Book Chapters
Science Quality and Integrity
The USGS provides unbiased, objective, and impartial scientific information upon which our audiences, including resource managers, planners, and other entities, rely.
The USGS provides unbiased, objective, and impartial scientific information upon which our audiences, including resource managers, planners, and other entities, rely.
Browse more than 5,500 book chapters authored by our scientists over the past 100+ year history of the USGS and refine search by topic, location, year, and advanced search.
Filter Total Items: 6063
Carnivorous mammals: the case of the sea otter
No abstract available at this time
Authors
J. A. Estes
Causes and importance of genetic differences between groups of test fish
No abstract available at this time
Authors
R.C. Simon, W. B. Schill, H. L. Kincaid
Cell lines used for the production of viral fish disease agents
No abstract available at this time
Authors
B. C. Lidgerding
Characterization of petroleum hydrocarbons in tissues of birds killed in the Amoco Cadiz oil spill
Results of the chemical analysis for petroleum hydrocarbons of muscle and liver tissue of several species of seabirds found washed ashore in the area affected by the Amoco Cadiz oil spill.
Authors
G.C. Lawler, J.P. Holmes, D.M. Adamkiewicz, M.I. Shields, J. -Y. Monnat, J.L. Laseter
Chronology of mudflows in the South Fork and North Fork Toutle River following the May 18 eruption
No abstract available.
Authors
J. E. Cummans
Considerations for selecting fish production facilities
No abstract available at this time
Authors
N. C. Parker
Diagnostic brain residues of dieldrin: Some new insights
Forty adult male cowbirds were fed a diet containing 20 ppm dieldrin; 20 of the birds were randomly selected to die from dieldrin poisoning and 20 were sacrificed when dieldrin had made them too sick to eat. An average of 6.8 ppm dieldrin (range of 1.51 to 11.7) in the brain on a wet-weight basis was associated with a treatment-related cessation of feeding, whereas an average of 16.3 ppm (range of
Authors
G. H. Heinz, R. W. Johnson
Discriminant analysis in wildlife research: Theory and applications
Discriminant analysis, a method of analyzing grouped multivariate data, is often used in ecological investigations. It has both a predictive and an explanatory function, the former aiming at classification of individuals of unknown group membership. The goal of the latter function is to exhibit group separation by means of linear transforms, and the corresponding method is called canonical analysi
Authors
B.K. Williams
Distance estimation as a variable in estimating bird numbers from vocalizations
No abstract available.
Authors
J. M. Scott, F.L. Ramsey, C.B. Kepler
Effect of time of day on bird activity
Breeding season activity, based on detections recorded on more than a million 3. minute Breeding Bird Survey stops, reaches a peak for most species during the hour centered at sunrise or in the following hour. Activity of most species then declines gradually as the morning progresses. When large samples are considered, activity patterns for a given species are quite constant from year to year; bu
Authors
C.S. Robbins
Effects of forest fragmentation on avifauna of the eastern deciduous forest
No abstract available.
Authors
R.F. Whitcomb, C.S. Robbins, J.F. Lynch, B.L. Whitcomb, M. K. Klimkiewicz, D. Bystrak