C. Reutter, Barbara Mahler, Allison A. Shipp, Randy L. Ulery
1999, Circular 1171
Water quality in the Trinity River basin was studied during 1992-95 as part of the USGS National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Program. Studies included chemical sampling of streams, streambed sediments, biota, and ground water; measuring distributions of biological communities in streams; and measuring physical characteristics of streams that affect biological habitat....
A GIS modeling method applied to predicting forest songbird habitat
Randy Dettmers, Jonathan Bart
1999, Ecological Applications (9) 152-163
We have developed an approach for using “presence” data to construct habitat models. Presence data are those that indicate locations where the target organism is observed to occur, but that cannot be used to define locations where the organism does not occur. Surveys of highly mobile vertebrates often yield these...
Species succession and sustainability of the Great Lakes fish community
Randy L. Eshenroder, Mary K. Burnham-Curtis
William W. Taylor, C. Paola Ferreri, editor(s)
1999, Book chapter, Great Lakes fishery policy and management: A binational perspective
This article concentrates on the sustainability of the offshore pelagic and deepwater fish communities that were historically dominated by lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush). The causes of alteration in these fish communities (i.e., overfishing, introductions, and cultural eutrophication) were identified by Loftus and Regier (1972). Here we look at...
Movement patterns and population characteristics of the Karner blue butterfly (Lycaeides melissa samuelis) at Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore
Randy L. Knutson, John R. Kwilosz, Ralph Grundel
1999, Natural Areas Journal (19) 109-120
We conducted a three-year mark-release-recapture study of the endangered Karner blue butterfly (Lycaeides melissa samuelis Nabokov) at Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore to describe the butterfly's movement patterns and to assess seasonal changes in the Karner blue's population structure. Estimated mean Karner blue adult life span was less than 3.5 days....
Functional convergence among pelagic sculpins of Lake Baikal and deepwater ciscoes of the Great Lakes
Randy L. Eshenroder, Valentina G. Sideleva, Thomas N. Todd
1999, Journal of Great Lakes Research (25) 847-855
The vast, well-oxygenated hypolimnia of Lake Baikal and the Great Lakes were both dominated by endemic planktivorous fishes. These dominants, two species of sculpins (Comephorus, Comephoridae) in Lake Baikal and six species of deepwater ciscoes (Coregonus, Salmonidae) in the Great Lakes, although distant taxonomically, have morphologies suggesting a surprising degree...
Potential overflow of Mojave Creek near disposal site, Edwards Air Force Base, California
Randy L. Dinehart, Jerry G. Harmon
1998, Open-File Report 98-97
Sedimentological evidence in Mojave Creek near Edwards, California, indicates that the largest discharge in the last hundred years near the disposal site of the Main Base Landfill at Edwards Air Force Base was a few hundred cubic feet per second. The distal ends of two alluvial fans on the Mojave...
Organochlorines, mercury, and selenium in great blue heron eggs from Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore, Indiana
Thomas W. Custer, Randy K. Hines, Paul M. Stewart, Mark J. Melancon, Diane S. Henshel, Daniel W. Spearks
1998, Journal of Great Lakes Research (24) 3-11
In 1993, 20 great blue heron (Ardea herodias; GBH) eggs (one per nest) were collected from a colony at the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore, Indiana (INDU). The eggs were artificially incubated until pipping and were then analyzed for organochlorines, mercury, and selenium. Livers of embryos were analyzed for hepatic microsomal...
Grooved Terrain on Ganymede: First Results from Galileo High-Resolution Imaging
Robert T. Pappalardo, James W. Head, Geoffrey C. Collins, Randolph L. Kirk, Gerhard Neukum, Jurgen Oberst, Bernd Giese, Ronald Greeley, Clark R. Chapman, Paul Helfenstein, Jeffrey M. Moore, Alfred S. McEwen, B. Randy Tufts, David A. Senske, H. Herbert Breneman, Kenneth P. Klaasen
1998, Icarus (135) 276-302
High-resolution Galileo imaging has provided important insight into the origin and evolution of grooved terrain on Ganymede. The Uruk Sulcus target site was the first imaged at high resolution, and considerations of resolution, viewing geometry, low image compression, and complementary stereo imaging make this region extremely informative. Contrast variations in...
Large impact features on Europa: Results of the Galileo Nominal Mission
Jeffrey M. Moore, Erik Asphaug, Robert J. Sullivan, James E. Klemaszewski, Kelly C. Bender, Ronald Greeley, Paul E. Geissler, Alfred S. McEwen, Elizabeth P. Turtle, Cynthia B. Phillips, B. Randy Tufts, James W. Head III, Robert T. Pappalardo, Kevin B. Jones, Clark R. Chapman, Michael J.S. Belton, Randolph L. Kirk, David Morrison
1998, Icarus (135) 127-145
The Galileo Orbiter examined several impact features on Europa at considerably better resolution than was possible from Voyager. The new data allow us to describe the morphology and infer the geology of the largest impact features on Europa, which are probes into the crust. We observe two basic types of...
Habitat use and feeding ecology of riverine juvenile American shad
Robert M. Ross, Randy Bennett, James H. Johnson
1997, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (17) 964-974
We examined premigratory populations of American shad Alosa sapidissima in the upper Delaware River to determine habitat and microhabitat use, differential prey use among habitat types, and habitat suitability indices for this previously unmodeled life stage. Both seining and diving techniques were used to quantify juveniles in six habitat types with six...
Cytochrome P450 and organochlorine contaminants in black-crowned night-herons from the Chesapeake Bay region, USA
Barnett A. Rattner, Mark J. Melancon, Clifford P. Rice, Walter Riley Jr., John D. Eisemann, Randy K. Hines
1997, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (16) 2315-2322
Black-crowned night-heron (Nycticorax nycticorax) offspring were collected from a relatively uncontaminated coastal reference site (next to Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge, VA, USA) and two sites in the Chesapeake Bay watershed (Baltimore Harbor, MD and Rock Creek Park, Washington, DC, USA). Hepatic microsomal activities of benzyloxyresorufin-O-dealkylase and ethoxyresorufin-O-dealkylase were significantly elevated...
1993 annual status report: a summary of fish data in six reaches of the upper Mississippi River system
Steve Gutreuter, Randy W. Burkhardt, Mark Stopyro, Andrew Bartels, Eric Kramer, Melvin C. Bowler, Frederick A. Cronin, Dirk W. Soergel, Michael D. Petersen, David P. Herzog, Paul T. Raibley, Kevin S. Irons, Timothy M. O’Hara
1997, Long Term Resource Monitoring Program 97-P008
The Long Term Resource Monitoring Program (LTRMP) completed 1,994 collections of fishes from stratified random and permanently fixed sampling locations in six study reaches of the Upper Mississippi River System during 1993. Collection methods included day and night electrofishing, hoop netting, fyke netting (two net sizes), gill netting, seining,...