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Publications

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

Filter Total Items: 16784

Enteric redmouth bacterium: comparison of isolates from different geographic areas

No abstract available.
Authors
G. L. Bullock, H. M. Stuckey, E. B. Shotts

Corynebacterial kidney disease: egg transmission following iodophore disinfection

No abstract available.
Authors
G. L. Bullock, H. M. Stuckey, D. Mulcahy

Feeding habitat use by colonially-breeding herons, egrets, and ibises in North Carolina

Nine species of herons, egrets, and ibises were followed by airplane from a nesting colony near Beaufort, North Carolina to their feeding sites. Except for Cattle Egrets, which flew exclusively to fields and dumps, the birds flew mainly to saltmarsh habitat. The selection of feeding habitats by Great Egrets and Louisiana Herons was directly related to tidal depth. The Great Egret was the only spec
Authors
Thomas W. Custer, Ronald G. Osborn

Nutrient requirements of fishes

No abstract available at this time
Authors
G. Post, G. L. Rumsey

Ciliates of freshwater fishes

No abstract available at this time
Authors
G. L. Hoffman

Alternative sources of vitamin C for channel catfish

No abstract available at this time
Authors
T.M. Brandt, C.W. Deyoe, P.A. Seib

Atlantic Flyway review: Region V: Laurel, Prince Georges County, MD (390-0765)

Back-yard banding above the Patuxent River gorge was limited to early mornings and evenings on 28 days from 20 August through 12 October, and four full days within the same period.Although the number of birds captured per 100 net-hours was well above average in each of the three months, the only species banded in unusually high numbers was the Gray Catbird (68 birds vs. 61, 39, and 32 in 1973, 197
Authors
Chandler S. Robbins

Floods of July 19-20, 1977 in the Johnstown area, western Pennsylvania

Intense rainfall on the evening of July 19 and early morning hours of July 20, 1977, resulted in moderate to record flooding throughout much of an eight-county area of southwest Pennsylvania. In a 400-square-mile area directly north and east of Johnstown, rainfall totals of 6 to 12 inches were measured in a six to eight-hour period. Flood peaks having recurrence intervals greater than 100 years we
Authors
Stan A. Brua