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Publications

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

Filter Total Items: 16780

The toxicity of p,p'-DDT to the clapper rail

The LC50 (concentration of toxicant in the diet expected to kill half of the test birds in 5 days) for p,p' -DDT in clapper rails (Rallus longirostris) was found to be 1,612 ppm for males and 1,896 ppm for females. Amounts of DDT + DDD in the brains of birds that died were significantly greater (P < 0.01) than those in the brains of survivors. Thirty ppm DDT + DDD approximated the lower limit of
Authors
A. Van Velzen, J.F. Kreitzer

Effects of environmental pollutants on Connecticut and Maryland ospreys

Osprey (Pandion haliaetus) eggs were exchanged between Connecticut and Maryland osprey nests in 1968 and 1969 to test the hypothesis that the decline in reproductive success of Connecticut ospreys was caused by something within the external environment of the eggs. Incubation of 30 Connecticut osprey eggs by Maryland ospreys did not improve the hatching rate. Forty-five Maryland osprey eggs incu
Authors
Stanley N. Wiemeyer, P.R. Spitzer, W.C. Krantz, T. G. Lamont, E. Cromartie

Hooded merganser kills a meadow vole

No abstract available.
Authors
D. H. White

California condor plumage and molt as field study aids

An analysis is made of the reliability of plumage and molt characteristics of the California condor for estimating age and identifying individual birds. Neither character seems sufficiently reliable to use in more than a general way.
Authors
S.R. Wilbur

Scent-marking in wolves

No abstract available.
Authors
R.P. Peters, L. D. Mech

Weights, growth, and survival of timber wolf pups in Minnesota

Weights, growth rates, canine tooth lengths, and survival data were obtained from 73 wild wolf (Canis lupus) pups that were 8 to 28 weeks old when live-trapped in three areas of northern Minnesota from 1969 to 1972. Relative weights of wild pups are expressed as percentages of a standard weight curve based on data from captive pups of similar age. These relative weights varied greatly within lit
Authors
V. Van Ballenberghe, L. D. Mech