Publications
This list of publications includes peer-review journal articles, official USGS publications series, reports and more authored by scientists in the Ecosystems Mission Area. A database of all USGS publications, with advanced search features, can be accessed at the USGS Publications Warehouse.
Filter Total Items: 41758
The movement and recovery of tagged walleyes in Michigan, 1929-1953
No abstract available.
Authors
Paul H. Eschmeyer, Walter R. Crowe
Kidney disease in brook trout and its treatment
No abstract available.
Authors
S. F. Snieszko, P.J. Griffin
The effect of some sulfonamides on the growth of brook trout, brown trout, and rainbow trout
No abstract available.
Authors
S. F. Snieszko, E. M. Wood
Notes on the life cycle of Fibricola cratera (Trematoda: Strigeida)
No abstract available.
Authors
G. L. Hoffman
Some effects of fluctuating and falling water levels on waterfowl production
No abstract available.
Authors
K.E. Wolf
Infectious pancreatic necrosis in brook trout
No abstract available.
Authors
E. M. Wood, S. F. Snieszko, W. T. Yasutake
Ichthyological notes - artificial propagation of the sea lamprey, Petromyzon marinus
No abstract available.
Authors
R.E. Lennon
Early life history of the yellow perch, Perca flavescens (Mitchill), in the Red Lakes, Minnesota
The early life history of the yellow perch, an important commercial species in the Red Lakes, Minnesota, has been studied with special reference to length at scale formation, growth rate during first season of life, and food habits as they relate to growth and survival. Scales are fully imbricated in the area of 12th to 14th lateral line scales at 24 millimeters total length. There is a wide annua
Authors
Richard L. Pycha, Lloyd L. Smith
Artificial propagation of the sea lamprey Petromyzon marinus
Observations on the gland products, gonads, and general characteristics of sexually mature sea lampreys, Petromyzon marinus (Linnaeus), from Lake Huron, and a need to obtain some information on very young larval lampreys, prompted an experiment on the stripping and hatching of eggs. Seventeen specimens were selected from a group of spawning migrants which had been trapped in the Ocqueoc River, Mic
Authors
Robert E. Lennon
The pygmy whitefish, Coregonus coulteri, in Lake Superior
Bottom trawling by the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service motor vessel Cisco in Lake Superior in 1952–1953 revealed a large population of a tiny whitefish, Coregonus (Prosopium) coulteri, which has been reported previously only from northwestern North America. The hiatus in range, from Lake Superior to the Columbia River basin, is the greatest known for a North American freshwater fish. Although mino
Authors
Paul H. Eschmeyer, Reeve M. Bailey