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Filter Total Items: 16785

Effects of body weight and age on the time and pairing of American black ducks

I used captive young and adult American Black Ducks (Anas rubripes) during October-February 1984-1985 to test whether body weight and age affected time of pair-bond formation. Eighty ducks were marked individually, and 10 ducks (6 males and 4 females, half of each age class) were assigned to each of 8 experimental pens. Ducks in 4 pens received an ad libitum diet of commercial duck food, and ducks
Authors
G. R. Hepp

Cholinesterase inhibition in meadow voles (Microtus Pennsylvanicus) following field applications of orthene®

Brain acetylcholinesterase activity in field-caught meadow voles (Microtus pennsylvanicus) was depressed after a field-spray of Orthene® (acephate: acetylphosphoramidothioic acid O,S-dimethyl ester) by as much as 32% in 1982 and 38% in 1983. Short-term recovery was demonstrated and occurred in a time-dependent fashion in 1982. Plasma Cholinesterase levels were more variable but also were depressed
Authors
David A. Jett

Mercury, cadmium, lead, and selenium in three waterbird species nesting in Galveston Bay, Texas, USA

Heavy metal and selenium concentrations were determined in Olivaceous Cormorants (Phalacrocorax olivaceus ), Laughing gulls (Larus atricilla ), and Black Skimmers (Rynchops niger ) nesting in Galveston Bay, Texas, during 1980-81. Lead was detected at low levels in a small proportion of the liver samples. Mercury was present in all livers sampled, the highest levels being found in cormorants (7.8
Authors
K. A. King, E. Cromartie

Analysis of cyanide in whole blood of dosed cathartids

A gas-liquid chromatographic method was modified to quantify both unmetabolized (“free”) and metabolized (“bound”, i.e., thiocyanates) cyanides. The methods for both are efficient and sensitive to 0.05 ppm. Repeated freezing and thawing of whole blood from treated cathartids caused an initial increase in free cyanide concentrations, followed by a gradual decline to a plateau. Bound cyanide concent
Authors
A. J. Krynitsky, Stanley N. Wiemeyer, E. F. Hill, J. W. Carpenter

Effects of liberalized harvest regulations on wood ducks in the Atlantic Flyway

Beginning in 1977the FWS provided southern Atlantic Flyway states the opportunity to liberalize wood duck harvest regulations. Harvest subsequently increased throughout the flyway but appeared to be more a function of population growth than changes in regulations. In the South, harvest rate increased only slightly for young males and no decline in average survival was detected. We found no evidenc
Authors
F.A. Johnson, J. E. Hines, F. Montalbano, J. D. Nichols

Hatching success of Caspian terns nesting in the lower Laguna Madre, Texas, USA

The average clutch size of Caspian Terns nesting in a colony in the Lower Laguna Madre near Laguna Vista, Texas, USA in 1984 was 1.9 eggs per nest. Using the Mayfield method for calculating success, one egg hatched in 84.1% of the nests and 69.8% of the eggs laid hatched. These hatching estimates are as high or higher than estimates from colonies in other areas.
Authors
C. A. Mitchell, T. W. Custer

Relationship between snow depth and gray wolf predation on white-tailed deer

Survival of 203 yearling and adult white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) was monitored for 23,441 deer days from January through April 1975-85 in northeastern Minnesota. Gray wolf (Canis lupus) predation was the primary mortality cause, and from year to year during this period, the mean predation rate ranged from 0.00 to 0.29. The sum of weekly snow depths/month explained 51% of the variation
Authors
M.E. Nelson, L. D. Mech

Estimating nest detection probabilities for white-winged dove nest transects in Tamaulipas, Mexico

Nest transects in nesting colonies provide one source of information on White-winged Dove (Zenaida asiatica asiatica) population status and reproduction. Nests are counted along transects using standardized field methods each year in Texas and northeastern Mexico by personnel associated with Mexico's Office of Flora and Fauna, the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Authors
J. D. Nichols, R. E. Tomlinson, G. Waggerman

Lead poisoning in free-ranging California condors

No abstract available.
Authors
D.L. Janssen, J.E. Oosterhuis, J. L. Allen, M.P. Anderson, D.G. Kelts, Stanley N. Wiemeyer

Physiological condition of autumn-banded mallards and its relationship to hunting vulnerability

An important topic of waterfowl ecology concerns the relationship between the physiological condition of ducks during the nonbreeding season and fitness, i.e., survival and future reproductive success. We investigated this subject using direct band recovery records of mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) banded in autumn (1 Oct-15 Dec) 1981-83 in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley (MAV) [USA]. A condition i
Authors
G. R. Hepp, R.J. Blohm, R. E. Reynolds, J. E. Hines, J. D. Nichols