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Publications

This list of publications includes peer-review journal articles, official USGS publications series, reports and more authored by scientists in the Ecosystems Mission Area. A database of all USGS publications, with advanced search features, can be accessed at the USGS Publications Warehouse.  

Filter Total Items: 41763

Two female mallards incubating on one nest

Abstract has not been submitted
Authors
H. F. Duebbert

White-faced ibis in McIntosh County, North Dakota

Abstract has not been submitted
Authors
H. F. Duebbert

Trumpeter swan in Kidder County, North Dakota

Abstract has not been submitted
Authors
L.M. Cowardin, J. C. Bartonek

New fashions for the duck marsh

Abstract has not been submitted
Authors
F.B. Lee, A.D. Kruse, W.H. Thornsberry

An improved girthometer for studies of gill net selectivity

Gill nets are effective for collecting samples of many fish species. These nets may be highly selective in their catch, depending on the mesh size or sizes used and on the size distribution and body shape of the fish in the population. Early studies related mesh selectivity to length or, in a few instances, to length and weight. Later studies showed that the selectivity of gill nets was related
Authors
Richard S. Wydoski, David R. Wolfert

Distribution and abundance of the Japanese snail, Viviparus japonicus, and associated macrobenthos in Sandusky Bay, Ohio

A survey of the macrobenthos of Sandusky Bay, Lake Erie, in June, 1963, provided information on the abundance and distribution of the introduced Japanese snail, Viviparus japonicus, which has become a nuisance to commercial seine fishermen. The abundance and distribution varied considerably within the bay; at the time of the survey, most snails were found near the north-central shore. Environmenta
Authors
David R. Wolfert, Jarl K. Hiltunen

Seasonal depth distribution of fish in southeastern Lake Michigan

This study is based on systematic seasonal bottom trawling between 3 and 50 fathoms (5.5 and 91.5 m.) from February to November 1964 and supplementary information from other experimental fishing at additional depths and with other gear. The seasonal depth distribution of eight common species is described, and temperature relations are discussed. Catch records for less common species are mentioned
Authors
LaRue Wells

Daytime distribution of Pontoporeia affinis off bottom in Lake Michigan

The vertical migration of the amphipod Pontoporeia affinis in Lake Michigan has been well documented by Wells, Marzolf, and McNaught and Hasler. Wells and Marzolf observed Pontoporeia off bottom only at night. McNaught and Hasler, however, found Pontoporeia above the bottom shortly after noon in a 24-hr study on 12 June 1965, and some individuals were taken just below the thermocline in all daylig
Authors
LaRue Wells

Species succession and fishery exploitation in the Great Lakes

The species composition of fish in the Great Lakes has undergone continual change since the earliest records. Some changes were caused by enrichment of the environment, but others primarily by an intensive and selective fishery for certain species. Major changes related to the fishery were less frequent before the late 1930's than in recent years and involved few species. Lake sturgeon (Acipenser
Authors
Stanford H. Smith

The alewife

When the first alewife, Alosa pseudoharengus, was discovered in Lake Michigan near South Manitou Island on May 5, 1949, few people would have guessed that it would become the best known fish of the lake in less than two decades. Now it competes only with the coho salmon in its claim to such fame. When the third specimen was officially recorded from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in March 1952, however, a
Authors
Stanford H. Smith

Comparative embryology of five species of lampreys of the upper Great Lakes

The four species of lampreys native to the upper Great Lakes (American brook lamprey, Lampetra lamotteni; chestnut lamprey, Ichthyomyzon castaneus; northern brook lamprey, I. fossor; and silver lamprey, I. unicuspis) were collected in various stages of their life cycle and maintained in the laboratory until sexually mature. Secondary sex characters of the four native species are compared. Several
Authors
Allen J. Smith, John H. Howell, George W. Piavis