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: 41772
Color of the tarsi and toes of the black rail
Examination of two fresh specimens of the Black Rail (Laterallus jamaicensis) has prompted us to call attention to the color of the tarsi and toes of this species, since our observations do not agree with published accounts. Audubon (Ornithological Biography, vol. IV; 361, 1838) and Friedmann (Birds of North and Middle America, U.S. Nat'l. Mus. Bull., 50: 154, 1941) state that the tarsi and toes a
Authors
B. Meanley, R. E. Stewart
Duck-wing collections - their history, current status, and potential uses
No abstract available.
Authors
A. D. Geis, S.M. Carney
A useful device for sampling understory woody vegetation
No abstract available.
Authors
T.H. Ripley, F.M. Johnson, W.P. Thomas
Clutch size of the clapper rail
Incidental information concerning the clutch size of the Clapper Rail (Rallus longirostris) was obtained during other studies of this species in the extensive salt marshes near Chincoteague, Virginia. Clutches were considered complete when repeated visits to the nest showed no additional eggs or when embryonic development could be clearly detected.
Authors
R. E. Stewart, B. Meanley
Peromyscus ranges at high and low population densities
Live-trapping studies at the Patuxent Wildlife Research Center, Maryland, showed that the ranges of wood mice were larger when the population density was lower and smaller when the population density was higher. When the population density was about 1.3 male mice per acre in June 1954, the average distance recorded between traps after four or more captures was 258 feet. When the population density
Authors
L. F. Stickel
A method of studying wild bird populations by mist-netting and banding
No abstract available.
Authors
D.D. Stamm, D.E. Davis, C.S. Robbins