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Arthropod prey of Wilson's Warblers in the understory of Douglas-fir forests Arthropod prey of Wilson's Warblers in the understory of Douglas-fir forests

Availability of food resources is an important factor in avian habitat selection. Food resources for terrestrial birds often are closely related to vegetation structure and composition. Identification of plant species important in supporting food resources may facilitate vegetation management to achieve objectives for providing bird habitat. We used fecal analysis to describe the diet of...
Authors
J.C. Hagar, K.M. Dugger, E. E. Starkey

Monitoring post-fire vegetation rehabilitation projects: A common approach for non-forested ecosystems Monitoring post-fire vegetation rehabilitation projects: A common approach for non-forested ecosystems

Emergency Stabilization and Rehabilitation (ES&R) and Burned Area Emergency Response (BAER) treatments are short-term, high-intensity treatments designed to mitigate the adverse effects of wildfire on public lands. The federal government expends significant resources implementing ES&R and BAER treatments after wildfires; however, recent reviews have found that existing data from...
Authors
Troy A. Wirth, David A. Pyke

Monitoring biological diversity: strategies, tools, limitations, and challenges Monitoring biological diversity: strategies, tools, limitations, and challenges

Monitoring is an assessment of the spatial and temporal variability in one or more ecosystem properties, and is an essential component of adaptive management. Monitoring can help determine whether mandated environmental standards are being met and can provide an early-warning system of ecological change. Development of a strategy for monitoring biological diversity will likely be most...
Authors
E.A. Beever

Linking the concept of scale to studies of biological diversity: evolving approaches and tools. Linking the concept of scale to studies of biological diversity: evolving approaches and tools.

Although the concepts of scale and biological diversity independently have received rapidly increasing attention in the scientific literature since the 1980s, the rate at which the two concepts have been investigated jointly has grown much more slowly. We find that scale considerations have been incorporated explicitly into six broad areas of investigation related to biological diversity...
Authors
E.A. Beever, R.K. Swihart, B. T. Bestelmeyer

Conservation genetics in the USGS Conservation genetics in the USGS

Conservation genetics is the application of the tools and concepts of genetics to the conservation of biological resources. Once too sophisticated and expensive for routine use, the tools of conservation genetics are now widely used to address many complex management questions. These novel methods of analysis can augment assessments made with traditional methods and can bring new...
Authors
Ruth Jacobs, Susan Haig, Sandra L. Talbot, James Winton, Tim King, Kate Kendall

Trachemys scripta elegans (Red-eared Slider). Reproduction Trachemys scripta elegans (Red-eared Slider). Reproduction

The natural range of Trachemys scripta elegans is centered in the south-central United States, from Illinois to the Gulf of Mexico. Because of its prominence in the international pet trade, the species now can be found over much of the United States, and its introduction has been documented throughout the world (Ernst et al. 1994. Turtles of the United States and Canada. Smithsonian...
Authors
Matthew P. Bettelheim, R. Bruce Bury, Laura C. Patterson, Glen M. Lubcke

Factors influencing nest success of songbirds in aspen and willow riparian areas in the Great Basin Factors influencing nest success of songbirds in aspen and willow riparian areas in the Great Basin

Recent studies have examined the effects of livestock grazing, agriculture, and human habitation on nest predation and brood parasitism in riparian areas in the western United States. However, we know little about factors influencing nest success in riparian areas lacking such anthropogenic influences, in part because the influences are so pervasive. We studied riparian bird communities...
Authors
J.M. Heltzel, S.L. Earnst

A landscape-scale model of yellow-billed loon (Gavia adamsii) habitat preferences in northern alaska A landscape-scale model of yellow-billed loon (Gavia adamsii) habitat preferences in northern alaska

We modeled yellow-billed loon (Gavia adamsii) habitat preferences in a 23,500 km2 area of northern Alaska using intensive aerial surveys and landscape-scale habitat descriptors. Of the 757 lakes censused, yellow-billed loons occupied 15% and Pacific loons (G. pacifica) 42%. Lake area, depth, proportion of shoreline in aquatic vegetation, shoreline complexity, hydrological connectivity...
Authors
Susan L. Earnst, Robert Platte, Laura Bond

Importance of wetland landscape structure to shorebirds wintering in an agricultural valley Importance of wetland landscape structure to shorebirds wintering in an agricultural valley

Only recently has the influence of landscape structure on habitat use been a research focus in wetland systems. During non-breeding periods when food can be locally limited, wetland spatial pattern across a landscape may be of great importance in determining wetland use. We studied the influence of landscape structure on abundances of wintering Dunlin (Calidris alpina) and Killdeer...
Authors
Oriane W. Taft, Susan M. Haig

Effects of historical climate change, habitat connectivity, and vicariance on genetic structure and diversity across the range of the Red Tree Vole (Phenacomys longicaudus) in the Pacific Northwest United States Effects of historical climate change, habitat connectivity, and vicariance on genetic structure and diversity across the range of the Red Tree Vole (Phenacomys longicaudus) in the Pacific Northwest United States

Phylogeographical analyses conducted in the Pacific Northwestern United States have often revealed concordant patterns of genetic diversity among taxa. These studies demonstrate distinct North/South genetic discontinuities that have been attributed to Pleistocene glaciation. We examined phylogeographical patterns of red tree voles (Phenacomys longicaudus) in western Oregon by analysing
Authors
Mark P. Miller, R.M. Bellinger, E.D. Forsman, Susan M. Haig

Sex determination of Pohnpei Micronesian kingfishers using morphological and molecular genetic techniques Sex determination of Pohnpei Micronesian kingfishers using morphological and molecular genetic techniques

Conservation-oriented studies of Micronesian Kingfishers (Todiramphus cinnamominus) have been hindered by a lack of basic natural history information, despite the status of the Guam subspecies (T. c. cinnamominus) as one of the most endangered species in the world. We used tissue samples and morphometric measures from museum specimens and wild-captured Pohnpei Micronesian Kingfishers (T...
Authors
Dylan C. Kesler, I.F. Lopes, Susan M. Haig

Dawning of Herpetological Conservation and Biology: A special welcome to your new journal Dawning of Herpetological Conservation and Biology: A special welcome to your new journal

Inception of a new journal in herpetology is a rare event. The first discussion of developing a journal with an emphasis on natural history and conservation occurred among a subset of us (McCallum, others), while at the 2005 joint annual meeting of the SSAR/HL/ASIH in Tampa, Florida. Some of the initial questions we posed for a new herpetological journal were as follows: (1) is there a...
Authors
R. Bruce Bury, Malcolm L. McCallum, Stanley E. Trauth, Raymond A. Saumure
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