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Publications

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

Filter Total Items: 16785

Managing visitor impacts in parks: A multi-method study of the effectiveness of alternative management practices

How can recreation use be managed to control associated environmental impacts? What management practices are most effective and why? This study explored these and related questions through a series of experimental ?treatments? and associated ?controls? at the summit of Cadillac Mountain in Acadia National Park, a heavily used and environmentally fragile area. The treatments included five manage
Authors
L.O. Park, J. L. Marion, R.E. Manning, S.R. Lawson, C. Jacobi

Freeze-frame fruit selection by birds

The choice of fruits by an avian frugivore is affected by choices it makes at multiple hierarchical levels (e.g., species of fruit, individual tree, individual fruit). Factors that influence those choices vary among levels in the hierarchy and include characteristics of the environment, the tree, and the fruit itself. Feeding experiments with wild-caught birds were conducted at El Tirol, Departa
Authors
Mercedes S. Foster

Hierarchical modeling of cluster size in wildlife surveys

Clusters or groups of individuals are the fundamental unit of observation in many wildlife sampling problems, including aerial surveys of waterfowl, marine mammals, and ungulates. Explicit accounting of cluster size in models for estimating abundance is necessary because detection of individuals within clusters is not independent and detectability of clusters is likely to increase with cluster si
Authors
J. Andrew Royle

Population dynamics of the Concho water snake in rivers and reservoirs

The Concho Water Snake (Nerodia harteri paucimaculata) is confined to the Concho–Colorado River valley of central Texas, thereby occupying one of the smallest geographic ranges of any North American snake. In 1986, N. h. paucimaculata was designated as a federally threatened species, in large part because of reservoir projects that were perceived to adversely affect the amount of habitat available
Authors
M.J. Whiting, J.R. Dixon, B.D. Greene, J.M. Mueller, O.W. Thornton, J. S. Hatfield, J. D. Nichols, J. E. Hines

Behavior comparisons for whooping cranes raised by costumed caregivers and trained for an ultralight-led migration

The successful reintroduction program being run by the Whooping Crane Eastern Partnership using whooping cranes (Grus americana) trained to fly behind ultralight aircraft depends on a supply of these trained crane colts each year. The crane colts are hatched from eggs contributed by the various partners and trained to follow costume clad humans and ultralight aircraft at USGS Patuxent Wildlife Re
Authors
Glenn H. Olsen

Estimating total population size for adult female sea turtles: Accounting for non-nesters

Assessment of population size and changes therein is important to sea turtle management and population or life history research. Investigators might be interested in testing hypotheses about the effect of current population size or density (number of animals per unit resource) on future population processes. Decision makers might want to determine a level of allowable take of individual turtles
Authors
W. L. Kendall, J.I. Richardson

Wildlife values of North American ricelands

Ricelands have become an indispensable component of waterbird habitat and a leading example of integrating agricultural and natural resource management in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley, Gulf Coast, and Central California. Residual rice, weed seeds, and invertebrates provide food for many avian species during fall and winter. In North America, considerable information exists on the use of ricef
Authors
J.M. Eadie, C.S. Elphick, K. J. Reinecke, M. R. Miller

Sediment ingestion rates in waterfowl (Anatidae) and their use in environmental risk assessment

When waterfowl (Anatidae) ingest sediment as they feed, they are exposed to the environmental contaminants in those sediments. The rate of ingestion may be key to assessing environmental risk. Rates of sediment ingestion were estimated as from <2% to 22% in 16 species of waterfowl collected in the northeastern United States. The piscivorous red-breasted merganser (Mergus serrator) ingested sedimen
Authors
W. Nelson Beyer, Matthew C. Perry, Peter C. Osenton

Quantifying the extent of river fragmentation by hydropower dams in the Sarapiquí River Basin, Costa Rica

Costa Rica has recently experienced a rapid proliferation of dams for hydropower on rivers draining its northern Caribbean slope. In the Sarapiquí River Basin, eight hydropower plants were built between 1990 and 1999 and more projects are either under construction or proposed. The majority of these dams are small (<15 m tall) and operate as water diversion projects.While the potential environmenta
Authors
Elizabeth P. Anderson, Catherine M. Pringle, Mary C. Freeman