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Publications

These publications showcase the significant science conducted in our Science Centers.

Filter Total Items: 16780

Sexual maturation and productivity of Japanese quail fed graded concentrations of mercuric chloride

Japanese quail (Coturnix c. japonica) were fed 0, 2, 4, 8, 16, and 32 p.p.m. Hg as mercuric chloride (HgCl2) from the time of hatching up to the age of 1 year. None of the birds manifested any gross signs of mercury poisioning. Food consumption, growth rate, and weight maintenance were unaffected. Initial oviposition tended to occur at a younger age as dietary mercuric chloride increased, e.g., th
Authors
E. F. Hill, C.S. Shaffner

The effects of orchard pesticide applications on breeding robins

From 1966 through 1968, robins reproduced successfully in commercial apple orchards which were periodically sprayed with DDT, dieldrin, and other pesticides. Observations by a Z-man team using walkie-talkies revealed that breeding robins obtained essentially all food for themselves and nestlings from unsprayed areas adjacent to the orchards. Invertebrate trapping in sprayed and unsprayed areas sho
Authors
E.V. Johnson, G.L. Mack, D.Q. Thompson

Some characteristics of fall migration of female woodcock

Nine female woodcock (Philohela minor) were radio-tagged in central Pennsylvania before fall migration to monitor premigratory and migratory movements. Within 15 days of departure, 5 of the birds moved 0.8 to 8.0 km from their normally used area, but the remaining 4 did not move. In 1973 five marked woodcock began migration between 30 November and 8 December. In 1974, four birds departed between
Authors
R.A. Coon, P.D. Caldwell, G.L. Storm

White-tailed deer migration and its role in wolf predation

Seventeen white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) were radio-tagged in winter yards and tracked for up to 17 months each (881 locations) from January 1973 through August 1974 in the central Superior National Forest of NE Minnesota following a drastic decline in deer numbers. Ten vyolves (Canis lupus) from 7 packs in the same area were radiotracked before and/or during the same period (703 loca
Authors
R.L. Hoskinson, L. D. Mech

Aging immature mourning doves by primary feather molt

No abstract available.
Authors
G.H. Haas, S.R. Amend

Woodcock use of clearcut aspen areas in Wisconsin

Clearcut areas in northern Wisconsin aspen (Populus spp., mostly P. tremuloides) forests were highly attractive to woodcock (Philohela minor) for feeding and night-roosting, and made excellent sites for woodcock trapping and banding. Woodcock use of clearcuts was extended for several years by annually removing vegetation from trails with a bulldozer. A continued high demand for aspen pulpwood ma
Authors
J.B. Hale, L.E. Gregg

Population ecology of the mallard: VI. The effect of exploitation on survival

No abstract available.
Authors
David R. Anderson, Kenneth P. Burnham

Parasites and diseases of warmwater fishes

No abstract available.
Authors
Fred P. Meyer, Glenn L. Hoffman

Mineral resources of the Eagle Cap Wilderness and adjacent areas, Oregon

No abstract available.
Authors
Paul L. Weis, J. L. Gualtieri, William F. Cannon, Ernest T. Tuchek, Arel B. McMahan, Francis E. Federspiel

Preimpoundment water quality of Raystown Branch Juniata River and six tributary streams, south-central Pennsylvania

The Raystown Branch Juniata River watershed, which is the main water source for Raystown Lake, is a 960-square-mile (2,490 square kilometres) drainage basin in south-central Pennsylvania. Preimpoundment water-quality data were collected on the Raystown Branch and six tributary st.reams in the basin. Specific conductance values varied inversely with water discharge. The pH values were extremely low
Authors
Donald R. Williams

Preliminary results of preimpoundment water-quality studies in the Tioga River Basin, Pennsylvania and New York

The Tioga River and its major tributaries were sampled monthly from September 1973 to May 1975. Water quality in the Tioga River is degraded by acid-mine drainage entering the stream near Blossburg from both strip- and deep-mined areas. The stream supports few species of aquatic life from Blossburg to its confluence with Crooked Creek. Alkaline water of tributaries Mill Creek, Crooked Creek, and t
Authors
Janice R. Ward