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Conference Papers

Browse almost 5,000 conference papers authored by our scientists and refine search by topic, location, year, and advanced search.

Filter Total Items: 5326

Delayed age at weaning in Southeast Alaska Steller sea lions determined using stable isotopes of carbon and nitrogen

No abstract available.
Authors
Lorrie D. Rea, A.R. Banks, Sean D. Farley, Craig A. Stricker, B. Fadely, J. Mellish, A. Christ, K. Pitcher

Foraging ecology of bottlenose dolphins: a stable isotopic reconstruction over six decades

No abstract available.
Authors
S.L. Rossman, N.B. Barros, Craig A. Stricker, P.H. Ostrom, R.S. Wells

The history of mammal eradications in Hawai`i and the United States associated islands of the Central Pacific

Many eradications of mammal taxa have been accomplished on United States associated islands of the Central Pacific, beginning in 1910. Commonly eradicated species are rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus), rats (Rattus spp.), feral cats (Felis catus), and several feral ungulates from smaller islands and fenced natural areas on larger Hawaiian Islands. Vegetation and avifauna have demonstrated dramatic r
Authors
S.C. Hess, J.D. Jacobi

Biologically-mediated flux of trace metals from streams to riparian spiders: a large scale survey in mineralized alpine ecosystems

No abstract available.
Authors
J.M. Kraus, R. B. Wanty, T.S. Schmidt, D.M. Walters, C. A. Stricker

Exploring the potential for a fused Landsat-MODIS snow covered area product

Results from nine 3 x 3 km study areas in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado, USA demonstrate there is potential for using sporadically acquired Landsat images in combination with daily coarse resolution fractional snow covered area (SCA) images to produce daily high resolution binary SCA images. The results also highlight several challenges to implementing this type of approach. The approach describ
Authors
David J. Selkowitz

Catfish science: Status and trends in the 21st century

Catfish science, the study of the fish order Siluriformes, is a diverse and expanding field in terms of advances and breadth of topics. We compiled literature from primary fisheries journals as an index of interest and advances in catfish science to examine temporal trends in the field. The number of catfish scientific publications varied over the past century with strong peaks during 1975–1979 an
Authors
Thomas J. Kwak, Mark T. Porath, Paul H. Michaletz, Vincent H. Travnichek

Developing a regional canopy fuels assessment strategy using multi-scale lidar

Accurate assessments of canopy fuels are needed by fire scientists to understand fire behavior and to predict future fire occurrence. A key descriptor for canopy fuels is canopy bulk density (CBD). CBD is closely linked to the structure of the canopy; therefore, lidar measurements are particularly well suited to assessments of CBD. LANDFIRE scientists are exploring methods to integrate airborne an
Authors
Birgit E. Peterson, Kurtis Nelson

Undiscovered hydrocarbon resources in the U.S. Gulf Coast Jurassic Norphlet and Smackover Formations

The U.S. Geological Survey has completed assessments of undiscovered technically recoverable oil and gas resources in the Jurassic Norphlet and Smackover formations of the onshore coastal plain and State waters of the U.S. Gulf Coast. The Norphlet Formation consists of sandstones and interbedded shales and siltstones deposited during a marine transgression. Along its northeast margin, deposition o
Authors
Ofori N. Pearson

Assessment of in-place oil shale resources of the Eocene Green River Formation, a foundation for calculating recoverable resources

The recently completed assessment of in-place resources of the Eocene Green River Formation in the Piceance Basin, Colorado; the Uinta Basin, Utah and Colorado; and the Greater Green River Basin Wyoming, Colorado, and Utah and their accompanying ArcGIS projects will form the foundation for estimating technically-recoverable resources in those areas. Different estimates will be made for each of the
Authors
Ronald C. Johnson, Tracy J. Mercier

Using dissolved gases to observe the evolution of groundwater age in a mountain watershed over a period of thirteen years

Baseflows in snowmelt-dominated mountain streams are critical for sustaining ecosystems and water resources during periods of greatest demand. Future climate predictions for mountainous areas throughout much of the western U.S. include increasing temperatures, declining snowpacks, and earlier snowmelt periods. The degree to and rate at which these changes will affect baseflows in mountain streams
Authors
Andrew H. Manning