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Publications

Filter Total Items: 1990

Sodium cyanide hazards to fish and other wildlife from gold mining operations

Highly toxic sodium cyanide (NaCN) is used increasingly by the international mining community to extract gold and other precious metals through milling of high grade ores and heap leaching of low grade ores. Of the 98 million kg cyanide (CN) consumed in North America in 1989, about 80% was used in gold mining (Knudson 1990). In Canada, more than 90% of the mined gold is extracted from ores with th
Authors
R. Eisler, D. R. Clark, Stanley N. Wiemeyer, C. J. Henny

Historical land cover changes in the Great Lakes Region

Two different methods of reconstructing historical vegetation change, drawing on General Land Office (GLO) surveys and fossil pollen deposits, are demonstrated by using data from the Great Lakes region. Both types of data are incorporated into landscape-scale analyses and presented through geographic information systems. Results from the two methods reinforce each other and allow reconstructions o
Authors
K.L. Cole, M.B. Davis, F. Stearns, G. Guntenspergen, K. Walker

Effects of fire on golden eagle territory occupancy and reproductive success

We examined effects of fire on golden eagle (Aquila chrysaetos) territory occupancy and reproductive success in southwestern Idaho because wildfires since 1980 have resulted in large-scale losses of shrub habitat in the Snake River Plain. Success (percentage of pairs that raised young) at burned territories declined after major fires (P = 0.004). Pairs in burned areas that could expand into adjace
Authors
Michael N. Kochert, Karen Steenhof, J.M. Marzluff, L.B. Carpenter

Ambystoma gracile (Northwestern Salamander): Predation and cannibalism

Lack of information concerning predatory interactions between Ambystoma gracile and Ambystoma macrodactylum (long-toed salamander) larvae, as well as potential cannibalism within A. gracile populations, prompted us to conduct a field experiment to investigate the potential for this inter- and intraspecific predation. This field experiment was conducted at a lake in Mount Rainier National Park, Was
Authors
Robert L. Hoffman, Gary L. Larson

Clinal variation in the juvenal plumage of American kestrels

The American Kestrel(Falco sparverius) is a sexually dichromatic falcon that exhibits considerable individual plumage variability. For example, the anterior extent of the black dorsal barring in juvenile males has been used throughout North America as one of several aging criteria, but recent data demonstrate that the variability among individual Southeastern American Kestrels(E S. paulus)exce
Authors
J.A. Smallwood, C. Natale, K. Steenhof, M. Meetz, C.D. Marti, R.J. Melvin, G.R. Bortolotti, R. Robertson, S. Robertson, W.R. Shuford, S.A. Lindemann, B. Tornwall

Temporal variations of water quality and the taxonomic structures of phytoplankton and zooplankton assemblages in mountain lakes, Mount Rainier National Park, Washington USA

A synoptic inventory of physical and chemical properties and plankton assemblages of 27 mountain lakes was conducted at Mount Rainier National Park in 1988. From 1990–1993, die opportunity was presented to resurvey six of these lakes to determine inter-annual change within die set of characteristics surveyed in 1988. If changes were evident, a second objective was to provide guidance to park manag
Authors
Gary L. Larson, C. D. McIntire, Ruth W. Jacobs, R. Truitt

Within- and between-year dispersal of American Avocets among multiple western Great Basin wetlands

Connectivity of discrete habitat patches may be described in terms of the movements of individual organisms among such patches. To examine connectivity of widely dispersed alkali lake systems, we recorded post-breeding and subsequent breeding locations of color-banded American Avocets (Recurvirostra americana) in the western U.S. Great Basin, from 1995-1997. Among individuals observed during the p
Authors
Jonathan H. Plissner, Susan M. Haig, L.W. Oring

Integrating physical and chemical characteristics of lakes into the glacially influenced landscape of the Northern Cascade Mountains, Washington State, USA

A basic knowledge of the physical and chemical characteristics of lakes is needed by management to make informed decisions to protect water resources. In this study we investigated some of the physical and chemical characteristics of 58 lakes in alpine, subalpine, and forest vegetation zones in a natural area (North Cascades National Park Service Complex) between 1989 and 1993. The objectives of t
Authors
Gary L. Larson, G.A. Lomnicky, Robert Hoffman, W.J. Liss, E. Deimling

Butyltin compounds in river otters (Lutra canadensis) from the northwestern United States

Butyltin compounds, including mono-, di-, and tributyltin (MBT, DBT, and TBT) were measured in livers of 40 adult river otters (Lutra canadensis) collected from rivers and coastal bays in Washington and Oregon, USA. Butyltins were found in all the river otters, at a concentration range of 8.5–2,610 ng/g, WW. The greatest concentration of total butyltins of 2,610 ng/g, WW, was found in a river otte
Authors
K. Kannan, Robert A. Grove, K. Senthilkumar, Charles J. Henny, J. P. Geisy

Detecting long-term hydrological patterns at Crater Lake, Oregon

Tree-ring chronologies for mountain hemlock (Tsuga mertensiana) were used to reconstruct the water level of Crater Lake, a high-elevation lake in the southern Cascade Range of Oregon. Reconstructions indicate that lake level since the late 1980s has been lower than at any point in the last 300 years except the early 1930s to mid 1940s. Lake level was consistently higher during the Little Ice Age
Authors
D. L. Peterson, D.G. Silsbee, Kelly T. Redmond

Chlorinated hydrocarbons in livers of American mink (Mustela vison) and river otter (Lutra canadensis) from the Columbia and Fraser River Basins, 1990-1992

We investigated chlorinated hydrocarbon contaminants in aquatic mustelid species on the Fraser and Columbia Rivers of northwestern North America. Carcasses of river otter (Lutra canadensis) (N=24) and mink (Mustela vison) (N=34) were obtained from commercial trappers during the winters of 1990–91 and 1991–92. Pooled liver samples were analyzed for organochlorine pesticides, polychlorinated bipheny
Authors
J. E. Elliott, Charles J. Henny, M.L. Harris, L. K. Wilson, R. J. Norstrom