Douglas Johnson
Douglas Johnson is a Research Statistician (Emeritus) for the USGS Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center in Jamestown, North Dakota.
Science and Products
MMI: Multimodel inference or models with management implications?
A plan for the North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat)
Preliminary methodology to assess the national and regional impact of U.S. wind energy development on birds and bats
Conservation buffer distance estimates for Greater Sage-Grouse: a review
Behavior of bats at wind turbines
Wind turbines are causing unprecedented numbers of bat fatalities. Many fatalities involve tree-roosting bats, but reasons for this higher susceptibility remain unknown. To better understand behaviors associated with risk, we monitored bats at three experimentally manipulated wind turbines in Indiana, United States, from July 29 to October 1, 2012, using thermal cameras and other methods. We obser
A comprehensive analysis of small-passerine fatalities from collisions with turbines at wind energy facilities
Patterns in diurnal airspace use by migratory landbirds along an ecological barrier
Accuracy of aging ducks in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Waterfowl Parts Collection Survey
A model of strength
Migration and habitat preferences of Swainson's Hawks at an autumn stopover site in northwestern Texas
Monitoring that matters
The treatment of missing data in long-term monitoring programs
Science and Products
MMI: Multimodel inference or models with management implications?
A plan for the North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat)
Preliminary methodology to assess the national and regional impact of U.S. wind energy development on birds and bats
Conservation buffer distance estimates for Greater Sage-Grouse: a review
Behavior of bats at wind turbines
Wind turbines are causing unprecedented numbers of bat fatalities. Many fatalities involve tree-roosting bats, but reasons for this higher susceptibility remain unknown. To better understand behaviors associated with risk, we monitored bats at three experimentally manipulated wind turbines in Indiana, United States, from July 29 to October 1, 2012, using thermal cameras and other methods. We obser