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
Public access management as an adaptive wildlife management tool Public access management as an adaptive wildlife management tool
Wildlife populations across the United States are benefiting from improved wildlife management techniques. However, these benefits also create new challenges including overpopulation, disease, increased winter kill, and forage degradation. These issues have become the challenges for natural resource managers and landowners. Specifically, elk (Cervus elaphus) populations in the Gunnison...
Authors
Douglas S. Ouren, Raymond D. Watts
Survival and condition of big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus) after radiotagging Survival and condition of big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus) after radiotagging
We tested the 5% rule for the ratio of radiotransmitter mass to body mass by applying radiotransmitters and passive integrated transponders (PIT tags) or PIT tags alone to adult, female big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus) roosting in buildings in Fort Collins, Colorado. We used records from PIT readers at roosts to compute apparent annual survival of both groups from 2001 to 2003 and found...
Authors
D.J. Neubaum, M.A. Neubaum, L.E. Ellison, T. J. O'Shea
Drought allocations using the Systems Impact Assessment Model: Klamath River Drought allocations using the Systems Impact Assessment Model: Klamath River
Water supply and allocation scenarios for the Klamath River, Ore. and Calif., were evaluated using the Systems Impact Assessment Model (SIAM), a decision support system developed by the U.S. Geological Survey. SIAM is a set of models with a graphical user interface that simulates water supply and delivery in a managed river system, water quality, and fish production. Simulation results...
Authors
M. Flug, S.G. Campbell
Cibola High Levee Pond annual report 2004 Cibola High Levee Pond annual report 2004
This represents the fourth and last annual report of a five year study investigating the early life ecology of the bonytail and razorback sucker at Cibola High Levee Pond. The work in 2004 included: telemetry studies, collection of physical water quality measurements, zooplankton samples, netting fish, the collection of scale samples for aging, predator/prey tank tests and a preliminary...
Authors
Gordon A. Mueller, Jeanette Carpenter, Paul C. Marsh
Modeling effects of bank friction and woody bank vegetation on channel flow and boundary shear stress in the Rio Puerco, New Mexico Modeling effects of bank friction and woody bank vegetation on channel flow and boundary shear stress in the Rio Puerco, New Mexico
[1] We have applied a physically based model for steady, horizontally uniform flow to calculate reach-averaged velocity and boundary shear-stress distributions in a natural stream with woody vegetation on the channel banks. The model calculates explicitly the form drag on woody plant stems and includes the effects of vegetation on the boundary shear stress, velocity, and turbulence...
Authors
E.R. Griffin, J. W. Kean, K.R. Vincent, J.D. Smith, Jonathan M. Friedman
A test of geographic assignment using isotope tracers in feathers of known origin A test of geographic assignment using isotope tracers in feathers of known origin
We used feathers of known origin collected from across the breeding range of a migratory shorebird to test the use of isotope tracers for assigning breeding origins. We analyzed δD, δ13C, and δ15N in feathers from 75 mountain plover (Charadrius montanus) chicks sampled in 2001 and from 119 chicks sampled in 2002. We estimated parameters for continuous-response inverse regression models...
Authors
Michael B. Wunder, C.L. Kester, F.L. Knopf, R. O. Rye
Software Review: A program for testing capture-recapture data for closure Software Review: A program for testing capture-recapture data for closure
Capture-recapture methods are widely used to estimate population parameters of free-ranging animals. Closed-population capture-recapture models, which assume there are no additions to or losses from the population over the period of study (i.e., the closure assumption), are preferred for population estimation over the open-population models, which do not assume closure, because...
Authors
Thomas R. Stanley, Jon D. Richards
Factors limiting the recovery of boreal toads (Bufo b. boreas) Factors limiting the recovery of boreal toads (Bufo b. boreas)
Boreal toads (Bufo b. boreas) are widely distributed over much of the mountainous western United States. Populations in the Southern Rocky Mountains suffered extensive declines in the late 1970s through early 1980s (Carey, 1993). At the time, these mass mortalities were thought to be associated with a bacterial infection (Carey, 1993). Although the few populations that survived the mass...
Authors
C. Carey, P.S. Corn, M.S. Jones, L.J. Livo, E. Muths, C.W. Loeffler
Glueboards for estimating lizard abundance Glueboards for estimating lizard abundance
No abstract available.
Authors
G.H. Rodda, K. Dean-Bradley, T. H. Fritts
An evaluation of weather and disease as causes of decline in two populations of boreal toads An evaluation of weather and disease as causes of decline in two populations of boreal toads
Two populations of boreal toads (Bufo boreas) experienced drastic declines in abundance in the late 1990s. Evidence supported the hypothesis of disease (the chytrid fungus, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis) as the cause of these declines, but other hypotheses had not been evaluated. We used an 11-year capture–recapture data set to evaluate weather and disease as causes of these declines...
Authors
Rick D. Scherer, Erin L. Muths, Barry R. Noon, Paul Stephen Corn
Evaluating water management strategies with the Systems Impact Assessment Model: SIAM version 4 Evaluating water management strategies with the Systems Impact Assessment Model: SIAM version 4
Water from many of California's coastal rivers has been used for a wide variety of development ventures, including major agricultural diversions, hydropower generation, and contaminant assimilation from industry, agriculture and logging. Anthropogenic impacts often degrade water quality and decrease the quantity and quality of aquatic habitat. Reallocating streamflow away from uses that...
Authors
John M. Bartholow, John Heasley, Blair Hanna, Jeff Sandelin, Marshall Flug, Sharon Campbell, Jim Henriksen, Aaron Douglas
Nest survival relative to patch size in a highly fragmented shortgrass prairie landscape Nest survival relative to patch size in a highly fragmented shortgrass prairie landscape
Understanding the influences of habitat fragmentation on vertebrate populations is essential for the protection and ecological restoration of strategic sites for native species. We examined the effects of prairie fragmentation on avian reproductive success using artificial and natural nests on 26 randomly selected, privately owned patches of shortgrass prairie ranging in size from 7 to...
Authors
S. K. Skagen, A. A. Yackel Adams, R.D. Adams