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Publications

Browse publications authored by our scientists.  Publications available are: USGS-authored journal articles, series reports, book chapters, other government publications, and more. **Disclaimer: The views expressed in Non-USGS publications are those of the author and do not represent the views of the USGS, Department of the Interior, or the U.S. Government.

Filter Total Items: 4348

Evaluating the power to detect temporal trends in fishery independent surveys: A case study based on Gillnets Set in the Ohio waters of Lake Erie for walleye

Fishery-independent (FI) surveys provide critical information used for the sustainable management and conservation of fish populations. Because fisheries management often requires the effects of management actions to be evaluated and detected within a relatively short time frame, it is important that research be directed toward FI survey evaluation, especially with respect to the ability to detect
Authors
Tyler Wagner, Christopher S. Vandergoot, Jeff Tyson

Converting nonstandard fish sampling data to standardized data

Fishery biologists spend considerable effort over multiple years collecting data on fish population and community status using a particular sampling method or set of methods. However, new (and often more effective) sampling methods and technologies are continuously being developed. To incorporate these new sampling techniques, fishery biologists need a means for converting sample data collected us
Authors
James Peterson, Craig P. Paukert

Standard methods for sampling North American freshwater fishes

This important reference book provides standard sampling methods recommended by the American Fisheries Society for assessing and monitoring freshwater fish populations in North America. Methods apply to ponds, reservoirs, natural lakes, and streams and rivers containing cold and warmwater fishes. Range-wide and eco-regional averages for indices of abundance, population structure, and condition for
Authors
Scott A. Bonar, Wayne A. Hubert, David W. Willis

Morphological characteristics and growth of northern pike in waters of the United States

No abstract available.
Authors
Y.G. Kuzmenko, T.B. Spesyviy, Scott A. Bonar

Climate change adaptation for the US National Wildlife Refuge System

Since its establishment in 1903, the National Wildlife Refuge System (NWRS) has grown to 635 units and 37 Wetland Management Districts in the United States and its territories. These units provide the seasonal habitats necessary for migratory waterfowl and other species to complete their annual life cycles. Habitat conversion and fragmentation, invasive species, pollution, and competition for wate
Authors
Brad Griffith, J. Michael Scott, Robert S. Adamcik, Daniel Ashe, Brian Czech, Robert Fischman, Patrick Gonzalez, Joshua J. Lawler, A. David McGuire, Anna Pidgorna

Sensitivity of the carbon cycle in the Arctic to climate change

The recent warming in the Arctic is affecting a broad spectrum of physical, ecological, and human/cultural systems that may be irreversible on century time scales and have the potential to cause rapid changes in the earth system. The response of the carbon cycle of the Arctic to changes in climate is a major issue of global concern, yet there has not been a comprehensive review of the status of th
Authors
A. David McGuire, Leif G. Anderson, Torben R. Christensen, Scott Dallimore, Laodong Guo, Daniel J. Hayes, Martin Heimann, T.D. Lorenson, Robie W. Macdonald, Nigel Roulet

Effects of commercial harvest on shovelnose sturgeon populations in the Upper Mississippi River

Shovelnose sturgeon Scaphirhynchus platorynchus have become an increasingly important commercial species in the upper Mississippi River (UMR) because of the collapse of foreign sturgeon (family Acipenseridae) populations and bans on imported caviar. In response to concerns about the sustainability of the commercial shovelnose sturgeon fishery in the UMR, we undertook this study to describe the dem
Authors
Jeff D. Koch, Michael C. Quist, Clay L. Pierce, Kirk A. Hansen, Michael J. Steuck

Tracking the Commonwealth’s moose: GPS technology and the Massachusetts moose research project

No abstract available.
Authors
Stephen DeStefano, David W. Wattles

Hemlock ecosystem monitoring of New River Gorge National River and Gauley River National Recreation Area vegetation and bird communities: 1998–2008

We initiated a long-term hemlock ecosystem monitoring study in 1998 on the New River Gorge National River (NERI) and Gauley River National Recreation Area (GARI), in Nicholas, Fayette, and Raleigh counties, West Virginia, to quantify the effects of hemlock woolly adelgid (HWA) on forest ecosystem dynamics. Hemlock vigor and degree of adelgid infestation were sampled in each fall 1998 through 2007
Authors
John M. Wood, Petra Bohall Wood, John Perez

Genetic conservation and paddlefish propagation

The conservation of genetic diversity of our natural resources is overwhelmingly one of the central foci of 21st century management practices. Three recommendations related to the conservation of paddlefish Polyodon spathula genetic diversity are to (1) identify genetic diversity at both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA loci using a suggested list of 20 sampling locations, (2) use genetic diversity e
Authors
Brian L. Sloss, Robert A. Klumb, Edward J. Heist

Multifunctional grass farming: Science and policy considerations

No abstract available.
Authors
George Boody, Prasanna H. Gowda, John Westra, Caroline van Schaik, Patrick Welle, Bruce C. Vondracek, Dennis Johnson
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