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Publications

FORT scientists have produced more than 1,500 peer reviewed publications that are registered in the USGS Publications Warehouse, along with many others prior to their work at the USGS or in conjunction with other government agencies. 

Filter Total Items: 2239

Effects of climate change on surface- and ground-water quality

No abstract available.
Authors
Peter S. Murdoch, Jill Baron, T. L. Miller

Spring-summer movements of bonytail in a Colorado River reservoir, Lake Mohave, Arizona and Nevada

The bonytail Gila elegans is a large-river minnow (Cyprinid) endemic to the Colorado River system of western North America. The species is federally listed as endangered, its biology poorly understood, and relatively little is known of its movements. Two short-term telemetry studies were conducted during 1996 and 1997 to assess spring-summer temporal and spatial movement patterns in Lake Mohave, A
Authors
Paul C. Marsh, Gordon Mueller

Development of a preliminary invertebrate index of biotic integrity for Lake Huron coastal wetlands

The biota of aquatic systems are integrators of overall habitat quality, revealing both episodic as well as cumulative disturbance, and therefore are able to serve as natural monitors of the systems they inhabit. Invertebrate communities from three relatively pristine coastal wetlands located along the northern shore of Lake Huron were compared to those from three relatively impacted Saginaw Bay c
Authors
Thomas M. Burton, Donald G. Uzarski, Joseph P. Gathman, John A. Genet, Brian E. Keas, Craig A. Stricker

Quality of life on the Colorado Plateau: A report to camera-survey collaborators in southeast Utah

What constitutes quality of life among community residents in southeastern and central Utah? What critical areas, elements, and special outdoor places are essential to quality of life in those areas? Answering these questions was the goal of this "quality-of-life" research collaboration in the Colorado Plateau region. Collaborators include the Utah Travel Council (UTC), Canyon Country Partnership,
Authors
Jonathan G. Taylor, Jessica B. Reis-Ruehrwein, Natalie R. Sexton, Dale J. Blahna

Applied historical ecology: Using the past to manage for the future

Applied historical ecology is the use of historical knowledge in the management of ecosystems. Historical perspectives increase our understanding of the dynamic nature of landscapes and provide a frame of reference for assessing modern patterns and processes. Historical records, however, are often too brief or fragmentary to be useful, or they are not obtainable for the process or structure of int
Authors
Thomas W. Swetnam, Craig D. Allen, Julio L. Betancourt

Runoff and erosion from a rapidly eroding pinyon-juniper hillslope

No abstract available.
Authors
B.P. Wilcox, J. Pitlick, Craig D. Allen, David W. Davenport

Mortality of riparian box elder from sediment mobilization and extended inundation

To explore how high flows limit the streamward extent of riparian vegetation we quantified the effects of sediment mobilization and extended inundation on box elder (Acer negundo) saplings along the cobble-bed Gunnison River in Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Monument, Colorado, USA. We counted and aged box elders in 144 plots of 37.2 m2, and combined a hydraulic model with the hydrologic re
Authors
Jonathan M. Friedman, Gregor T. Auble

Vegetation responses to natural regulation of elk in Rocky Mountain National Park

Little experimental information is available on the relationship between herbivory by native ungulates and vegetation in relatively undisturbed environments. A quasi-experimental situation exists in Rocky Mountain National Park, where elk (Cervus elaphus) populations have increased about 3-fold since 1968, following their release from artificial controls within the park boundaries. We reviewed dat
Authors
Linda Zeigenfuss, Francis J. Singer, David Bowden

Biogeographical profiles of shorebird migration in midcontinental North America

The biogeographic information described here will help identify the uniqueness of different regions of the plains to migrating shorebirds. Although shorebirds migrating along Atlantic and Pacific coastal areas are capable of long jumps between refueling stops, there is evidence that some species move short rather than long distances between refueling sites. Maps of distribution patterns and chrono
Authors
Susan K. Skagen, Peter B. Sharpe, Robert G. Waltermire, M. Beth Dillon

Hybridization and the phylogenetic relationship between polecats and domestic ferrets in Britain

Ferrets (Mustela furo) were domesticated from polecats (M. putorius, M. eversmannii) over 2000 years ago. Following their introduction to Britain, they escaped and hybridized with native European polecats (M. putorius). Native polecats declined to the point of near extinction prior to World War I, but have recently begun to expand from a Welsh refugium. Concern has arisen as to the extent of polec
Authors
A. Davison, J. D. S. Birks, H. I. Griffiths, A. C. Kitchener, D. Biggins, R. K. Butlin