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: 41764
The return on the blueback salmon to the Columbia River
THE year 1941 was a crucial one for the blueback salmon of the Columbia River. During that year, one brood came closer to extinction than was realized by more than a few individuals. The immediate causes were not overfishing, hydroelectric power development, or irrigation—although these factors continued to exert their long-standing effects. The direct causes can be attributed to an “act of God” p
Authors
Frederick S. Fisher
A report upon the Grand Coulee Fish Maintenance Project 1939-1947
The construction or Grand Coulee Dam, on the upper Columbia River, involved the loss of 1,140 lineal miles of spawning and rearing stream to the production of anadromous fishes. The fact that the annual value of these fish runs to the nation was estimated at $250,000 justified reasonable expenditures to assure their perpetuation. It was found economically infeasible to safely collect and pass adul
Authors
F. F. Fish, Mitchell G. Hanavan
Removal of excess nitrogen in a hatchery water supply
The water system at the U. S. Fish Cultural Station, Leavenworth, Washington, has been supplemented with two wells that were to be used to increase the temperature of the water during the winter and to cool the Water in the summer if necessary. The well water proved to be unsuitable for hatchery purposes because it was supersaturated with nitrogen, causing "gas-bubble" disease among fish subjected
Authors
R.R. Rucker
Twelfth breeding-bird census. 5. Apple orchards
No abstract available.
Authors
P. F. Springer, R. E. Stewart
[Book review] The Land and Wildlife, by Edward H. Graham, Oxford University Press, New York, 1947
No abstract available.
Authors
D.L. Allen
Hazards associated with handling the new organic phosphates
No abstract available.
Authors
J.C. Ward, J.B. DeWitt
Effect of bait in live trapping Peromyscus
SUMMARY: Evidence from live trapping tests indicated that Peromyscus leucopus did not leave their home ranges because of the attraction of trap bait in nearby areas. A trap line down the center of a heavily live-trapped area caught as many mice before the area trapping as afterward. Thus, there was reason to believe that the area trapping did not serve to pre-bait the mice. Two unbait
Authors
L. F. Stickel
The trap line as a measure of small mammal populations
SUMMARY: The value of a line of traps as a measure of relative abundance of small mammals was studied by field trials on Peromyscus leucopus populations. Comparisons were made between the numbers of mice captured by a line of live traps and the numbers captured in intensive live trapping of a larger area surrounding the line. Trials were made in bottomland woods where mice were numerous and in
Authors
L. F. Stickel