Layne Adams, Ph.D. (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 60
Wolves will not provide small-scale ecological restoration
Licht and colleagues (BioScience 60: 147–153) proposed a paradigm shift in wolf management to include the introductions of small, highly manipulated groups of wolves (Canis lupus) to confined natural areas to facilitate ecosystem recovery. Certainly, reductions or losses of apex predators from many regions worldwide have had profound effects on ecosystem characteristics (Soulé et al...
Authors
Jerrold L. Belant, Layne G. Adams
No evidence of trophic mismatch for caribou in Greenland
No abstract available.
Authors
Dennis B. Griffith, Layne G. Adams, David C. Douglas, Christine Cuyler, Robert S. White, Anne Gunn, Donald E. Russell, Raymond D. Cameron
Population-level resource selection by sympatric brown and American black bears in Alaska
Distribution theory predicts that for two species living in sympatry, the subordinate species would be constrained from using the most suitable resources (e.g., habitat), resulting in its use of less suitable habitat and spatial segregation between species. We used negative binomial generalized linear mixed models with fixed effects to estimate seasonal population-level resource...
Authors
Jerrold L. Belant, Brad Griffith, Yingte Zhang, Erich H. Follmann, Layne G. Adams
Are inland wolf-ungulate systems influenced by marine subsidies of Pacific salmon?
Wolves (Canis lupus) in North America are considered obligate predators of ungulates with other food resources playing little role in wolf population dynamics or wolf–prey relations. However, spawning Pacific salmon (Oncorhyncus spp.) are common throughout wolf range in northwestern North America and may provide a marine subsidy affecting inland wolf–ungulate food webs far from the coast...
Authors
Layne G. Adams, Sean D. Farley, Craig A. Stricker, Dominic J. Demma, Gretchen H. Roffler, Dennis C. Miller, Robert O. Rye
Movements of juvenile Gyrfalcons from western and interior Alaska following departure from their natal areas
Juvenile raptors often travel thousands of kilometers from the time they leave their natal areas to the time they enter a breeding population. Documenting movements and identifying areas used by raptors before they enter a breeding population is important for understanding the factors that influence their survival. In North America, juvenile Gyrfalcons (Falco rusticolus) are routinely...
Authors
Carol L. McIntyre, David C. Douglas, Layne G. Adams
Stochastic and compensatory effects limit persistence of variation in body mass of young caribou
Nutritional restriction during growth can have short- and long-term effects on fitness; however, animals inhabiting uncertain environments may exhibit adaptations to cope with variation in food availability. We examined changes in body mass in free-ranging female caribou (Rangifer tarandus) by measuring mass at birth and at 4, 11, and 16 months of age to evaluate the relative importance...
Authors
Bruce W. Dale, Layne G. Adams, William E. Collins, Kyle Joly, Patrick Valkenburg, Robert Tobey
Ranking Alaska moose nutrition: Signals to begin liberal antlerless harvests
We focused on describing low nutritional status in an increasing moose (Alces alces gigas) population with reduced predation in Game Management Unit (GMU) 20A near Fairbanks, Alaska, USA. A skeptical public disallowed liberal antlerless harvests of this moose population until we provided convincing data on low nutritional status. We ranked nutritional status in 15 Alaska moose...
Authors
Rodney D. Boertje, Kalin A. Kellie, C. Tom Seaton, Mark A. Keech, Donald D. Young, Bruce W. Dale, Layne G. Adams, Andrew R. Aderman
Interspecific resource partitioning in sympatric ursids
The fundamental niche of a species is rarely if ever realized because the presence of other species restricts it to a narrower range of ecological conditions. The effects of this narrower range of conditions define how resources are partitioned. Resource partitioning has been inferred but not demonstrated previously for sympatric ursids. We estimated assimilated diet in relation to body...
Authors
Jerrold L. Belant, Knut Kielland, Erich H. Follmann, Layne G. Adams
Interrelationships of Denali's large mammal community
Along with its sweeping mountain landscapes, Denali National Park and Preserve (Denali) is probably best known for opportunities to observe the large mammals common to Interior Alaska. Locally known as the “Big Five,” gray wolves (Canis lupus), grizzly bears (Ursus arctos),moose (Alces alces), caribou (Rangifer tarandus) and Dall sheep (Ovis dalli) have coexisted in the region for...
Authors
Layne G. Adams, Thomas J. Meier, Patricia A Owen, Gretchen H. Roffler
Evaluation of aerial survey methods for Dall's sheep
Most Dall's sheep (Ovis dalli dalli) population-monitoring efforts use intensive aerial surveys with no attempt to estimate variance or adjust for potential sightability bias. We used radiocollared sheep to assess factors that could affect sightability of Dall's sheep in standard fixed-wing and helicopter surveys and to evaluate feasibility of methods that might account for sightability...
Authors
Mark S. Udevitz, Bradley Shults, Layne G. Adams, Christopher Kleckner
Tracking the movements of Denali's wolves
The wolves of Denali National Park (formerly Mount McKinley National Park) were the subject of some of the earliest research on wolf ecology. From 1939 to 1941, Adolph Murie performed groundbreaking studies of wolves, observing wolves and their prey and collecting wolf scats and prey remains. His work resulted in one of the first major scientific publications about wolves, The Wolves of...
Authors
T.J. Meier, John W. Burch, Layne G. Adams
Simulating the influences of various fire regimes on caribou winter habitat
Caribou are an integral component of high‐latitude ecosystems and represent a major subsistence food source for many northern people. The availability and quality of winter habitat is critical to sustain these caribou populations. Caribou commonly use older spruce woodlands with adequate terrestrial lichen, a preferred winter forage, in the understory. Changes in climate and fire regime...
Authors
T. Scott Rupp, Mark L. Olson, Layne G. Adams, Bruce W. Dale, Kyle Joly, Jonathan Henkelman, William E. Collins, Anthony M. Starfield
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 60
Wolves will not provide small-scale ecological restoration
Licht and colleagues (BioScience 60: 147–153) proposed a paradigm shift in wolf management to include the introductions of small, highly manipulated groups of wolves (Canis lupus) to confined natural areas to facilitate ecosystem recovery. Certainly, reductions or losses of apex predators from many regions worldwide have had profound effects on ecosystem characteristics (Soulé et al...
Authors
Jerrold L. Belant, Layne G. Adams
No evidence of trophic mismatch for caribou in Greenland
No abstract available.
Authors
Dennis B. Griffith, Layne G. Adams, David C. Douglas, Christine Cuyler, Robert S. White, Anne Gunn, Donald E. Russell, Raymond D. Cameron
Population-level resource selection by sympatric brown and American black bears in Alaska
Distribution theory predicts that for two species living in sympatry, the subordinate species would be constrained from using the most suitable resources (e.g., habitat), resulting in its use of less suitable habitat and spatial segregation between species. We used negative binomial generalized linear mixed models with fixed effects to estimate seasonal population-level resource...
Authors
Jerrold L. Belant, Brad Griffith, Yingte Zhang, Erich H. Follmann, Layne G. Adams
Are inland wolf-ungulate systems influenced by marine subsidies of Pacific salmon?
Wolves (Canis lupus) in North America are considered obligate predators of ungulates with other food resources playing little role in wolf population dynamics or wolf–prey relations. However, spawning Pacific salmon (Oncorhyncus spp.) are common throughout wolf range in northwestern North America and may provide a marine subsidy affecting inland wolf–ungulate food webs far from the coast...
Authors
Layne G. Adams, Sean D. Farley, Craig A. Stricker, Dominic J. Demma, Gretchen H. Roffler, Dennis C. Miller, Robert O. Rye
Movements of juvenile Gyrfalcons from western and interior Alaska following departure from their natal areas
Juvenile raptors often travel thousands of kilometers from the time they leave their natal areas to the time they enter a breeding population. Documenting movements and identifying areas used by raptors before they enter a breeding population is important for understanding the factors that influence their survival. In North America, juvenile Gyrfalcons (Falco rusticolus) are routinely...
Authors
Carol L. McIntyre, David C. Douglas, Layne G. Adams
Stochastic and compensatory effects limit persistence of variation in body mass of young caribou
Nutritional restriction during growth can have short- and long-term effects on fitness; however, animals inhabiting uncertain environments may exhibit adaptations to cope with variation in food availability. We examined changes in body mass in free-ranging female caribou (Rangifer tarandus) by measuring mass at birth and at 4, 11, and 16 months of age to evaluate the relative importance...
Authors
Bruce W. Dale, Layne G. Adams, William E. Collins, Kyle Joly, Patrick Valkenburg, Robert Tobey
Ranking Alaska moose nutrition: Signals to begin liberal antlerless harvests
We focused on describing low nutritional status in an increasing moose (Alces alces gigas) population with reduced predation in Game Management Unit (GMU) 20A near Fairbanks, Alaska, USA. A skeptical public disallowed liberal antlerless harvests of this moose population until we provided convincing data on low nutritional status. We ranked nutritional status in 15 Alaska moose...
Authors
Rodney D. Boertje, Kalin A. Kellie, C. Tom Seaton, Mark A. Keech, Donald D. Young, Bruce W. Dale, Layne G. Adams, Andrew R. Aderman
Interspecific resource partitioning in sympatric ursids
The fundamental niche of a species is rarely if ever realized because the presence of other species restricts it to a narrower range of ecological conditions. The effects of this narrower range of conditions define how resources are partitioned. Resource partitioning has been inferred but not demonstrated previously for sympatric ursids. We estimated assimilated diet in relation to body...
Authors
Jerrold L. Belant, Knut Kielland, Erich H. Follmann, Layne G. Adams
Interrelationships of Denali's large mammal community
Along with its sweeping mountain landscapes, Denali National Park and Preserve (Denali) is probably best known for opportunities to observe the large mammals common to Interior Alaska. Locally known as the “Big Five,” gray wolves (Canis lupus), grizzly bears (Ursus arctos),moose (Alces alces), caribou (Rangifer tarandus) and Dall sheep (Ovis dalli) have coexisted in the region for...
Authors
Layne G. Adams, Thomas J. Meier, Patricia A Owen, Gretchen H. Roffler
Evaluation of aerial survey methods for Dall's sheep
Most Dall's sheep (Ovis dalli dalli) population-monitoring efforts use intensive aerial surveys with no attempt to estimate variance or adjust for potential sightability bias. We used radiocollared sheep to assess factors that could affect sightability of Dall's sheep in standard fixed-wing and helicopter surveys and to evaluate feasibility of methods that might account for sightability...
Authors
Mark S. Udevitz, Bradley Shults, Layne G. Adams, Christopher Kleckner
Tracking the movements of Denali's wolves
The wolves of Denali National Park (formerly Mount McKinley National Park) were the subject of some of the earliest research on wolf ecology. From 1939 to 1941, Adolph Murie performed groundbreaking studies of wolves, observing wolves and their prey and collecting wolf scats and prey remains. His work resulted in one of the first major scientific publications about wolves, The Wolves of...
Authors
T.J. Meier, John W. Burch, Layne G. Adams
Simulating the influences of various fire regimes on caribou winter habitat
Caribou are an integral component of high‐latitude ecosystems and represent a major subsistence food source for many northern people. The availability and quality of winter habitat is critical to sustain these caribou populations. Caribou commonly use older spruce woodlands with adequate terrestrial lichen, a preferred winter forage, in the understory. Changes in climate and fire regime...
Authors
T. Scott Rupp, Mark L. Olson, Layne G. Adams, Bruce W. Dale, Kyle Joly, Jonathan Henkelman, William E. Collins, Anthony M. Starfield
*Disclaimer: Listing outside positions with professional scientific organizations on this Staff Profile are for informational purposes only and do not constitute an endorsement of those professional scientific organizations or their activities by the USGS, Department of the Interior, or U.S. Government