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Publications

FORT scientists have produced more than 2000 peer reviewed publications that are registered in the USGS Publications Warehouse, along with many others prior to their work at the USGS or in conjunction with other government agencies. 

Filter Total Items: 2401

A 21st century perspective on postfire seeding A 21st century perspective on postfire seeding

Wildfires elicit a perceived need for emergency action to stabilize denuded landscapes. Aerial seeding of rapidly growing nonnative grasses is used routinely in an attempt to control postfire erosion, despite limited scientific basis for its effectiveness and with little consideration for its unintended ecological impacts. As fire size and magnitude have increased in recent decades, so...
Authors
Jon E. Keeley, Craig D. Allen, J. Betancourt, G.W. Chong, C. J. Fotheringham, H.D. Safford

Use of NEXRAD to study shorebird migration in the Prairie Pothole region: A feasibility study Use of NEXRAD to study shorebird migration in the Prairie Pothole region: A feasibility study

An essential component of shorebird conservation is identifying, protecting, and managing high-priority stopover sites and migration habitats crucial to the long-term persistence of migrating shorebirds. Because of the tremendous variability in migrant shorebird occurrence patterns in the Prairie Pothole Region of the U.S. (Skagen 1997), it is labor- and cost-intensive to locate the...
Authors
Cynthia P. Melcher, Susan K. Skagen, Lori Randall

Riparian willow restoration at Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge Riparian willow restoration at Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge

Riparian willow communities along the Illinois River at Arapaho National Wildlife Refuge in North Park near Walden, Colorado, provide important habitat for a number of wildlife species, including neotropical migratory birds. Existing stands in the northern (downstream) portion of the refuge are sparse and discontinuous (Photo 1) compared to upstream portions of the Illinois River and the...
Authors
G.T. Auble, J. E. Roelle, A. TImberman

Ecological thresholds: The key to successful enviromental management or an important concept with no practical application? Ecological thresholds: The key to successful enviromental management or an important concept with no practical application?

An ecological threshold is the point at which there is an abrupt change in an ecosystem quality, property or phenomenon, or where small changes in an environmental driver produce large responses in the ecosystem. Analysis of thresholds is complicated by nonlinear dynamics and by multiple factor controls that operate at diverse spatial and temporal scales. These complexities have...
Authors
P.M. Groffman, Jill Baron, T. Blett, A.J. Gold, I. Goodman, L.H. Gunderson, B.M. Levinson, Margaret A. Palmer, H.W. Paerl, G.D. Peterson, N.L. Poff, D.W. Rejeski, J.F. Reynolds, M.G. Turner, K.C. Weathers, J. Wiens

Modeling post-fledging survival of lark buntings in response to ecological and biological factors Modeling post-fledging survival of lark buntings in response to ecological and biological factors

We evaluated the influences of several ecological, biological, and methodological factors on post-fledging survival of a shortgrass prairie bird, the Lark Bunting (Calamospiza melanocorys). We estimated daily post-fledging survival (n = 206, 82 broods) using radiotelemetry and color bands to track fledglings. Daily survival probabilities were best explained by drought intensity, time in...
Authors
A. A. Yackel Adams, S. K. Skagen, J. A. Savidge

Spatial nonlinearities: Cascading effects in the earth system Spatial nonlinearities: Cascading effects in the earth system

Nonlinear behavior is prevalent in all aspects of the Earth System, including ecological responses to global change (Gallagher and Appenzeller 1999; Steffen et al. 2004). Nonlinear behavior refers to a large, discontinuous change in response to a small change in a driving variable (Rial et al. 2004). In contrast to linear systems where responses are smooth, well-behaved, continuous...
Authors
Debra P.C. Peters, R.A. Pielke, B.T. Bestelmeyer, Craig D. Allen, Stuart Munson-McGee, K. M. Havstad

A permutation test for quantile regression A permutation test for quantile regression

A drop in dispersion, F-ratio like, permutation test (D) for linear quantile regression estimates (0≤τ≤1) had relative power ≥1 compared to quantile rank score tests (T) for hypotheses on parameters other than the intercept. Power was compared for combinations of sample sizes (n=20−300) and quantiles (τ=0.50−0.99) where both tests maintained valid Type I error rates in simulations with p...
Authors
Brian S. Cade, Jon D. Richards

Populations estimates of North American shorebirds, 2006 Populations estimates of North American shorebirds, 2006

This paper provides updates on population estimates for 52 species of shorebirds, involving 75 taxa, occurring in North America. New information resulting in a changed estimate is available for 39 of the 75 taxa (52%), involving 24 increases and 15 decreases. The preponderance of increased estimates is likely the result of improved estimates rather than actual increases in numbers. Many...
Authors
R.I. Guy Morrison, Brian J. McCaffery, Robert E. Gill, Susan K. Skagen, Stephanie L. Jones, Gary W. Page, Cheri L. Gratto-Trevor, Brad A. Andres

Bark beetle outbreaks in western North America: Causes and consequences Bark beetle outbreaks in western North America: Causes and consequences

Since 1990, native bark beetles have killed billions of trees across millions of acres of forest from Alaska to northern Mexico. Although bark beetle infestations are a regular force of natural change in forested ecosystems, several of the current outbreaks, which are occurring simultaneously across western North America, are the largest and most severe in recorded history.
Authors
Barbara Bentz, Jesse Logan, James A. MacMahon, Craig D. Allen, Matt Ayres, Edward E Berg, Allan Carroll, Matt Hansen, Jeff H. Hicke, Linda A. Joyce, Wallace Macfarlane, Steve Munson, Jose Negron, Tim Paine, Jim Powell, Kenneth Raffa, Jacques Regniere, Mary Reid, Bill Romme, Steven J. Seybold, Diana Six, Jim Vandygriff, Tom Veblen, Mike White, Jeff Witcosky

A landscape perspective for forest restoration A landscape perspective for forest restoration

Forest managers throughout the West are anxiously seeking solutions to the problem of “large crown fires” - destructive blazes atypical of many forest types in the region. These wildfires have created a crisis mentality in management that has focused on rigid prescriptions for fuels reduction, rather than the restoration of diverse, resilient, and self-regulating forest ecosystems. Now...
Authors
Thomas D. Sisk, Melissa Savage, Donald A. Falk, Craig D. Allen, Esteban Muldavin, Patrick McCarthy
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