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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

Notes on Bachman's sparrow in Central Louisiana

Notes on the ecology of Bachman’s Sparrow (Aimophila aestivalis) were obtained during a study of birds in relation to the direct or artificial seeding of Longleaf Pine (Pinus palustris) and Loblolly Pine (P. taeda) in central Louisiana from 1955 to 1957. Stoddard (in Burleigh, “Georgia Birds,” pp. 667-668, 1958) has presented an account of the ecology of this species in the pine woods of southern
Authors
B. Meanley

The North American tree ducks

No abstract available.
Authors
B. Meanley

Observations on the fulvous tree duck in Louisiana

The Fulvous Tree Duck is a locally common breeding bird of the rice fields of southwestern Louisiana. Observations made in 1955, 1956 and 1957, showed that this species was probably most abundant in the vicinity of Mamou, Evangeline Parish, and Roanoke, Jefferson Davis Parish. Tree ducks arrive in the rice country as the rice is planted in the spring and usually depart following fall harvest. A fe
Authors
B. Meanley, A.G. Meanley

The Patuxent Research Refuge

No abstract available.
Authors
A.L. Nelson

Effects of certain chemicals on mucus-producing cells of Petromyzon marinus

Tissue samples that contained slime-secreting cells were taken from the gills and epidermis of larval lampreys that had been poisoned by several compounds. Histochemical treatment of these pathological tissues helped delineate the fate of these mucus-producing areas of the ammocetes. It was shown that the slime-secreting cells, located at the tips of the gill filaments, lining the gill chamber, an
Authors
Philip J. Sawyer

Burrowing activities of the larval lamprey

Since the appearance in 1950 of Applegate's work on the sea lamprey in Michigan (U. S. Fish and Wildl. Serv., Spec. Sci. Rept.; Fish, No. 55) and the subsequent development of means to control lampreys in the Great Lakes, biologists have accumulated much additional information on adult lampreys. Larval lampreys, however, are difficult animals to observe in the f
Authors
Philip J. Sawyer

Rapid measurement of fish

No abstract available.
Authors
Leonard S. Joeris

Fluctuations in the population of yellow perch, Perca flavescens(Mitchill), in Saginaw Bay Lake Huron

SUMMARY: The value of a line of traps as a measure of relative abundance of small mammals was studied by field trials on Peromyscus leucopus populations. Comparisons were made between the numbers of mice captured by a line of live traps and the numbers captured in intensive live trapping of a larger area surrounding the line. Trials were made in bottomland woods where mice were numerous and in
Authors
Salah El-Din El-Zarka