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Page 963, results 24051 - 24075

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A multilocus population genetic survey of greater sage-grouse across their range
Sara J. Oyler-McCance, S.E. Taylor, T.W. Quinn
2005, Molecular Ecology (14) 1293-1310
The distribution and abundance of the greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) have declined dramatically, and as a result the species has become the focus of conservation efforts. We conducted a range-wide genetic survey of the species which included 46 populations and over 1000 individuals using both mitochondrial...
Conflicting patterns of genetic structure produced by nuclear and mitochondrial markers in the Oregon Slender Salamander (Batrachoseps wrighti): implications for conservation efforts and species management
Mark Miller, Susan M. Haig, R.S. Wagner
2005, Conservation Genetics (6) 275-287
Endemic to Oregon in the northwestern US, the Oregon slender salamander (Batrachoseps wrighti) is a terrestrial plethodontid found associated with late successional mesic forests. Consequently, forest management practices such as timber harvesting may impact their persistence. Therefore, to infer possible future effects of these practices on population structure and differentiation,...
Monitoring temporal change in riparian vegetation of Great Basin National Park
Erik A. Beever, David A. Pyke, Jeanne C. Chambers, Fred Landau, S.D. Smith
2005, Western North American Naturalist (65) 382-402
Disturbance in riparian areas of semiarid ecosystems involves complex interactions of pulsed hydrologic flows, herbivory, fire, climatic effects, and anthropogenic influences. We resampled riparian vegetation within ten 10-m × 100-m plots that were initially sampled in 1992 in 4 watersheds of the Snake Range, east central Nevada. Our finding of...
Tree species and size structure of old-growth Douglas-fir forests in central western Oregon, USA
Nathan Poage, J. C. Tappeiner II
2005, Forest Ecology and Management (204) 329-343
We characterized the structure of 91 old-growth forests dominated by Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco), using inventory data from recent (1985–1991) old-growth timber sales in western Oregon. The data were complete counts (i.e., censuses) of all live trees >20 cm diameter at breast height (dbh, measured at 1.4 m above the ground) over...
A hierarchical perspective of plant diversity
Daniel Sarr, D.E. Hibbs, M. Huston
2005, The Quarterly Review of Biology (80) 187-212
Predictive models of plant diversity have typically focused on either a landscapea??s capacity for richness (equilibrium models), or on the processes that regulate competitive exclusion, and thus allow species to coexist (nonequilibrium models). Here, we review the concepts and purposes of a hierarchical, multiscale model of the controls of plant...
Assessing mercury exposure and effects to American dippers in headwater streams near mining sites
Charles J. Henny, James L. Kaiser, Heidi A. Packard, Robert A. Grove, Mike R. Taft
2005, Ecotoxicology (14) 709-725
To evaluate mercury (Hg) exposure and possible adverse effects of Hg on American dipper (Cinclus mexicanus) reproduction, we collected eggs and nestling feathers and the larval/nymph form of three Orders of aquatic macroinvertebrates (Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera and Trichoptera = EPT) important in their diet from three major headwater tributaries of the upper Willamette...
Distribution patterns of lentic-breeding amphibians in relation to ultraviolet radiation exposure in western North America
M. J. Adams, B. R. Hossack, R.A. Knapp, P.S. Corn, S. A. Diamond, P.C. Trenham, D.B. Fagre
2005, Ecosystems (8) 488-500
An increase in ultraviolet-B (UV-B) radiation has been posited to be a potential factor in the decline of some amphibian population. This hypothesis has received support from laboratory and field experiments showing that current levels of UV-B can cause embryo mortality in some species, but little research has addressed whether...
Population genetics of Gunnison sage-grouse: Implications for management
S.J. Oyler-McCance, J. St. John, S.E. Taylor, A.D. Apa, T.W. Quinn
2005, Journal of Wildlife Management (69) 630-637
The newly described Gunnison sage-grouse (Centrocercus minimus) is a species of concern for management because of marked declines in distribution and abundance due to the loss and fragmentation of sagebrush habitat. This has caused remaining populations to be unusually small and isolated. We utilized mitochondrial DNA sequence data and data...
Spatial and temporal variations in the age structure of Arctic sea ice
G. I. Belchansky, David C. Douglas, Nikita G. Platonov
2005, Geophysical Research Letters (32)
Spatial and temporal variations in the age structure of Arctic sea ice are investigated using a new reverse chronology algorithm that tracks ice-covered pixels to their location and date of origin based on ice motion and concentration data. The Beaufort Gyre tends to harbor the oldest (>10 years old) sea...
Estimated ultraviolet radiation doses in wetlands in six national parks
S. A. Diamond, P.C. Trenham, M. J. Adams, B. R. Hossack, R.A. Knapp, L. Stark, D. Bradford, P.S. Corn, K. Czarnowski, P. D. Brooks, D.B. Fagre, B. Breen, N.E. Dentenbeck, K. Tonnessen
2005, Ecosystems (8) 462-477
Ultraviolet-B radiation (UV-B, 280–320-nm wavelengths) doses were estimated for 1024 wetlands in six national parks: Acadia (Acadia), Glacier (Glacier), Great Smoky Mountains (Smoky), Olympic (Olympic), Rocky Mountain (Rocky), and Sequoia/Kings Canyon (Sequoia). Estimates were made using ground-based UV-B data (Brewer spectrophotometers), solar radiation models, GIS tools, field characterization of vegetative...
Disentangling association patterns in fission-fusion societies using African buffalo as an example
P.C. Cross, James O. Lloyd-Smith, W.M. Getz
2005, Animal Behaviour (69) 499-506
A description of the social network of a population aids us in understanding dispersal, the spread of disease, and genetic structure in that population. Many animal populations can be classified as fission–fusion societies, whereby groups form and separate over time. Examples discussed in the literature include ungulates, primates and cetaceans...
Describing spatial pattern in stream networks: A practical approach
L.M. Ganio, C.E. Torgersen, R. E. Gresswell
2005, Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment (3) 138-144
The shape and configuration of branched networks influence ecological patterns and processes. Recent investigations of network influences in riverine ecology stress the need to quantify spatial structure not only in a two-dimensional plane, but also in networks. An initial step in understanding data from stream networks is discerning non-random patterns...
Southern marl prairies conceptual ecological model
S.M. Davis, W.F. Loftus, E.E. Gaiser, A.E. Huffman
2005, Wetlands (25) 821-831
About 190,000 ha of higher-elevation marl prairies flank either side of Shark River Slough in the southern Everglades. Water levels typically drop below the ground surface each year in this landscape. Consequently, peat soil accretion is inhibited, and substrates consist either of calcitic marl produced by algal periphyton mats or...
Morphometry, gross morphology and available histopathology in North Atlantic right whale (Eubalaena glacialis) mortalities (1970 to 2002)
M.J. Moore, A.R. Knowlton, S.D. Kraus, W.A. McLellan, R. K. Bonde
2005, Journal of Cetacean Research and Management (6) 199-214
Fifty-four right whale mortalities have been reported from between Florida, USA and the Canadian Maritimes from 1970 to 2002. Thirty of those animals were examined: 18 adults and juveniles, and 12 calves. Morphometric data are presented such that prediction of body weight is possible if the age, or one or...
Population genetic structure in migratory sandhill cranes and the role of Pleistocene glaciations
Kenneth L. Jones, Gary Krapu, David A. Brandt, Mary V. Ashley
2005, Molecular Ecology (14) 2645-2657
Previous studies of migratory sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis) have made significant progress explaining evolution of this group at the species scale, but have been unsuccessful in explaining the geographically partitioned variation in morphology seen on the population scale. The objectives of this study were to assess the population structure and...
Flight speeds of northern pintails during migration determined by satellite telemetry
Michael R. Miller, John Y. Takekawa, Joseph P. Fleskes, Dennis L. Orthmeyer, Michael L. Casazza, David A. Haukos, William M. Perry
2005, The Wilson Bulletin (117) 364-374
Speed (km/hr) during flight is one of several factors determining the rate of migration (km/ day) and flight range of birds. We attached 26-g, back-mounted satellite-received radio tags (platform transmitting terminals; PTTs) to adult female Northern Pintails (Anas acuta) during (1) midwinter 2000–2003 in the northern Central Valley of...
Causes of wolf depredation increase in Minnesota from 1979-1998
E. K. Harper, W.J. Paul, L. David Mech
2005, Wildlife Society Bulletin (33) 888-896
Wolf (Canis lupus) depredations on livestock in Minnesota have been increasing over the last 20 years. A major explanation cited for this increase is wolf range expansion, but no studies have tested this explanation. Additional reasons could include 1) wolf colonization of new areas within long-existing wolf range, 2) learning...
Markov Chain Monte Carlo estimation of species distributions: A case study of the swift fox in western Kansas
Glen A. Sargeant, Marsha A. Sovada, Christiane C. Slivinski, Douglas H. Johnson
2005, Journal of Wildlife Management (69) 483-487
Accurate maps of species distributions are essential tools for wildlife research and conservation. Unfortunately, biologists often are forced to rely on maps derived from observed occurrences recorded opportunistically during observation periods of variable length. Spurious inferences are likely to result because such maps are profoundly affected by the duration and...
Hybridization of Tamarix ramosissima and T. chinensis (saltcedars) with T. aphylla (athel) (tamaricaceae) in the southwestern USA dertermined from DNA sequence data
John F. Gaskin, Patrick B. Shafroth
2005, Madroño (52) 1-10
Morphological intermediates between Tamarix ramosissima or T. chinensis (saltcedars) and T. aphylla (athel) were found recently in three locations in the southwestern USA, and were assumed to be hybrids or a previously unreported species. We sequenced chloroplast and nuclear DNA from putative parental and hybrid morphotypes and hybrid status of...
Characterizing flow regimes for floodplain forest conservation: An assessment of factors affecting sapling growth and survivorship on three cold desert rivers
D.C. Andersen
2005, Canadian Journal of Forest Research (35) 2886-2899
I analyzed annual height growth and survivorship of Fremont cottonwood (Populus fremontii S. Watson) saplings on three floodplains in Colorado and Utah to assess responses to interannual variation in flow regime and summer precipitation. Mammal exclosures, supplemented with an insecticide treatment at one site, were used to assess flow regime...
A test of geographic assignment using isotope tracers in feathers of known origin
Michael B. Wunder, C.L. Kester, F.L. Knopf, R. O. Rye
2005, Oecologia (144) 607-617
We used feathers of known origin collected from across the breeding range of a migratory shorebird to test the use of isotope tracers for assigning breeding origins. We analyzed δD, δ13C, and δ15N in feathers from 75 mountain plover (Charadrius montanus) chicks sampled in 2001 and from 119...
Forest turnover rates follow global and regional patterns of productivity
Nathan L. Stephenson, Phillip J. van Mantgem
2005, Ecology Letters (8) 524-531
Using a global database, we found that forest turnover rates (the average of tree mortality and recruitment rates) parallel broad-scale patterns of net primary productivity. First, forest turnover was higher in tropical than in temperate forests. Second, as recently demonstrated by others, Amazonian forest turnover was higher on fertile than...
Evaluation of ecological risk to populations of a threatened plant from an invasive biocontrol insect
S. M. Louda, T. A. Rand, A. E. Arnett, A. S. McClay, A. K. McEachern
2005, Ecological Applications (15) 234-249
Controversy exists over estimation of ecological risk in biological control. At present, the risk to the rare, federally listed Pitcher's thistle (Cirsium pitcheri) in North America from Rhinocyllus conicus, a biological control weevil now feeding on many native thistles, is unknown. We hypothesized that quantification of host specificity and potential...
Use of decision support systems as a drought management tool
D. Frevert, H. Lins
Moglen G.E., editor(s)
2005, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 2005 Watershed Management Conference - Managing Watersheds for Human and Natural Impacts: Engineering, Ecological, and Economic Challenges
Droughts present a unique challenge to water managers throughout the world and the current drought in the western United States is taxing facilities to the limit. Coping with this severe drought requires state of the art decision support systems including efficient and accurate hydrologic process models, detailed hydrologic data bases...
The GIS weasel - An interface for the development of spatial information in modeling
Roland J. Viger, S.M. Markstrom, G.H. Leavesley
Moglen G.E., editor(s)
2005, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 2005 Watershed Management Conference - Managing Watersheds for Human and Natural Impacts: Engineering, Ecological, and Economic Challenges
The GIS Weasel is a map and Graphical User Interface (GUI) driven tool that has been developed as an aid to modelers in the delineation, characterization of geographic features, and their parameterization for use in distributed or lumped parameter physical process models. The interface does not require user expertise in...