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Publications

Below is a list of WERC's peer-reviewed publications. If you are searching for a specific publication and cannot find it in this list, please contact werc_web@usgs.gov

Filter Total Items: 3617

Macrofauna communities of exposed sandy beaches on the Southern California mainland and Channel Islands

No abstract available at this time
Authors
J.E. Dugan, D.M. Hubbard, D.L. Martin, J.M. Engle, D.M. Richards, G.E. Davis, K. D. Lafferty, R.F. Ambrose

Floristic surveys of Saguaro National Park Protected Natural Areas

No abstract available at this time
Authors
W. L. Halvorson, B.S. Gebow

Documenting trans-Himalayan migration through satellite telemetry: A report on capture, deployment, and tracking of bar-headed goose (Anser indicus)

Animal movement and migration studies have made significant progress with the use of telemetry. Conventional radio telemetry has been used in numerous studies in different regions. However, the use of this technology is restricted to species with limited range of movement. Applying this tool for long distance migrants is usually unsatisfactory. Other challenges such as hilly terrain or dense veget
Authors
Sàlim Javed, John Y. Takekawa, David C. Douglas, Asad R. Rahmani, Binod C. Choudhury, Steven L. Landfried, Shruti Sharma

Pepperweed: a growing threat to western wildlife habitat

Counts on photographs and visual estimates of the numbers of territorial gulls are usually reliable indicators of the number of gull nests, but single visual estimates are not adequate to measure the number of nests in individual colonies. To properly interpret gull counts requires that several islands with known numbers of nests be photographed to establish the ratio of gulls to nests applicable
Authors
D.S. Gilmer

Non-native grasses and fires create double jeopardy

No abstract available at this time
Authors
T. Esque, C. Schwalbe

Scientific meeting raises awareness of amphibian decline in Asia

Blood samples from 433 Peregrine Falcons (Falco peregrinus) during fall and spring migrations, 1976-80, indicated that most of their pesticide burden, primarily DDE, was accumulated on wintering grounds in Latin America. DDE in spring migrants returning from Latin America for the first time declined significantly from 1979 to 1980. Only about 10% of breeding-age females contained organochlorine re
Authors
Vance Vredenburg, Yuezhao Wang, Gary M. Fellers

Cryptic genetic variation and paraphyly in ravens

Widespread species that are morphologically uniform may be likely to harbour cryptic genetic variation. Common ravens (Corvus corax) have an extensive range covering nearly the entire Northern Hemisphere, but show little discrete phenotypic variation. We obtained tissue samples from throughout much of this range and collected mitochondrial sequence and nuclear microsatellite data. Our study reveal
Authors
K.E. Omland, C.L. Tarr, W.I. Boarman, J.M. Marzluff, R.C. Fleischer

Fire and exotic grasses changing Mojave's face

No abstract available at this time
Authors
M.L. Brooks, T. C. Esque

Book review: A natural history of the Sonoran Desert

Review info: A Natural History of the Sonoran Desert. Edited by S. J. Phillips and P. W. Comus. 2000. Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum Press, Tucson AZ, and University of California Press, Berkeley CA. 628 pp. Cloth ISBN 0-520-22029-3 Paper ISBN 0-520-21980-5.
Authors
Matthew L. Brooks

Estimating the magnitude of decline of the Florida torreya (Torreya taxifolia Arn.)

Torreya taxifolia is a coniferous tree that is endemic to the 35 km stretch of bluffs and ravines along the east side of the Apalachicola River in northern Florida and adjacent southern Georgia. This formerly locally abundant tree declined during the 1950s and 1960s as a result of disease and is currently on the US Endangered Species list. For sparsely distributed species it can often be difficult
Authors
Mark W. Schwartz, Sharon M. Hermann, Phillip J. van Mantgem