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Publications

Below is a list of available NOROCK peer reviewed and published science. If you are in search of a specific publication and cannot find it below or through a search, please contact twojtowicz@usgs.gov.

Filter Total Items: 1255

A half century of change in alpine treeline patterns at Glacier National Park, Montana, U.S.A. A half century of change in alpine treeline patterns at Glacier National Park, Montana, U.S.A.

Using sequential aerial photography, we identified changes in the spatial distribution of subalpine fir (Abies lasiocarpa) habitat at the alpine treeline ecotone. Six 40-ha study sites in the McDonald Creek drainage of Glacier National Park contained subalpine fir forests that graded into alpine tundra. Over a 46-yr period, altitudinal changes in the location of alpine treeline ecotone...
Authors
F.L. Klasner, D.B. Fagre

Grizzly bear denning chronology and movements in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem Grizzly bear denning chronology and movements in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem

Den entrance and emergence dates of grizzly bears (Ursus arctos) in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem are important to management agencies that wish to minimize impacts of human activities on bears. Current estimates for grizzly bear denning events use data that were collected from 1975–80. We update these estimates by including data obtained from 1981–99. We used aerial telemetry data...
Authors
Mark A. Haroldson, Mark A. Ternent, Kerry A. Gunther, Charles C. Schwartz

Hydrologic processes and nutrient dynamics in a pristine mountain catchment Hydrologic processes and nutrient dynamics in a pristine mountain catchment

Nutrient dynamics in watersheds have been used as an ecosystem-level indicator of overall ecosystem function or response to disturbance (e.g. Borman.N et al. 1974, WEBSTER et al. 1992). The examination of nutrients has been evaluated to determine responses to logging practices or other changes in watershed land use. Nutrient dynamics have been related to changing physical and biological...
Authors
F. Richard Hauer, Daniel B. Fagre, Jack A. Stanford

The paradigm of grizzly bear restoration in North America The paradigm of grizzly bear restoration in North America

Grizzly bear restoration and recovery is a controversial, highly politicized process. By 1959, when the Craigheads began their pioneering work on Yellowstone grizzly bears, the species had been reduced to a remnant of its historic range. Prior to the colonization of North America by Europeans, the grizzly lived in relatively pristine habitats with aboriginal Native Americans. As...
Authors
C. C. Schwartz

Spawning characteristics of redband trout in a headwater stream in Montana Spawning characteristics of redband trout in a headwater stream in Montana

I investigated the spawning characteristics of redband trout Oncorhynchus mykiss gairdneri (a rainbow trout subspecies) during the spring of 1998 in Basin Creek, a third-order headwater stream located in the Kootenai River drainage in northwestern Montana. I examined the timing of spawning as related to discharge and water temperature and analyzed microhabitat selection of 30 completed...
Authors
Clint C. Muhlfeld

History of pronghorn population monitoring, research, and management in Yellowstone National Park History of pronghorn population monitoring, research, and management in Yellowstone National Park

Pronghorn antelope in Yellowstone National Park (YNP) persist in a small population that historically has experienced recurrent, sometimes dramatic declines. They apparently are isolated from other pronghorns, depend partly on private lands for winter range, experience heavy predation of fawns, and concentrate during winter in a relatively small area, thereby increasing their...
Authors
Kim A. Keating

Consumption of fungal sporocarps by Yellowstone grizzly bears Consumption of fungal sporocarps by Yellowstone grizzly bears

Sign of grizzly bears (Ursus arctos horribilis) consuming fungal sporocarps (mushrooms and truffles) was observed on 68 occasions during a study of radiomarked bears in the Yellowstone region, 1977–96. Sporocarps also were detected in 96 grizzly bear feces. Most fungi consumedby Yellowstone's grizzlybearsweremembersofthe Boletaceae(Suillus spp.), Russulaceae (Russula spp. and Lactarius...
Authors
David J. Mattson, Shannon Podruzny, Mark A. Haroldson

Grizzly bear denning and potential conflict areas in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem Grizzly bear denning and potential conflict areas in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem

Increasing winter use of steep, high-elevation terrain by backcountry recreationists has elevated concern about disturbance of denning grizzly bears (Ursus arctos) in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE). To help identify areas where such conflicts might occur, we developed a spatially explicit model to predict potential denning areas in the GYE. Using a scan area of 630 m around each...
Authors
Shannon Podruzny, Steve Cherry, Charles C. Schwartz, Lisa Landenburger

Tolazoline reversal of xylazine in bison (Bison bison): Mitigation of adverse effects Tolazoline reversal of xylazine in bison (Bison bison): Mitigation of adverse effects

Tolazoline is a mixed alpha-1 and -2 adrenergic antagonist used to reverse the sedative, analgesic and muscle-relaxing effects of xylazine, a potent alpha adrenergic agonist. Tolazoline has been used in cattle and is superior to yohimbine, another alpha adrenergic antagonist, in this species. In white-tailed deer, tolazoline shortened recovery times and reversed xylazine-induced...
Authors
Thomas J. Roffe, Steven J. Sweeney

Effectiveness of Brucella abortus Strain 19 single calfhood vaccination in elk (Cervus elaphus) Effectiveness of Brucella abortus Strain 19 single calfhood vaccination in elk (Cervus elaphus)

Brucellosis in Greater Yellowstone Area (GYA) bison and elk has been a source of controversy and focus of the Greater Yellowstone Interagency Brucellosis Committee (GYIBC) for years. Brucellosis has been eradicated from cattle in the 3 states of Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho and all three states currently are classified as “brucellosis free” with regard to livestock. Yet free-ranging elk...
Authors
Thomas J. Roffe, Lee C. Jones, Kenneth Coffin, Steven J. Sweeney
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