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Page 958, results 23926 - 23950

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Songbirds are resilient to hurricane disturbed habitats during spring migration
Emily Lain, Theodore J. Zenzal Jr., Frank R. Moore, Wylie C. Barrow Jr., Robert H. Diehl
2017, Journal of Avian Biology (48) 815-826
The Gulf of Mexico is a conspicuous feature of the Neotropical–Nearctic bird migration system. Traveling long distances across ecological barriers comes with considerable risks, and mortality associated with intercontinental migration may be substantial, including that caused by storms or other adverse weather events. However, little, if anything, is known about...
Comparison of burbot populations across adjacent native and introduced ranges
Annika W. Walters, Elizabeth G. Mandeville, W. Carl Saunders, Paul C. Gerrity, Joseph A. Skorupski, Zachary E. Underwood, Eric I. Gardunio
2017, Aquatic Invasions (12) 251-262
Introduced species are a threat to biodiversity. Burbot, Lota lota, a fish native to the Wind River Drainage, Wyoming and a species of conservation concern, have been introduced into the nearby Green River Drainage, Wyoming, where they are having negative effects on native fish species. We compared these native and...
Alternative foraging strategies enable a mountain ungulate to persist after migration loss
Alyson B. Courtemanch, Matthew J. Kauffman, Steve Kilpatrick, Sarah Dewey
2017, Ecosphere (8) 1-16
The persistence of many migratory ungulate populations worldwide is threatened due to anthropogenic impacts to seasonal ranges and migration routes. While many studies have linked migratory ungulate declines to migration disruption or loss, very few have explored the underlying factors that determine whether a population perishes or persists. In some...
Finite‐fault Bayesian inversion of teleseismic body waves
Brandon Clayton, Stephen H. Hartzell, Morgan P. Moschetti, Sarah E. Minson
2017, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (107) 1526-1544
Inverting geophysical data has provided fundamental information about the behavior of earthquake rupture. However, inferring kinematic source model parameters for finite‐fault ruptures is an intrinsically underdetermined problem (the problem of nonuniqueness), because we are restricted to finite noisy observations. Although many studies use least‐squares techniques to make the finite‐fault problem...
Quantile regression of microgeographic variation in population characteristics of an invasive vertebrate predator
Shane R. Siers, Julie A. Savidge, Robert Reed
2017, PLoS ONE (12) 1-19
Localized ecological conditions have the potential to induce variation in population characteristics such as size distributions and body conditions. The ability to generalize the influence of ecological characteristics on such population traits may be particularly meaningful when those traits influence prospects for successful management interventions. To characterize variability in invasive...
The morphology of transverse aeolian ridges on Mars
Paul Geissler, Justin T. Wilgus
2017, Aeolian Research (26) 63-71
A preliminary survey of publicly released high resolution digital terrain models (DTMs) produced by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter identified transverse aeolian ridges (TARs) in 154 DTMs in latitudes from 50°S to 40°N. Consistent with previous surveys, the TARs identified in HiRISE DTMs...
Length limits fail to restructure a Largemouth Bass population: A 28‐year case history
Leandro E. Miranda, M.E. Colvin, A. C. Shamaskin, L. A. Bull, T. Holman, R. Jones
2017, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (37) 624-632
Length limits have been implemented by fisheries management agencies to achieve population density, size structure, and angler satisfaction objectives. By redirecting harvest towards or away from particular length‐ or age‐groups, length limits rely on harvest by anglers to maintain a population at or near a desired state. The fish population...
A mosaic-based approach is needed to conserve biodiversity in disturbed freshwater ecosystems
Sean M. Hitchman, Martha E. Mather, Joseph M. Smith, Jane S. Fencl
2017, Global Change Biology (24) 308-321
Conserving native biodiversity in the face of human‐ and climate‐related impacts is a challenging and globally important ecological problem that requires an understanding of spatially connected, organismal‐habitat relationships. Globally, a suite of disturbances (e.g., agriculture, urbanization, climate change) degrades habitats and threatens biodiversity. A mosaic approach (in which connected, interacting...
Transcriptional response to West Nile virus infection in the zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata)
Daniel J. Newhouse, Erik K. Hofmeister, Christopher N. Balakrishnan
2017, Royal Society Open Science (4) 1-12
West Nile virus (WNV) is a widespread arbovirus that imposes a significant cost to both human and wildlife health. WNV exists in a bird-mosquito transmission cycle in which passerine birds act as the primary reservoir host. As a public health concern, the mammalian immune response to WNV has been studied...
Potential for water borne and invertebrate transmission of West Nile virus in the Great Salt Lake, Utah
Melissa Lund, Valerie I. Shearn-Bochsler, Robert J. Dusek, Jan Shivers, Erik K. Hofmeister
2017, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (83)
In November and December of 2013, a large mortality event involving 15,000 - 20,000 eared grebes (Podiceps nigricollis) occurred at the Great Salt Lake (GSL), UT. The onset of the outbreak in grebes was followed by a mortality event in > 86 bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus). During the die-off, West...
Investigation of plastic debris ingestion by four species of sea turtles collected as bycatch in pelagic Pacific longline fisheries
Katherine E. Clukey, Christopher A. Lepczyk, George H. Balazs, Thierry M. Work, Jennifer M. Lynch
2017, Marine Pollution Bulletin (120) 117-125
Ingestion of marine debris is an established threat to sea turtles. The amount, type, color and location of ingested plastics in the gastrointestinal tracts of 55 sea turtles from Pacific longline fisheries from 2012 to 2016 were quantified, and compared across species, turtle length, body condition, sex, capture location, season...
Human infectious disease burdens decrease with urbanization but not with biodiversity
Chelsea L. Wood, Alex McInturff, Hillary S. Young, DoHyung Kim, Kevin D. Lafferty
2017, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences (372)
nfectious disease burdens vary from country to country and year to year due to ecological and economic drivers. Recently, Murray et al. (Murray CJ et al. 2012 Lancet 380, 2197–2223. (doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(12)61689-4)) estimated country-level morbidity and mortality associated with a variety of factors, including infectious diseases, for the years...
Serosurvey for West Nile virus antibodies in Steller's Jays (Cyanocitta stelleri) captured in coastal California
Elena West, Erik K. Hofmeister, M. Zach Peery
2017, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (53) 582-585
West Nile virus (WNV) was first detected in New York in 1999 and, during its expansion across the continental US, southern Canada, and Mexico, members of the Corvidae (ravens, crows, magpies, and jays) were frequently infected and highly susceptible to the virus. As part of a behavioral study of Steller's...
Conservation, biodiversity and infectious disease: scientific evidence and policy implications
Hillary S. Young, Chelsea L. Wood, A. Marm Kilpatrick, Kevin D. Lafferty, Charles L. Nunn, Jeffrey R. Vincent
2017, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences (372) 1-4
Habitat destruction and infectious disease are dual threats to nature and people. The potential to simultaneously advance conservation and human health has attracted considerable scientific and popular interest; in particular, many authors have justified conservation action by pointing out potential public health benefits . One major focus of this...
Lambdapapillomavirus 2 in a gray wolf (Canis lupus) from Minnesota with oral papillomatosis and sarcoptic mange
Susan Knowles, Steve K. Windels, Marie Adams, Jeffrey S. Hall
2017, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (53) 925-929
Oral papillomatosis was diagnosed in a gray wolf (Canis lupus) with sarcoptic mange from Minnesota, USA found dead in February 2015. Intranuclear inclusion bodies were evident histologically, and papillomaviral antigens were confirmed using immunohistochemistry. Sequencing of the L1 papillomavirus gene showed closest similarity to Lambdapapillomavirus 2....
Cyanobacteria of the 2016 Lake Okeechobee and Okeechobee Waterway harmful algal bloom
Barry H. Rosen, Timothy W. Davis, Christopher J. Gobler, Benjamin J. Kramer, Keith A. Loftin
2017, Open-File Report 2017-1054
The Lake Okeechobee and the Okeechobee Waterway (Lake Okeechobee, the St. Lucie Canal and River, and the Caloosahatchee River) experienced an extensive harmful algal bloom within Lake Okeechobee, the St. Lucie Canal and River and the Caloosahatchee River in 2016. In addition to the very visible bloom of the cyanobacterium...
Natural infections with pigeon paramyxovirus serotype 1: Pathologic changes in Eurasian collared-doves (Streptopelia decaocto) and rock pigeons (Columba livia) in the United States
Marcos Isidoro Ayza, C.L. Afonso, J.B. Stanton, Susan Knowles, S. Ip, C. LeAnn White, Heather Fenton, M.G. Ruder, A. C. Dolinski, Julia S. Lankton
2017, Veterinary Pathology (54) 695-703
Pigeon paramyxovirus serotype 1 (PPMV-1) is a globally distributed, virulent member of the avian paramyxovirus serotype 1 serogroup that causes mortality in columbiformes and poultry. Following introduction into the United States in the mid-1980s, PPMV-1 rapidly spread causing numerous mortality events in Eurasian collared-doves (Streptopelia decaocto) (ECDOs) and rock pigeons...
Addressing wild turkey population declines using structured decision making
Kelly F. Robinson, Angela K. Fuller, Michael V. Schiavone, Bryan L. Swift, Duane R. Diefenbach, William F. Siemer, Daniel J. Decker
2017, Journal of Wildlife Management (81) 393-405
We present a case study from New York, USA, of the use of structured decision making (SDM) to identify fall turkey harvest regulations that best meet stakeholder objectives, in light of recent apparent declines in abundance of wild turkeys in the northeastern United States. We used the SDM framework to...
Scenario Evaluator for Electrical Resistivity survey pre-modeling tool
Neil Terry, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, Judith L. Robinson, Lee D. Slater, Keith J. Halford, Andrew Binley, John W. Lane Jr., Dale D. Werkema
2017, Groundwater (55) 885-890
Geophysical tools have much to offer users in environmental, water resource, and geotechnical fields; however, techniques such as electrical resistivity imaging (ERI) are often oversold and/or overinterpreted due to a lack of understanding of the limitations of the techniques, such as the appropriate depth intervals or resolution of the methods....
Linking occupancy surveys with habitat characteristics to estimate abundance and distribution in an endangered cryptic bird
Lisa H. Crampton, Kevin W. Brinck, Kyle E. Pias, Barbara A. P. Heindl, Thomas Savre, Julia S. Diegmann, Eben H. Paxton
2017, Biodiversity and Conservation (26) 1525-1539
Accurate estimates of the distribution and abundance of endangered species are crucial to determine their status and plan recovery options, but such estimates are often difficult to obtain for species with low detection probabilities or that occur in inaccessible habitats. The Puaiohi (Myadestes palmeri) is a cryptic species...
Hydrogeologic framework and selected components of the groundwater budget for the upper Umatilla River Basin, Oregon
Nora B. Herrera, Kate Ely, Smita Mehta, Adam J. Stonewall, John C. Risley, Stephen R. Hinkle, Terrence D. Conlon
2017, Scientific Investigations Report 2017-5020
Executive SummaryThis report presents a summary of the hydrogeology of the upper Umatilla River Basin, Oregon, based on characterization of the hydrogeologic framework, horizontal and vertical directions of groundwater flow, trends in groundwater levels, and components of the groundwater budget. The conceptual model of the groundwater flow system integrates available...
Water temperature effects from simulated changes to dam operations and structures in the Middle and South Santiam Rivers, Oregon
Norman L. Buccola
2017, Open-File Report 2017-1063
Green Peter and Foster Dams on the Middle and South Santiam Rivers, Oregon, have altered the annual downstream water temperature profile (cycle). Operation of the dams has resulted in cooler summer releases and warmer autumn releases relative to pre-dam conditions, and that alteration can hinder recovery of various life...
Responses of juvenile black-tailed prairie dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus) to a commercially produced oral plague vaccine delivered at two doses
Elsa M. Cardenas-Canales, Lisa L. Wolfe, Tripp. Daniel W., Tonie E. Rocke, Rachel C. Abbott, Michael W. Miller
2017, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (53) 916-920
We confirmed safety and immunogenicity of mass-produced vaccine baits carrying an experimental, commercial-source plague vaccine (RCN-F1/V307) expressing Yersinia pestis V and F1 antigens. Forty-five juvenile black-tailed prairie dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus) were randomly divided into three treatment groups (n=15 animals/group). Animals in the first group received one standard-dose vaccine bait (5×107...