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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

Foreword

No abstract available.
Authors
Jonathan M. Friedman, Michael L. Scott, Duncan Patten

Evaluating landscape health: Integrating societal goals and biophysical process

Evaluating landscape change requires the integration of the social and natural sciences. The social sciences contribute to articulating societal values that govern landscape change, while the natural sciences contribute to understanding the biophysical processes that are influenced by human activity and result in ecological change. Building upon Aldo Leopold's criteria for landscape health, the ro
Authors
D.J. Rapport, C. Gaudet, J.R. Karr, Jill Baron, C. Bohlen, W. Jackson, Bruce Jones, R.J. Naiman, B. Norton, M. M. Pollock

Chemical and biological characteristics of desert rock pools in intermittent streams of Capitol Reef National Park, Utah

Chemical variability and biological communities of rock pools found in small desert drainage basins of Capitol Reef National Park were characterized over 8 mon in 1994. Neither flooding, drying, nor the presence or absence of surrounding vegetated wetlands had a great effect on chemical composition, which was very dilute and fluctuated somewhat in response to rain events. Neither flooding nor dryi
Authors
Jill Baron, Toben LaFrancois, Boris C. Kondratieff

Carbon cycling in terrestrial environments: Chapter 17

This chapter reviews a number of applications of isotopic techniques for the investigation of carbon cycling processes. Carbon dioxide (C02) is an important greenhouse gas. Its concentration in the atmosphere has increased from an estimated 270 ppm at the beginning of the industrial revolution to ∼ 360 ppm at present. Climatic conditions and atmospheric C02 concentration also influence isotopic di
Authors
Yang Wang, Thomas G. Huntington, Laurie J. Osher, Leonard I Wassenaar, Susan E. Trumbore, Ronald Amundson, Jennifer W. Harden, Diane M. McKnight, Sherry L. Schiff, George R. Aiken, W. Berry Lyons, Ramon O. Aravena, Jill Baron

A policy model to initiate environmental negotiations: Three hydropower workshops

How do I get started in natural resource negotiations? Natural resource managers often face difficult negotiations when they implement laws and policies regulating such resources as water, wildlife, wetlands, endangered species, and recreation. As a result of these negotiations, managers must establish rules, grant permits, or create management plans. The Legal‐Institutional Analysis Model (LIAM)
Authors
Berton Lee Lamb, Jonathan G. Taylor, Nina Burkardt, Phadrea D. Ponds

Selecting habitat management strategies on refuges

This report is a joint effort of the Biological Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) to provide National Wildlife Refuge (NWR) managers guidance on the selection and evaluation of habitat management strategies to meet stated objectives. The FWS recently completed a handbook on writing refuge management goals and objectives (U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Authors
Richard L. Schroeder, Wayne J. King, John E. Cornely

Viewpoint: Sustainability of piñon-juniper ecosystems - A unifying perspective of soil erosion thresholds

Many pinon-juniper ecosystem in the western U.S. are subject to accelerated erosion while others are undergoing little or no erosion. Controversy has developed over whether invading or encroaching pinon and juniper species are inherently harmful to rangeland ecosystems. We developed a conceptual model of soil erosion in pinon-jumper ecosystems that is consistent with both sides of the controversy
Authors
David W. Davenport, D.D. Breshears, B.P. Wilcox, Craig D. Allen

Information-theoretic model selection and model averaging for closed-population capture-recapture studies

Specification of an appropriate model is critical to valid statistical inference. Given the “true model” for the data is unknown, the goal of model selection is to select a plausible approximating model that balances model bias and sampling variance. Model selection based on information criteria such as AIC or its variant AICc, or criteria like CAIC, has proven useful in a variety of contexts incl
Authors
Thomas R. Stanley, Kenneth P. Burnham

Drought-induced shift of a forest-woodland ecotone: Rapid landscape response to climate variation

In coming decades, global climate changes are expected to produce large shifts in vegetation distributions at unprecedented rates. These shifts are expected to be most rapid and extreme at ecotones, the boundaries between ecosystems, particularly those in semiarid landscapes. However, current models do not adequately provide for such rapid effects—particularly those caused by mortality—largely bec
Authors
Craig D. Allen, David D. Breshears

Stream habitat analysis using the instream flow incremental methodology

This document describes the Instream Flow Methodology in its entirety. This also is to serve as a comprehensive introductory textbook on IFIM for training courses as it contains the most complete and comprehensive description of IFIM in existence today. This should also serve as an official guide to IFIM in publication to counteract the misconceptions about the methodology that have pervaded the p
Authors
Ken D. Bovee, Berton L. Lamb, John M. Bartholow, Clair B. Stalnaker, Jonathan Taylor, Jim Henriksen

Experimental methods for restoring boreal toad populations in Rocky Mountain National Park

No abstract available.
Authors
Therese L. Johnson, Erin L. Muths, P. Stephen Corn

619 ecosystem management projects

No abstract available.
Authors
Thomas R. Stanley, Joel T. Heinen, James R. Strittholt, Philip M. Fearnside, Gillian Cooper-Driver