Publications
This list of publications includes peer-review journal articles, official USGS publications series, reports and more authored by scientists in the Ecosystems Mission Area. A database of all USGS publications, with advanced search features, can be accessed at the USGS Publications Warehouse.
Filter Total Items: 41772
Lake Michigan chemical data, 1954-55, 1960-61
This report presents without interpretation methods used in and the results of chemical analyses, and supplemental observations of temperatures at depth, transparency, and meteorological conditions for Lake Michigan in 1954, 1955, 1960, and 1961.
Authors
Alfred M. Beeton, James W. Moffett
Nocardial infection in hatchery-reared fingerling rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri)
No abstract available.
Authors
S. F. Snieszko, G. L. Bullock, C.E. Dunbar, L.L. Pettijohn
Uses of antibiotics and other antimicrobials in therapy of diseases of fishes
No abstract available.
Authors
K. Wolf, S. F. Snieszko
Amphibian cell culture: permanent cell line from the bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana)
No abstract available.
Authors
K. Wolf, M. C. Quimby
Pasteurella sp. from an epizootic of white perch (Roccus americanus) in Chesapeake Bay Tidewater areas
No abstract available.
Authors
S. F. Snieszko, G. L. Bullock, E. Hollis, J. G. Boone
Remarks on some facets of epizootiology of bacterial fish diseases
No abstract available.
Authors
S. F. Snieszko
Intracellular hemoglobin crystallization in two centrarchids, the largemouth bass and the bluegill
No abstract available.
Authors
A.E. Knight
Geographic distribution of some species of trichodinids (Ciliata: Peritricha) parasitic on fishes
No abstract available.
Authors
J. Lom, G. L. Hoffman
Comparison of various methods of hemoglobin determination on catfish blood
No abstract available.
Authors
H.N. Larsen
Crystal formation in furunculosis agar
SINCE ITS INTRODUCTION SOME MONTHS AGO, FURUNCULOSIS AGAR has been employed in the diagnosis of suspect furunculosis and also as a general purpose medium. During our work with this medium we have noticed discrete "colonies," of crystalline material, which very closely resemble microbial colonies. These crystal colonies are compact and appear on both the surface and subsurface; they occur in inocul
Authors
G. L. Bullock, A. J. Ross