Publications
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Clonal foraging in perennial wheatgrasses: A strategy for exploiting patchy soil nutrients Clonal foraging in perennial wheatgrasses: A strategy for exploiting patchy soil nutrients
1. Foraging by means of plasticity in placement of tillers in response to low- and high-nutrient patches was examined in the rhizomatous wheatgrass Elymus lanceolatus ssp. lanceolatus. Its ability to exploit soil nutrient patches was compared to that of the closely related but caespitose E. lanceolatus ssp. wawawaiensis. 2. Clones of 14 genets of each taxon were planted in boxes...
Authors
L. David Humphrey, David A. Pyke
Methods for evaluating crown area profiles of forest stands Methods for evaluating crown area profiles of forest stands
Canopy architectures of five structurally complex forest stands and three structurally simple forest stands in southwest Oregon and the Willamette Valley, Oregon, were evaluated and quantified through crown area profiles. Mixed conifer and mixed conifer hardwood stands across a range of sites were sampled for crown widths and heights. Crown width and shape equations were derived and used...
Authors
Michael E. Dubrasich, D.W. Hann, J. C. Tappeiner
Density, ages, and growth rates in old-growth and young-growth forests in coastal Oregon Density, ages, and growth rates in old-growth and young-growth forests in coastal Oregon
We studied the ages and diameter growth rates of trees in former Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.)Franco) old-growth stands on 10 sites and compared them with young-growth stands (50-70 years old, regenerated after timber harvest) in the Coast Range of western Oregon. The diameters and diameter growth rates for the first 100 years of trees in the old-growth stands were...
Authors
J. C. Tappeiner, D. Huffman, T. Spies, John D. Bailey
Growth responses of young Douglas-fir and tanoak 11 years after various levels of hardwood removal and understory suppression in southwestern Oregon, USA Growth responses of young Douglas-fir and tanoak 11 years after various levels of hardwood removal and understory suppression in southwestern Oregon, USA
At two sites in southwestern Oregon, height, diameter, and crown width of young Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) and sprout-origin tanoak (Lithocarpus densiflorus) were measured 1–11 years after reducing the density of a 2-year-old tanoak stand to 0%, 25%, 50%, and 100% of its initial cover. Some plots also included suppression of understory vegetation. Tanoak cover developed linearly...
Authors
T.B. Harrington, John C. Tappeiner
Long-term limnological data from the larger lakes of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA Long-term limnological data from the larger lakes of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA
Long-term limnological data from the four largest lakes in Yellowstone National Park (Yellowstone, Lewis, Shoshone, Heart) are used to characterize their limnology and patterns of temporal and spatial variability. Heart Lake has distinctively high concentrations of dissolved materials, apparently reflecting high thermal inputs. Shoshone and Lewis lakes have the highest total SiO2...
Authors
E.C. Theriot, S.C. Fritz, Robert E. Gresswell
Using mark-recapture methods to estimate fish abundance in small mountain lakes Using mark-recapture methods to estimate fish abundance in small mountain lakes
The majority of lacustrine fish populations in the western USA are located far from the nearest road. Although mark-recapture techniques are widely accepted for estimating population abundance, these techniques have been broadly ignored for fisheries surveys in remote mountain lakes because of restricted access and associated logistical constraints. In this study, mark recapture...
Authors
Robert E. Gresswell, W.J. Liss, G.A. Lomnicky, E. Deimling, Robert L. Hoffman, T. Tyler
Use of ungulates by Yellowstone grizzly bears Ursus arctos Use of ungulates by Yellowstone grizzly bears Ursus arctos
Previous results of fecal analysis from the Yellowstone area and the known abilities of grizzly bears Ursus arctos to acquire and digest tissue from vertebrates suggested that grizzlies in this ecosystem obtained substantial energy from ungulates. This issue was addressed using observations from radio-marked grizzly bears, 1977–1992. Ungulates potentially contributed the majority of...
Authors
D.J. Mattson
Wilderness-dependent wildlife: The large and carnivorous Wilderness-dependent wildlife: The large and carnivorous
Wilderness is vital to the conservation of wildlife species that are prone to conflict with humans and vulnerable to human-caused mortality. These species tend to be large and are often carnivorous. Such animals are typically problematic for humans because they kill livestock and, occasionally, humans, and cause inordinate damage to crops. The vulnerability of large herbivores and...
Authors
David J. Mattson
The scientific bases for preservation of the Mariana crow The scientific bases for preservation of the Mariana crow
The Panel recently released the report and recommendations resulting from its work over the last six months. Although primarily focused on the Mariana Crow, the report highlights that this is a matter potentially far more serious than the preservation of the crow on Guam and Rota. The report includes major sections dealing with the need to intensify research and control activities on the...
Authors
Committee on the Scientific Bases for the Preservation of the Mariana Crow National Research Council, W.D. Duckworth, S. R. Beissinger, S.R. Derrickson, T. H. Fritts, S. M. Haig, F.C. James, J.M. Marsluff, B.A. Rideout
Reproduction of black-crowned night-herons related to predation and contaminants in Oregon and Washington, USA Reproduction of black-crowned night-herons related to predation and contaminants in Oregon and Washington, USA
We studied reproductive characteristics of Black-crowned Night-Herons (Nycticorax nycticorax) at four colonies in south central Washington and one colony in north central Oregon in 1991. Nest success, adjusted using the Mayfield method, was significantly different between colonies and ranged from 12-84% to hatching and 12-73% to 14 days post-hatching. The mean number of young surviving...
Authors
L. J. Blus, Barnett A. Rattner, M. J. Melancon, Charles J. Henny
Vegetation change at Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore caused by plant succession and fire regime: A section in Western Great Lakes biogeographic area summary report Vegetation change at Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore caused by plant succession and fire regime: A section in Western Great Lakes biogeographic area summary report
No abstract available.
Authors
K.L. Cole
Supervised classification of Landsat thematic mapper imagery in a semi-arid rangeland by nonparametric discriminant analysis Supervised classification of Landsat thematic mapper imagery in a semi-arid rangeland by nonparametric discriminant analysis
In this article the authors used a nonparametric discriminant function in a supervised classification of Landsat Thematic Mapper satellite imagery of a ~240,000-ha semi-arid region in the Snake River Plains, southwestern Idaho. First, agriculture pixels were classified by distance from the soil baseline and water pixels by the thermal band value. Next, successive nonparametric...
Authors
Steven T. Knick, J.T. Rotenberry, T.J. Zarriello