Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Publications

USGS Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center staff publish results of their research in USGS series reports and in peer-reviewed journals. Publication links are below.  Information on all USGS publications can be found at the USGS Publications Warehouse.

Filter Total Items: 1907

Purple martins, then and now

Review of: The Purple Martin. Robin Doughty and Rob Fergus. 2002. University of Texas Press, Austin, Texas. 93 pages. $19.95 (cloth).
Authors
B. Euliss

A probable extralimital postbreeding assembly of bufflehead Bucephala albeola in southcentral North Dakota, USA, 1994-2002

The Bufflehead Bucephala albeola predominantly in Canada and Alaska (USA). Evidence suggests that the species may have recently expanded its breeding range southward into central and south-central North Dakota. This paper presents data on observations of Buffleheads during the breeding season in Kidder County, North Dakota, 1994-2002, and discusses the possibility that the species has not expanded
Authors
L.D. Igl

Predator selection of prairie landscape features and its relation to duck nest success

Mammalian predation is a major cause of mortality for breeding waterfowl in the U.S. Northern Great Plains, and yet we know little about the selection of prairie habitats by predators or how this influences nest success in grassland nesting cover. We selected 2 41.4-km2 study areas in both 1996 and 1997 in North Dakota, USA, with contrasting compositions of perennial grassland. A study area contai
Authors
M.L. Phillips, W.R. Clark, M.A. Sovada, D.J. Horn, Rolf R. Koford, R. J. Greenwood

Long-term and large-scale perspectives on the relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem functioning

In a growing body of literature from a variety of ecosystems is strong evidence that various components of biodiversity have significant impacts on ecosystem functioning. However, much of this evidence comes from short-term, small-scale experiments in which communities are synthesized from relatively small species pools and conditions are highly controlled. Extrapolation of the results of such exp
Authors
A.J. Symstad, F. S. Chapin, D.H. Wall, K.L. Gross, L.F. Huenneke, G.G. Mittelbach, Debra P. C. Peters, D. Tilman

Large-scale phytogeographical patterns in East Asia in relation to latitudinal and climatic gradients

Aim: This paper aims at determining how different floristic elements (e.g. cosmopolitan, tropical, and temperate) change with latitude and major climate factors, and how latitude affects the floristic relationships between East Asia and the other parts of the world. Location: East Asia from the Arctic to tropical regions, an area crossing over 50?? of latitudes and covering the eastern part of Chi
Authors
H. Qian, J.-S. Song, P. Krestov, Q. Guo, Z. Wu, X. Shen, X. Guo

Genetic variation in the midcontinental population of sandhill cranes, Grus canadensis

Three subspecies of sandhill crane (Grus canadensis) are recognized in the Midcontinental population, the lesser (Grus c. canadensis), Canadian (G. c. rowani), and greater (G. c. tabida). Blood samples collected on the population's primary spring staging area in Nebraska, U.S.A., were used to resolve the genetic relationship among these subspecies. Phylogenetic analysis of 27 G. canadensis, by DNA
Authors
Jessica L. Petersen, R. Bischof, G.L. Krapu, A.L. Szalanski

Incidence of Mink, Mustela vison, and River Otter, Lutra canadensis, in a highly urbanized area

Mink (Mustela vison) frequently inhabited or traversed a residential, business, and industrial part of the Twin Cities, Minnesota, with little water or natural vegetation. At least one River Otter (Lutra canadensis) also resided on a small pond on a golf course in the area for several winter months.
Authors
L. David Mech

Evaluation of landscape models for wolverines in the interior Northwest, United States of America

The wolverine (Gulo gulo) is an uncommon, wide-ranging carnivore of conservation concern. We evaluated performance of landscape models for wolverines within their historical range at 2 scales in the interior Northwest based on recent observations (n = 421) from Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana. At the subbasin scale, simple overlays of habitat and road-density classes were effective in predi
Authors
M.M. Rowland, M.J. Wisdom, D. H. Johnson, B.C. Wales, J.P. Copeland, F.B. Edelmann

Den site activity patterns of adult male and female swift foxes, Vulpes velox, in northwestern Texas

Activity of Swift Foxes (Vulpes velox) at den sites was studied in northwestern Texas during pup rearing seasons in 2000 and 2001 to determine role of males in parental care. Twenty-four percent of radio-collared females with a potential to breed successfully raised pups to eight weeks of age. We intensively monitored presence and absence of male and female Swift Foxes at two den sites each year.
Authors
Patrick R. Lemons, Warren B. Ballard, Robert M. Sullivan, Marsha A. Sovada

Effects of ungulates and prairie dogs on seed banks and vegetation in a North American mixed-grass prairie

The relationship between vegetation cover and soil seed banks was studied in five different ungulate herbivore-prairie dog treatment combinations at three northern mixed-grass prairie sites in Badlands National Park, South Dakota. There were distinct differences in both the seed bank composition and the aboveground vegetation between the off-prairie dog colony treatments and the on-colony treatmen
Authors
J. T. Fahnestock, D. L. Larson, G. E. Plumb, J.K. Detling

Male Brown-headed Cowbird Attacks and Kills a Nestling

I observed a male Brown-headed Cowbird (Molothrus ater) attack and kill a nestling of an unidentified passerine in a grassland field in Day County, South Dakota, in June 2000. The killing or removal of nestlings by female cowbirds has been reported by others, but this behavior has not been documented previously in male cowbirds.
Authors
L.D. Igl

Invertebrate response to snow goose herbivory on moist-soil vegetation

Foraging activity by snow geese (Chen caerulescens) often creates large areas devoid of vegetation ("eat-outs") in moist-soil impoundments and coastal wetlands. Open-water habitats that result from eat-outs may be valuable foraging areas for other wetland-dependent birds (i.e., waterfowl and shorebirds). However, few studies have examined the effects of goose-induced habitat changes on invertebrat
Authors
M. H. Sherfy, R. L. Kirkpatrick