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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: 41918

Stress-induced ascorbic acid depletion and cortisol production in two salmonid fishes

Interrenal ascorbic acid and serum cortisol were measured in non-specificity stressed yearling coho salmon and rainbow trout.Interrenal ascorbate was markedly decreased during stress but increased to normal if adaptation occurred.Serum cortisol was elevated by non-specific stress and remained high after interrenal ascorbate had returned to initial levels.
Authors
Gary Wedemeyer

Irradiation of fish fillets: Relation of vapor phase reactions to storage quality

Fish fillets irradiated under air, nitrogen, oxygen, or carbon dioxide atmospheres developed rancidlike flavors when they were stored at refrigerated temperatures. Packing and irradiating under vacuum or helium prevented development of off-flavors during storage.Significant quantities of nitrate and oxidizing substances were formed when oxygen, nitrogen, or air were present in the vapor or liquid
Authors
J. Spinelli, A.M. Dollar, Gary Wedemeyer, E.C. Gallagher

Chlorinated hydrocarbons in the young of Lake Michigan coho salmon

Three thousand eyed coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) eggs from Lake Michigan stock were sent by the Department of Natural Resources to the Fish Control Laboratory, La Crosse, Wis., on January 15, 1969, for use in evaluating candidate fish-cnotrol chemicals.
Authors
W. A. Willford, J.B. Sills, E.W. Whealdon

Chemical composition of rainbow trout urine following acute hypoxic stress

Rainbow trout (Salmo gairdnerii) were anesthetized with MS-222, catheterized, and introduced into urine collecting chambers. Twenty-four hours after introduction, a 4-hour accumulation of urine was collected to serve as the control. Water flow to the chambers was then discontinued for 30 minutes during which the oxygen content of the water exiting in the chamber dropped from 4.9 to 2.8 mg/l. Follo
Authors
Joseph B. Hunn

Determination of phosphate in natural waters by activation analysis of tungstophosphoric acid

Activation analysis may be used to determine quantitatively traces of phosphate in natural waters. Methods based on the reaction 31P(n,γ)32P are subject to interference by sulfur and chlorine which give rise to 32P through n,p and n,α reactions. If the ratio of phosphorus to sulfur or chlorine is small, as it is in most natural waters, accurate analyses by these methods are difficult to achieve. I
Authors
Herbert E. Allen, Richard B. Hahn

The influence of nitrogen on heterocyst production in blue-green algae

A series of experiments on heterocyst production in Anabaena variabilis provides some strong indirect evidence for the role of heterocysts in nitrogen fixation. Of the algae tested (Anabaena variabilis, A. inaequalis, A. cylindrica, A. flos-aquae, Tolypothrix distorta, Gloeotrichia echinulata, Aphanizomenon flos-aquae, Oscillatoria sp., and Microcystis aeruginosa), only those with heterocysts grew
Authors
Roann E. Ogawa, John F. Carr

[Book review] Life histories of North American cardinals, grosbeaks, buntings, towhees, finches, sparrows, and allies

The completion of an ornithological series as important as the Bent Life Histories is an exciting event. Here is a series of 21 volumes, spanning a history of nearly 60 years from inception to completion, containing over 9,500 text pages of information about North American birds, largely the work of one man – who was not professionally an ornithologist. One cannot well review the final number of s
Authors
R.C. Banks
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