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Publications

Find out more about Species Management Research Program through our publications. Browse the entire list below or by specific topics at the links below.

Filter Total Items: 653

Wildlife conservation and solar energy development in the Desert Southwest, United States

Large areas of public land are currently being permitted or evaluated for utility-scale solar energy development (USSED) in the southwestern United States, including areas with high biodiversity and protected species. However, peer-reviewed studies of the effects of USSED on wildlife are lacking. The potential effects of the construction and the eventual decommissioning of solar energy facilities
Authors
Jeffrey E. Lovich, Josua R. Ennen

Balancing energy development and conservation: A method utilizing species distribution models

Alternative energy development is increasing, potentially leading to negative impacts on wildlife populations already stressed by other factors. Resource managers require a scientifically based methodology to balance energy development and species conservation, so we investigated modeling habitat suitability using Maximum Entropy to develop maps that could be used with other information to help si
Authors
Catherine S. Jarnevich, M.K. Laubhan

Impacts of climate change on Oregon's coasts and estuaries

Earth’s changing climate is expected to have significant physical impacts along the coast and estuarine shorelands of Oregon, ranging from increased erosion and inundation of low lying areas, to wetland loss and increased estuarine salinity. The environmental changes associated with climate change include rising sea levels, increased occurrences of severe storms, rising air and water temperatures,
Authors
Peter Ruggerio, Cheryl A. Brown, Paul D. Komar, Jonathan C. Allan, Deborah A. Reusser, Henry Lee

Successful aquatic animal disease emergency programmes

The authors provide examples of emergency programmes which have been successful in eradicating or controlling certain diseases of aquatic animals. The paper is divided into four parts. The first part describes the initial isolation of viral haemorrhagic septicaemia (VHS) virus in North America in the autumn of 1988 from feral adult chinook (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) and coho salmon (O.kisutch) ret
Authors
T. Hastein, B.J. Hill, J. R. Winton

Gas bubble disease monitoring and research of juvenile salmonids, 1998

No abstract available.
Authors
J.W. Beeman, T.C. Robinson, P.V. Haner, S. P. VanderKooi, A.G. Maule

Heterosigma bloom and associated fish kill

No abstract available.
Authors
P.K. Hershberger, J.E. Rensel, J. R. Postel, F.B. Taub

Response of salmonid fish to artificial infection with chum salmon virus

In the fall of 1978, a reovirus was isolated from normal-appearing adult chum salmon (Oncorhynchus keta) returning to the Tokushibetsu Hatchery in Hokkaido, Japan (Winton et al 1981). The chum salmon virus (CSW) was recovered in the chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) embryo cell line (CHSE-214) where it replicated at 15-20 C, producing foci of syncytia in the monolayer. Electron microscopy
Authors
J. R. Winton, C.N. Lannan, M. Yoshimizu, T. Kimura

Use of a portable electric barrier to estimate Chinook salmon escapement in a turbid Alaskan river

We developed a portable electric barrier to aid in the capture of adult chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha undergoing spawning migrations up a turbid stream in south-central Alaska. In 1981, we tagged and released 157 chinook salmon after diverting them from the main-stem Killey River into a conventional trap with the aid of the electric barrier. On the basis of returns of tagged salmon to Be
Authors
A. Palmisano, C. V. Burger