Charles Van Riper, III, Ph.D. (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 131
Challenges to natural resource monitoring in a small border park: terrestrial mammals at Coronado National Memorial, Cochise County, Arizona
Long-term monitoring in national parks is essential to meet National Park Service and other important public goals. Terrestrial mammals are often proposed for monitoring because large mammals are of interest to visitors and small mammals are important as prey. However, traditional monitoring strategies for mammals are often too expensive and complex to sustain for long periods...
Authors
Don E. Swann, Melanie Bucci, Amy Kuenzi, Barbara N. Alberti, Cecil R. Schwalbe
Developing an ecosystem services online decision support tool to assess the impacts of climate change and urban growth in the Santa Cruz watershed: Where we live, work, and play
Using respective strengths of the biological, physical, and social sciences, we are developing an online decision support tool, the Santa Cruz Watershed Ecosystem Portfolio Model (SCWEPM), to help promote the use of information relevant to water allocation and land management in a binational watershed along the U.S.-Mexico border. The SCWEPM will include an ES valuation system within a...
Authors
Laura M. Norman, Nita Tallent-Halsell, William B. Labiosa, Matt Weber, Amy McCoy, Katie Hirschboeck, James B. Callegary, Charles van Riper III, Floyd Gray
The Colorado Plateau IV: shaping conservation through science and management
Roughly centered on the Four Corners region of the southwestern United States, the Colorado Plateau covers some 130,000 square miles of sparsely vegetated plateaus, mesas, canyons, arches, and cliffs in Arizona, Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico. With elevations ranging from 3,000 to 14,000 feet, the natural systems found within the plateau are dramatically varied, from desert to alpine...
Authors
Brian F. Wakeling, Thomas D. Sisk
Book review: Conservation biology of Hawaiian forest birds: Implications for island avifauna
For many years, following the publication of Studies in Avian Biology No. 22 by Scott et al. (2001), ornithologists interested in Hawaiian birds have waited for the next synthesis volume on Hawaiian bird research. Finally there is one, and it is excellent. Thane Pratt and his colleagues from Hawaii have added another milestone in the punctuated equilibrium of information surrounding...
Authors
R. Todd Engstrom, Charles van Riper III
Southwestern desert resources
The southwestern deserts stretch from southeastern California to west Texas and then south to central Mexico. The landscape of this region is known as basin and range topography featuring to "sky islands" of forest rising from the desert lowlands which creates a uniquely diverse ecology. The region is further complicated by an international border, where governments have caused...
Authors
William Lee Halvorson, Charles van Riper III, Cecil R. Schwalbe
The Ecology of Parasite-Host Interactions at Montezuma Well National Monument, Arizona - Appreciating the Importance of Parasites
Although parasites play important ecological roles through the direct interactions they have with their hosts, historically that fact has been underappreciated. Today, scientists have a growing appreciation of the scope of such impacts. Parasites have been reported to dominate food webs, alter predator-prey relationships, act as ecosystem engineers, and alter community structure. In...
Authors
Chris O'Brien, Charles van Riper III
A neotropical migrant bird's dilemma: where to stop for a good meal
To learn how migrating birds determine where to stop and find food, scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey, Northern Arizona University, and The University of Arizona studied the behavior of 28 species of neotropical migrant songbirds - warblers, flycatchers, tanagers, and vireos - along the lower Colorado River from 2001 to 2004. They found that, like interstate travelers greeted by...
Authors
Joseph J. Fontaine, Charles van Riper III
Landbird migration in the American West: Recent progress and future research directions
Our knowledge of avian behaviors during the nonbreeding period still lags behind that of the breeding season, but the last decade has witnessed a proliferation in research that has yielded significant progress in understanding migration patterns of North American birds. And, although historically the great majority of migration research has been conducted in the eastern half of the...
Authors
J.D. Carlisle, Susan Knight Skagen, B.E. Kus, Charles van Riper III, K.L. Paxton, J.F. Kelly
Spatial and temporal variation in climate change: A bird’s eye view
Recent changes in global climate have dramatically altered worldwide temperatures and the corresponding timing of seasonal climate conditions. Recognizing the degree to which species respond to changing climates is therefore an area of increasing conservation concern as species that are unable to respond face increased risk of extinction. Here we examine spatial and temporal...
Authors
Joseph J. Fontaine, Karie L. Decker, Susan Knight Skagen, Charles van Riper III
Development of nine new microsatellite loci for the American beaver, Castor canadensis (Rodentia: Castoridae), and cross-species amplification in the European beaver, Castor fiber
We developed nine new nuclear dinucleotide microsatellite loci for Castor canadensis. All loci were polymorphic, except for one. The number of alleles ranged from two to four and from five to 12 in populations from Arizona and Wisconsin, respectively. Average heterozygosity ranged from 0.13 to 0.86 per locus. Since cross-species amplification in Castor fiber was successful only in four...
Authors
K. Pelz-Serrano, Adrian Munguia-Vega, Antoinette J. Piaggio, M. Neubaum, P. Munclinger, A. PArtl, Charles van Riper III, M. Culver
Flower power: Tree flowering phenology as a settlement cue for migrating birds
1. Neotropical migrant birds show a clear preference for stopover habitats with ample food supplies; yet, the proximate cues underlying these decisions remain unclear. 2. For insectivorous migrants, cues associated with vegetative phenology (e.g. flowering, leaf flush, and leaf loss) may reliably predict the availability of herbivorous arthropods. Here we examined whether migrants use...
Authors
L.J. McGrath, Charles van Riper III, J.J. Fontaine
Rethinking avian response to Tamarix on the lower Colorado River: A threshold hypothesis
Many of the world's large river systems have been greatly altered in the past century due to river regulation, agriculture, and invasion of introduced Tamarix spp. (saltcedar, tamarisk). These riverine ecosystems are known to provide important habitat for avian communities, but information on responses of birds to differing levels of Tamarix is not known. Past research on birds along the...
Authors
Charles van Riper III, K.L. Paxton, C. A. O'Brien, P.B. Shafroth, L.J. McGrath
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 131
Challenges to natural resource monitoring in a small border park: terrestrial mammals at Coronado National Memorial, Cochise County, Arizona
Long-term monitoring in national parks is essential to meet National Park Service and other important public goals. Terrestrial mammals are often proposed for monitoring because large mammals are of interest to visitors and small mammals are important as prey. However, traditional monitoring strategies for mammals are often too expensive and complex to sustain for long periods...
Authors
Don E. Swann, Melanie Bucci, Amy Kuenzi, Barbara N. Alberti, Cecil R. Schwalbe
Developing an ecosystem services online decision support tool to assess the impacts of climate change and urban growth in the Santa Cruz watershed: Where we live, work, and play
Using respective strengths of the biological, physical, and social sciences, we are developing an online decision support tool, the Santa Cruz Watershed Ecosystem Portfolio Model (SCWEPM), to help promote the use of information relevant to water allocation and land management in a binational watershed along the U.S.-Mexico border. The SCWEPM will include an ES valuation system within a...
Authors
Laura M. Norman, Nita Tallent-Halsell, William B. Labiosa, Matt Weber, Amy McCoy, Katie Hirschboeck, James B. Callegary, Charles van Riper III, Floyd Gray
The Colorado Plateau IV: shaping conservation through science and management
Roughly centered on the Four Corners region of the southwestern United States, the Colorado Plateau covers some 130,000 square miles of sparsely vegetated plateaus, mesas, canyons, arches, and cliffs in Arizona, Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico. With elevations ranging from 3,000 to 14,000 feet, the natural systems found within the plateau are dramatically varied, from desert to alpine...
Authors
Brian F. Wakeling, Thomas D. Sisk
Book review: Conservation biology of Hawaiian forest birds: Implications for island avifauna
For many years, following the publication of Studies in Avian Biology No. 22 by Scott et al. (2001), ornithologists interested in Hawaiian birds have waited for the next synthesis volume on Hawaiian bird research. Finally there is one, and it is excellent. Thane Pratt and his colleagues from Hawaii have added another milestone in the punctuated equilibrium of information surrounding...
Authors
R. Todd Engstrom, Charles van Riper III
Southwestern desert resources
The southwestern deserts stretch from southeastern California to west Texas and then south to central Mexico. The landscape of this region is known as basin and range topography featuring to "sky islands" of forest rising from the desert lowlands which creates a uniquely diverse ecology. The region is further complicated by an international border, where governments have caused...
Authors
William Lee Halvorson, Charles van Riper III, Cecil R. Schwalbe
The Ecology of Parasite-Host Interactions at Montezuma Well National Monument, Arizona - Appreciating the Importance of Parasites
Although parasites play important ecological roles through the direct interactions they have with their hosts, historically that fact has been underappreciated. Today, scientists have a growing appreciation of the scope of such impacts. Parasites have been reported to dominate food webs, alter predator-prey relationships, act as ecosystem engineers, and alter community structure. In...
Authors
Chris O'Brien, Charles van Riper III
A neotropical migrant bird's dilemma: where to stop for a good meal
To learn how migrating birds determine where to stop and find food, scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey, Northern Arizona University, and The University of Arizona studied the behavior of 28 species of neotropical migrant songbirds - warblers, flycatchers, tanagers, and vireos - along the lower Colorado River from 2001 to 2004. They found that, like interstate travelers greeted by...
Authors
Joseph J. Fontaine, Charles van Riper III
Landbird migration in the American West: Recent progress and future research directions
Our knowledge of avian behaviors during the nonbreeding period still lags behind that of the breeding season, but the last decade has witnessed a proliferation in research that has yielded significant progress in understanding migration patterns of North American birds. And, although historically the great majority of migration research has been conducted in the eastern half of the...
Authors
J.D. Carlisle, Susan Knight Skagen, B.E. Kus, Charles van Riper III, K.L. Paxton, J.F. Kelly
Spatial and temporal variation in climate change: A bird’s eye view
Recent changes in global climate have dramatically altered worldwide temperatures and the corresponding timing of seasonal climate conditions. Recognizing the degree to which species respond to changing climates is therefore an area of increasing conservation concern as species that are unable to respond face increased risk of extinction. Here we examine spatial and temporal...
Authors
Joseph J. Fontaine, Karie L. Decker, Susan Knight Skagen, Charles van Riper III
Development of nine new microsatellite loci for the American beaver, Castor canadensis (Rodentia: Castoridae), and cross-species amplification in the European beaver, Castor fiber
We developed nine new nuclear dinucleotide microsatellite loci for Castor canadensis. All loci were polymorphic, except for one. The number of alleles ranged from two to four and from five to 12 in populations from Arizona and Wisconsin, respectively. Average heterozygosity ranged from 0.13 to 0.86 per locus. Since cross-species amplification in Castor fiber was successful only in four...
Authors
K. Pelz-Serrano, Adrian Munguia-Vega, Antoinette J. Piaggio, M. Neubaum, P. Munclinger, A. PArtl, Charles van Riper III, M. Culver
Flower power: Tree flowering phenology as a settlement cue for migrating birds
1. Neotropical migrant birds show a clear preference for stopover habitats with ample food supplies; yet, the proximate cues underlying these decisions remain unclear. 2. For insectivorous migrants, cues associated with vegetative phenology (e.g. flowering, leaf flush, and leaf loss) may reliably predict the availability of herbivorous arthropods. Here we examined whether migrants use...
Authors
L.J. McGrath, Charles van Riper III, J.J. Fontaine
Rethinking avian response to Tamarix on the lower Colorado River: A threshold hypothesis
Many of the world's large river systems have been greatly altered in the past century due to river regulation, agriculture, and invasion of introduced Tamarix spp. (saltcedar, tamarisk). These riverine ecosystems are known to provide important habitat for avian communities, but information on responses of birds to differing levels of Tamarix is not known. Past research on birds along the...
Authors
Charles van Riper III, K.L. Paxton, C. A. O'Brien, P.B. Shafroth, L.J. McGrath