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Publications

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

Filter Total Items: 16784

Uptake of dietary PCB by pregnant big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus) and their fetuses

In a previous study (CLARK and LAMONT 1976), 26 pregnant big brown bats were captured, caged, and fed uncontaminated mealworms until their litters were born. Immediately after parturition, female bats and litters were frozen. Five litters included at least one dead young, and these five litters contained significantly more of the PCB, Aroclor 1260, than did the 21 litters with only living young...
Authors
D. R. Clark

Organochlorine residues and reproduction in the little brown bat, Laurel, Maryland - June 1976

Twelve of 43 pregnant little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus) collected at Montpelier Barn, Laurel, Maryland, gave birth to dead young. Eleven of these 12 dead neonates were abnormally small. Most of the stillbirths were attributable to unknown reproductive difficulties associated with first pregnancies, but four may have been due to high concentrations of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB) in the newbo
Authors
D. R. Clark, A. J. Krynitsky

Dieldrin-induced mortality in an endangered species, the gray bat (Myotis grisescens)

Brains of juvenile gray bats, Myotis grisescens, found dead beneath maternity roosts in two Missouri caves contained lethal concentrations of dieldrin. One colony appeared to be abnormally small, and more dead bats were found a year after the juvenile bats had been collected. This is the first report to link the field mortality of bats directly to insecticide residues acquired through the food cha
Authors
D. R. Clark, R. K. LaVal, D. M. Swineford

Insecticides applied to a nursery colony of little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus): lethal concentrations in brain tissues

-Forty-six Myotis lucifugus were collected in May and June 1974 at a nursery colony in Hillsborough County, New Hampshire, that had been sprayed with DDT and chlordane in August and September 1973. When collected, 27 bats were alive, two were convulsing, and 17 were dead. Brains, carcasses, and milk and masticated insects from stomachs were analyzed for organochlorine insecticides and polychlorina
Authors
D. R. Clark, T.H. Kunz, T. E. Kaiser

Six different plasma enzymes in bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) and their usefulness in pathological diagnosis

1. Activities of creatine phosphokinase, glutamic oxalacetic transaminase, glutamic pyruvic transaminase, lactate dehydrogenase, fructose diphosphate aldolase and cholinesterase were measured in plasma of bald eagles.2. There were no sex differences in the plasma enzyme activities.3. An acute dieldrin dosage (10 mg/kg) of a female bald eagle resulted in 400% increases in activities of plasma creat
Authors
M. P. Dieter, Stanley N. Wiemeyer

Evaluating call-count procedures for measuring local mourning dove populations

No abstract available.
Authors
M.J. Armbruster, T.S. Baskett, W.R. Goforth, K.C. Sakler

Biological perspectives for the mourning dove call-count survey

No abstract available.
Authors
T.S. Baskett, M.J. Armbruster, M. W. Sayre

Characteristics of woodcock hunters and woodcock harvest in Pennsylvania

No abstract available.
Authors
R.A. Coon, J.S. Lindzey, J.L. George

Habitat selection by breeding red-winged blackbirds

Habitat preferences of breeding Red-winged Blackbirds in an agricultural area were determined by comparing population density, landscape characteristics, and vegetational descriptions. Observations were made throughout the breeding season. Preferred breeding habitats of Red-wings, in order of preference, were wetlands, hayfields, old fields, and pastures. Males and females occupied old fields
Authors
P.H. Albers

The effects of petroleum on different stages of incubation in bird eggs

Artificially incubated mallard eggs were treated externally with 5 μl of No. 2 fuel oil or 5 μl of Southern Louisiana crude oil at various times during the incubation period. Embryos were most sensitive to petroleum during the first 10 days of incubation. Southern Louisiana crude oil was more toxic to mallard embryos than No. 2 fuel oil. Hatching weights of ducklings from treated eggs were usually
Authors
P.H. Albers

Effects of No. 2 fuel oil on common eider eggs

An oil spill near a breeding colony could result in the transfer of oil from the plumage and feet of incubating birds to their eggs. Microlitre amounts of No. 2 fuel oil were applied externally to common eider eggs in an island breeding colony in Maine. Clutches of eggs treated with 20 ?l of fuel oil had significantly greater embryonic mortality than the control clutches when they were examined 7
Authors
P.H. Albers, Robert C. Szaro