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Page 89, results 2201 - 2225

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Estimating recruitment rate and population dynamics at a migratory stopover site using an integrated population model
Anna Maureen Tucker, Conor P. McGowan, Bryan L. Nuse, James E. Lyons, Clinton T. Moore, David R. Smith, John A. Sweka, Kristen A. Anstead, Audrey DeRose-Wilson, Nigel A. Clark
2025, Ecosphere (14)
Consideration of the full annual cycle population dynamics can provide useful insight for conservation efforts, but collecting data needed to estimate demographic parameters is often logistically difficult. For species that breed in remote areas, monitoring is often conducted during migratory stopover or at nonbreeding sites, and the recruitment rate of...
Can big data inform invasive dreissenid mussel risk assessments of habitat suitability?
Adam Sepulveda, Joshua A. Gage, Timothy D. Counihan, Anthony F. Prisciandaro
2025, Hydrobiologia (852) 1153-1164
Invasion risk assessments of habitat suitability provide insight on early detection effort allocation; however, sufficient data are rarely available to inform assessments. We explored tradeoffs of leveraging big data from the National Water Quality Portal (WQP), a standardized water quality database in the United States,...
Host vs. pathogen evolutionary arms race: Effects of exposure history on individual response to a genetically diverse pathogen
Daniel P. Walsh, Brandi L. Felts, E. Frances Cassirer, Thomas E. Besser, Jonathan A. Jenks
2025, Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution (10)
Introduction: Throughout their range, bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis) populations have seen significant disease-associated declines. Unfortunately, understanding of the underlying epidemiological processes driving the disease dynamics in this species has hindered conservation efforts aimed at improving the health and long-term viability of these populations. Individual response to pathogen exposure emerges from dynamic...
Haploid gynogens facilitate disomic marker development in paleotetraploid sturgeons
Richard Flamio Jr., Dominic G Swift, David S Portnoy, Kimberly Chojnacki, Aaron J. Delonay, Jeffrey Powell, Patrick Braaten, Edward J. Heist
2025, Molecular Ecology Resources (25)
Acipenseriformes (sturgeons and paddlefishes) are of substantial conservation concern, and development of genomic resources for these species is difficult due to past whole genome duplication. Development of disomic markers for polyploid organisms can be challenging due to difficulty in resolving alleles at a single locus from...
Restoring aquatic habitats through dam removal
Katherine M. Abbott, Allison H. Roy, Keith Nislow
2025, Cooperator Science Series CSS-148-2022
This report presents results from a four-year project (2018–2022) to document the effects of small, run-of-river dams and dam removal on water quality (stream temperature and dissolved oxygen (DO)), aquatic macroinvertebrates, and fishes. Temperature and DO are critical water quality parameters that shape biogeochemical processes and biotic assemblages in streams....
Strontium isotopes reveal diverse life history variations, migration patterns, and habitat use for Broad Whitefish (Coregonus nasus) in Arctic, Alaska
Jason C. Leppi, Daniel J. Rinella, Mark S. Wipfli, Randy J. Brown, Karen J. Spaleta, Matthew S. Whitman
2025, PLoS ONE (17)
Conservation of Arctic fish species is challenging partly due to our limited ability to track fish through time and space, which constrains our understanding of life history diversity and lifelong habitat use. Broad Whitefish (Coregonus nasus) is an important subsistence species for Alaska’s Arctic Indigenous communities, yet little is known...
Mid-Atlantic big brown and eastern red bats: Relationships between acoustic activity and reproductive phenology
Sabrina Deeley, W. Mark Ford, Nicholas Kalen, Samuel R. Freeze, Micheal St. Germain, Michael Muthersbaugh, Elaine Barr, Andrew Kniowski, Alexander Silvis, Jesse De La Cruz
2025, Diversity (14)
Acoustic data are often used to describe bat activity, including habitat use within the summer reproductive period. These data inform management activities that potentially impact bats, currently a taxa of high conservation concern. To understand the relationship between acoustic and reproductive timing, we sampled big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus)...
Assessing methods for mitigating fungal contamination in freshwater mussel in vitro propagation
Jennifer E. Ryan, Allison H. Roy, Peter D. Hazelton, David L. Perkins, Timothy Warren, Claire Walsh, Robert Wick
2025, Hydrobiologia (849) 2487-2501
Many freshwater mussel species are critically imperiled, and propagation is essential for species ‘recovery.’ Fungal contamination can negatively affect in vitro propagation of freshwater mussels; thus, we investigated methods of mitigating fungal contamination. Specifically, we tested the effect of medium replacement frequency and antifungal (Amphotericin B) concentrations on risk of...
Habitat management for stopover and breeding songbird communities along rights-of-way in forest-dominated landscapes
Eric L. Margenau, Petra B. Wood, Christopher T. Rota
2025, Ecological Applications (32)
The proliferation of energy rights-of-way (pipelines and powerlines; ROWs) in the central Appalachian region has prompted wildlife management agencies to consider ways to use these features to manage and conserve at-risk songbird species. However, little empirical evidence exists regarding best management strategies to enhance habitat surrounding ROWs for the songbird...
Identifying mismatches between conservation area networks and vulnerable populations using spatial randomization
Laura A. Nunes, Christine Ribic, Benjamin Zuckerberg
2025, Ecology and Evolution (11) 16006-16020
Grassland birds are among the most globally threatened bird groups due to substantial degradation of native grassland habitats. However, the current network of grassland conservation areas may not be adequate for halting population declines and biodiversity loss. Here, we evaluate a network of grassland conservation areas within...
What have we lost? Modeling dam impacts on American shad populations through their native range
Joseph D. Zydlewski, Daniel S. Stich, Samuel G. Roy, Michael M. Bailey, Timothy F Sheehan, Kenneth Sprankle
2025, Frontiers in Marine Science (8)
American shad (Alosa sapidissima) are native to the east coast of North America from the St. Johns River, Florida, to the St. Lawrence River region in Canada. Since the 1800s, dams have reduced access to spawning habitat. To assess the impact of dams, we estimated the historically accessed spawning habitat...
Supporting the adaptive capacity of species through more effective knowledge exchange with conservation practitioners
Carly N. Cook, Erik A. Beever, Lindsey Thurman, Laura Thompson, John E. Gross, Andrew R. Whiteley, Adrienne Nicotra, Jennifer A. Szymanski, Carlos Botero, Kimberley Hall, Ary A. Hoffmann, Gregor W. Schuurman, Carla Sgro
2025, Evolutionary Applications (14) 1969-1979
There is an imperative for conservation practitioners to facilitate the ability of biodiversity to adapt to accelerating environmental change. Evolutionary biologists are well-positioned to inform the development of evidence-based management strategies that will effectively support the adaptive capacity of species and ecosystems. Conservation practitioners increasingly accept that management practices must...
Remote sensing-based actual evapotranspiration assessment in a data-scarce area of Brazil: A case study of the Urucuia Aquifer System
Bruno César Comini de Andrade, Eber José de Andrade Pinto, Anderson Ruhoff, Gabriel B. Senay
2025, International Journal of Applied Earth Observations and Geoinformation (98)
The large groundwater reserves of the Urucuia Aquifer System (UAS) enabled agricultural development and economic growth in the western Bahia State, in northeastern Brazil. Over the last several years, concern has grown around the aquifer’s diminishing water levels, and water balance (WB) studies are in demand. Considering the lack of...
Thicknesses of lava flows in satellite images: Comparison of layered mare units with terrestrial analogs
M. Elise Rumpf, Heidi Needham, Sarah A. Fagents
2025, Icarus (350)
Recent advances in satellite imaging technology have greatly improved our observations of planetary surfaces. The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) Narrow Angle Camera (NAC) records images with resolutions on average of 0.5 m per pixel, resolving meter scale features on the surface of the Moon. NAC images have revealed layered deposits, interpreted to...
Accuracy and precision of U–Pb zircon geochronology at high spatial resolution (7–20 μm spots) by laser ablation-ICP-single-collector-sector-field-mass spectrometry
P. Mukherjee, Amanda Souders, Paul J. Sylvester
2025, Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry (34) 180-192
Use of small spots (≤20µm) for laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) U-Pb zircon geochronology is of increasing interest in the Earth sciences because the temporal record of geologic processes is often preserved on a fine-scale within zircon grains. However the systematic biases and external sources of uncertainity of U-Pb...
Reevaluation of thermal maturity and stages of petroleum formation of the Mississippian Barnett Shale, Fort Worth Basin, Texas
Michael Lewan, M.J. Pawlewicz
2025, AAPG Bulletin (101) 1945-1970
New data including measured reflectance (%Ro), programmed open-system pyrolysis data, and kerogen elemental analyses obtained on the Mississippian Barnett Shale in the Fort Worth Basin, Texas, indicate that secondary-gas generation starts at 1.5% Ro and not at the previously prescribed 1.1% Ro. Oil-cracking kinetic parameters derived from pyrolysis experiments in the presence and...
High-precision 40Ar/39Ar dating of Quaternary basalts from Auckland Volcanic Field, New Zealand, with implications for eruption rates and paleomagnetic correlations
Graham S. Leonard, Andrew T. Calvert, Jenni L Hopkins, Colin J.N. Wilson, Elaine R. Smid, Jan Lindsay, Duane E. Champion
2025, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Resources (343) 60-74
The Auckland Volcanic Field (AVF), which last erupted ca. 550 years ago, is a late Quaternary monogenetic basaltic volcanic field (ca. 500 km2) in the northern North Island of New Zealand. Prior to this study only 12 out of the 53 identified eruptive centres of the AVF had been reliably dated. Careful...
Autonomous samplers and environmental DNA metabarcoding: Sampling day and primer choice have greatest impact on fish detection probabilities
Devin Nicole Jones-Slobodian, Ben Augustine, Patrick Ross Hutchins, James M. Birch, Kevan Yamahara, Scott L. Jensen, Rodney T. Richardson, Regina Trott, James Campbell, Elliott Barnhart, Adam Sepulveda
2024, Metabarcoding & Metagenomics (8)
Unprecedented rates of biodiversity loss and ecosystem function necessitate the use of rapid, efficacious, and cost-effective biomonitoring tools. The combination of autonomous samplers and high throughput sequencing (i.e., “metabarcoding”) of environmental DNA (eDNA) samples enables characterization of entire communities at high frequency and can be an important...
U.S.-Mexico Borderland & vegetation community map
Pamela L. Nagler
2024, Conference Paper
People on both sides of the United States-Mexico border need a high-resolution, binational vegetation community map that spans the entire United States-Mexico borderlands. Traditionally, mapping efforts in this region were impeded by complex logistics related to the international border, differing national needs and plans, and resource allocations and priorities. To...
Estimating occupancy of focal bee species
Clint Otto, Larissa L. Bailey, Brianne Du Clos, Tamara Smith, Elaine Evans, Ian S. Pearse, Saff Killingsworth, Sarina Jepsen, Hollis Woodard
2024, Journal of Melittology
Current bee monitoring efforts have a limited capacity for understanding factors affecting wild bee population changes, including the effects of management. To improve the effectiveness of wild bee monitoring, we first discuss principles of biological monitoring and provide a framework to design monitoring projects to estimate species occupancy, where occupancy...
The effects of human-caused mortality on mammalian cooperative breeders: A synthesis
David Edward Ausband, Peter F. Rebholz, Lindsay Petrillo
2024, Biological Reviews (100) 149-157
Human-caused mortality can be pervasive and even highly selective for individuals in groups of cooperative breeders. Many studies of cooperative breeders, however, do not address human-caused mortality. Similarly, studies focused on the effects of human-caused mortality on wildlife populations often do not consider the ecology of cooperative breeders. We searched...
Mesocarnivores in residential yards: Influence of yard features on the occupancy, relative abundance, and overlap of coyotes, grey fox, and red fox
Emily P. Johansson, Brett Alexander DeGregorio
2024, Wildlife Research (51)
ContextAs conversion of natural areas to human development continues, there is a lack of information about how developed areas can sustainably support wildlife. While large predators are often extirpated from areas of human development, some medium-bodied mammalian predators (hereafter, mesocarnivores) have adapted to co-exist in human-dominated areas.Aims<p...
Groundwater/surface-water interaction
Howard W. Reeves, Serban Danielescu, Elizabeth Priebe, Helen Zhang
2024, Report, Groundwater science relevant to the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement: An updated status report
No abstract available....
Immediate effect of floating solar energy deployment on greenhouse gas dynamics in ponds
Nicholas E. Ray, Meredith A. Holgerson, Steven Mark Grodsky
2024, Environmental Science and Technology (58) 22104-22113
Floating photovoltaic (FPV) solar energy offers promise for renewable electricity production that spares land for other societal benefits. FPV deployment may alter greenhouse gas (GHG) production and emissions from waterbodies by changing physical, chemical, and biological processes, which can have implications for the carbon cost of energy production with FPV....
Developing a decision tree model to forecast runup and assess uncertainty in empirical formulations
Michael Itzkin, Margaret L. Palmsten, Mark L. Buckley, Justin J. Birchler, Legna M. Torres-Garcia
2024, Coastal Engineering (195)
The coastal zone is a dynamic region that can change rapidly and significantly with respect to the morphology of the beach and incoming wave conditions. Runup forecasts may be improved by adapting a dynamic approach that allows for different runup models to be implemented in response to changes in beach...