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Publications

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

Filter Total Items: 16784

Howling at two Minnesota wolf pack summer homesites

Howling sessions were monitored at two Minnesota wolf pack homesites for 2255 h between 29 April and 3 August 1973. All sessions recorded occurred from dusk through early morning, with an evening peak for one pack. Within a night, multiple sessions were grouped temporally, most occurring within an hour of one another. Howling rates for both packs increased throughout the homesite season, with the
Authors
F.H. Harrington, L. D. Mech

Relating wolf scat content to prey consumed

In 9 trials, captive wolves (Canis lupus) were fed prey varying in size from snowshoe hares (Lepus americanus) to adult deer (Odocoileus virginianus), and the resulting scats were counted. Field-collectible scats were distinguished from liquid, noncollectible stools. I n collectible scats, the remains of small prey occurred in greater proportion relative to the prey's weight, and in lesser propor
Authors
T.J. Floyd, L. D. Mech, P.A. Jordan

Mexican nesting records for the American bittern

No abstract available.
Authors
R.C. Banks, R.W. Dickerman

Bald eagles nesting in Baja California

Published records of Bald Eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) nesting in Baja California during the last 50 years are nonexistent to our knowledge, and few records exist prior to that time. Friedmann et al. (1950:61, Pac. Coast Avifauna 29) describe the distribution of Bald Eagles in Baja California as "a scattering of pairs on both the Pacific and Gulf Sides." Nesting Bald Eagles were first reporte
Authors
Charles J. Henny, Daniel W. Anderson, C.E. Knoder

A new hybrid warbler combination

No abstract available.
Authors
R.C. Banks, J. Baird

Prealternate molt in nuthatches

Nuthatches of the genus Sitta constitute one of the passerine groups in which prealternate (prenuptial) molt is generally believed not to occur. Dwight (1900: 298) discussed this genus with the family Paridae and stated: "All the members of this family have only the annual moult. They are peculiar in assuming a juvenal plumage closely resembling the pale nuptial plumage which results from extreme
Authors
Richard C. Banks

Nomenclature of the black-bellied whistling-duck

There are two distinguishable subspecies of the Black-bellied Whistling-Duck, one in South America to eastern Panama and one from western Panama through Central America to the southernmost United States. The type locality of the species is the West Indies, but there is little evidence that birds from that area are anything but vagrants or birds imported from South America. All records of this spec
Authors
Richard C. Banks

Variation in reproductivity with age in the brown pelican

About 10% of the Brown Pelicans breeding in South Carolina are in immature plumage. In comparison to adult breeders, immatures nested later, laid a smaller clutch, nested more frequently in low ground that was flooded, lost a larger proportion of nestlings, and produced fewer downy young per nest. Factors such as experience in breeding and fishing success probably influence reproductive success of
Authors
Lawrence J. Blus, Julie A. Keahey

Avian cholera and organochlorine residues in an American oystercatcher

Pasteurella multocida, the causative bacterium of avian cholera, was isolated from cultures of the liver and heart blood of a female, adult American oystercatcher (Haematopus palliatus) found dead on the Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge, South Carolina, in May 1973. This is apparently the first record of avian cholera in the oystercatcher. Low levels of DDE were identified in tissues of the oy
Authors
L. J. Blus, L. N. Locke, E. Cromartie