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Publications

Filter Total Items: 1990

The endemic headwater stream amphibians of the American Northwest: Associations with environmental gradients in a large forested preserve

We used a large forested preserve (Olympic National Park, USA) to examine the habitat associations of a unique and environmentally sensitive stream amphibian fauna: Ascaphus truei Stegneger, Rhyacotriton olympicus (Gaige) and Dicamptodon copei Nussbaum. We quantified the relative abundance of stream amphibians and compared them to physical, topographic, climatic and landscape variables. All three
Authors
M. J. Adams, R. Bruce Bury

Terrestrial and stream amphibians across clearcut-forest interfaces in the Siskiyou Mountains, Oregon

Timber harvest in the Pacific Northwest has resulted in a highly fragmented landscape. but there is no information on responses of amphibians to forest edges for this region. We investigated abundance of terrestrial and stream-dwelling amphibians on the interface of recent clearcuts and mature forest in the Siskiyou Mountains, Oregon, in summer and fall of 1998. We assessed relative abundance of t
Authors
Roman Biek, L. Scott Mills, R. Bruce Bury

Comparison of soil bacterial communities in rhizospheres of three plant species and the interspaces in an arid grassland

Soil bacteria are important contributors to primary productivity and nutrient cycling in arid land ecosystems, and their populations may be greatly affected by changes in environmental conditions. In parallel studies, the composition of the total bacterial community and of members of the Acidobacterium division were assessed in arid grassland soils using terminal restriction fragment length polymo
Authors
Cheryl R. Kuske, Lawrence O. Ticknor, Mark E. Miller, John M. Dunbar, Jody A. Davis, Susan M. Barns, Jayne Belnap

Distribution and abundance of snowy plovers in eastern North America, the Caribbean, and the Bahamas

Snowy Plovers (Charadrius alexandrinus) are small, partially migrant shorebirds that are broadly distributed across North America. Snowy Plover distribution west of the Rocky Mountains has been well described. However, distribution and abundance east of the Rocky Mountains has not received much attention despite current status and ESA listing concerns for Snowy Plovers in the southeastern United S
Authors
Leah Gorman, Susan M. Haig

Alien invasions in aquatic ecosystems: Toward an understanding of brook trout invasions and potential impacts on inland cutthroat trout in western North America

Experience from case studies of biological invasions in aquatic ecosystems has motivated a set of proposed empirical “rules” for understanding patterns of invasion and impacts on native species. Further evidence is needed to better understand these patterns, and perhaps contribute to a useful predictive theory of invasions. We reviewed the case of brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis)invasions in th
Authors
Jason B. Dunham, Susan B. Adams, Robert Schroeter, Douglas C. Novinger

Collaborative approaches to the evolution of migration and the development of science-based conservation in shorebirds

Shorebirds are among the most highly migratory creatures on earth. Both the study of their ecology and ongoing efforts to conserve their populations must reflect this central aspect of their biology. Many species of shorebirds use migration and staging sites scattered throughout the hemisphere to complete their annual migrations between breeding areas and nonbreeding habitats (Morrison 1984). The
Authors
Brian A. Harrington, S. Brown, James Corven, Jonathan Bart

Treatment effects on performance of N-fixing lichens in disturbed crusts of the Colorado Plateau

Biological soil crusts arrest soil erosion and supply nitrogen to arid ecosystems. To understand their recovery from disturbance, we studied performances of Collema spp. lichens relative to four experimental treatments plus microtopography of soil pedicels, oriented north-northwest to south-southeast in crusts. At sites in Needles (NDLS) and Island in the Sky (ISKY) districts of Canyonlands Nation
Authors
Diane W. Davidson, Mathew Bowker, Dylan George, Susan L. Phillips, Jayne Belnap

Landscapes to riverscapes: bridging the gap between research and conservation of stream fishes

Rivers and streams, by their very nature long ribbons of aquatic habitat, are inherently difficult to study. Approaching the banks of a flowing-water (lotic) system, one can see only a short fragment of the entire stream, from one bend to another, and can gain little appreciation for important features that lie beyond view. Moreover, materials transported downstream by the flow, and organisms trav
Authors
Kurt D. Fausch, Christian E. Torgersen, Colden V. Baxter, Hiram W. Li

Trends in midwinter counts of bald eagles in the contiguous United States, 1986-2000

We estimated statewide, regional, and national trends in counts of Bald Eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) along selected routes in the contiguous United States during midwinter, 1986-2000. Each January, several hundred observers collected data as part of a survey initiated by the National Wildlife Federation in 1979. To analyze these data, we used only those routes surveyed consistently in at leas
Authors
Karen Steenhof, Laura Bond, Kirk K. Bates, Lynda L. Leppert

Epizootiology and effect of avian pox on Hawaiian forest birds

We determined prevalence and altitudinal distribution of forest birds infected with avian pox at 16 locations on Hawaii, from sea level to tree line in mesic and xeric habitats, during 1977–1980. Isolates from lesions were cultured in the laboratory for positive identification of Poxvirus avium. Infected birds from the wild were brought into the laboratory to assess differences in the course of in
Authors
Charles van Riper, Sandra G. van Riper, Wallace R. Hansen