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: 2397
Rural-urban differences in hunting and birdwatching attitudes and participation Rural-urban differences in hunting and birdwatching attitudes and participation
Outdoor recreation facilitates important connections to nature and wildlife but is perceived differently across population segments. As such, we expected that current and past socio-demographic characteristics of individuals would influence intention to participate in outdoor recreation. We solicited 5,000 U.S. residents. (n = 1,030, 23% response) to describe their perceptions of hunting...
Authors
Emily J. Wilkins, Nicholas W. Cole, Holly M. Miller, Rudy Schuster, Ashley A. Dayer, Jennifer N. Duberstein, David C. Fulton, Howard W. Harshaw, Andrew H. Raedeke
Designing multi-scale hierarchical monitoring frameworks for wildlife to support management: A sage-grouse case study Designing multi-scale hierarchical monitoring frameworks for wildlife to support management: A sage-grouse case study
Population monitoring is integral to the conservation and management of wildlife; yet, analyses of population demographic data rarely consider processes occurring across spatial scales, potentially limiting the effectiveness of adaptive management. Therefore, we developed a method to identify hierarchical levels of organization (i.e., populations) to define multiple spatial scales...
Authors
Michael S. O’Donnell, David R. Edmunds, Cameron L. Aldridge, Julie A. Heinrichs, Peter S. Coates, Brian G. Prochazka, Steve E. Hanser
Optimizing walking pace to maximize snake detection rate: A visual encounter survey experiment Optimizing walking pace to maximize snake detection rate: A visual encounter survey experiment
Visual encounter survey efforts can be defined and constrained by duration, distance, or both duration and distance simultaneously. This study examines the optimal walking pace that will maximize the number of animal detections within a limited time frame. We predicted that animal sighting rate per unit of distance would decline with increasing pace, but that maximal sighting rate per...
Authors
Bjorn Lardner, Amy A. Yackel Adams, Julie A. Savidge, Robert Reed
Designing flows to enhance ecosystem functioning in heavily altered rivers Designing flows to enhance ecosystem functioning in heavily altered rivers
More than a century of dam construction and water development in the western United States has led to extensive ecological alteration of rivers. Growing interest in improving river function is compelling practitioners to consider ecological restoration when managing dams and water extraction. We developed an Ecological Response Model (ERM) for the Cache la Poudre River, northern Colorado...
Authors
Kevin R. Bestgen, N. LeRoy Poff, Daniel W Baker, Brian P. Bledsoe, David M. Merritt, Mark Lorie, Gregor T. Auble, John S. Sanderson, Boris C. Kondratieff
Aquatic–terrestrial linkages provide novel opportunities for freshwater ecologists to engage stakeholders and inform riparian management Aquatic–terrestrial linkages provide novel opportunities for freshwater ecologists to engage stakeholders and inform riparian management
Studies of aquatic–terrestrial ecosystem linkages explore the mechanisms by which components of one ecosystem, such as the aquatic insect community in a stream, directly affect components of an adjacent ecosystem, such as the density and diversity of riparian predators. On a human level, research into these linkages allows freshwater ecologists to form novel collaborations with...
Authors
Jeffrey Muehlbauer, Christina A. Lupoli, Johanna M. Kraus
Projected warming disrupts the synchrony of riparian seed dispersal and snowmelt streamflow Projected warming disrupts the synchrony of riparian seed dispersal and snowmelt streamflow
• Globally, spring phenology and abiotic processes are shifting earlier with warming. Differences in the magnitudes of these shifts may decouple the timing of plant resource requirements from resource availability. In riparian forests across the northern hemisphere, warming could decouple seed dispersal from snowmelt peak streamflow, thus reducing moisture and safe-sites for dominant...
Authors
Laura G. Perry, Patrick B. Shafroth, Lauren Hay, Steven L. Markstrom, Andrew R. Bock
Drought-mediated extinction of an arid-land amphibian: Insights from a spatially explicit dynamic occupancy model Drought-mediated extinction of an arid-land amphibian: Insights from a spatially explicit dynamic occupancy model
Understanding how natural and anthropogenic processes affect population dynamics of species with patchy distributions is critical to predicting their responses to environmental changes. Despite considerable evidence that demographic rates and dispersal patterns vary temporally in response to an array of biotic and abiotic processes, few applications of metapopulation theory have sought...
Authors
Erin R Zylstra, Don E. Swann, Blake R. Hossack, Robert J Steidl
Comparing ecological models Comparing ecological models
No abstract available.
Authors
Mevin Hooten, Evan G. Cooch
Age and growth of cottonwood trees along the Missouri River, North Dakota Age and growth of cottonwood trees along the Missouri River, North Dakota
The relict plains cottonwood (Populus deltoides subsp. monilifera) forest along the Missouri River between Lakes Sakakawea and Oahe includes trees as large as two meters in diameter. We cored 24 of these trees to determine their age and suitability for flow reconstruction. Because most of the trees were rotten in the center, we developed a method to estimate the date of the center ring...
Authors
Jonathan M. Friedman, Fisher R. Ankney, Marshall Wolf
Plants trap pollen to feed predatory arthropods as an indirect resistance against herbivory Plants trap pollen to feed predatory arthropods as an indirect resistance against herbivory
Plants commonly employ indirect resistance to reduce herbivory by provisioning predatory arthropod populations with additional resources. Numerous predatory arthropods consume pollen that is entrapped on dense, wooly trichomes of plants. Over two seasons, we supplemented pollen on the wooly leaves of turkey mullein, Croton setiger, in natural populations to determine if pollen entrapped...
Authors
Jenny Van Wyk, Billy Krimmel, Laure Crova, Ian S. Pearse
Species-specific responses to wetland mitigation among amphibians in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem Species-specific responses to wetland mitigation among amphibians in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
Habitat loss and degradation are leading causes of biodiversity declines, therefore assessing the capacity of created mitigation wetlands to replace habitat for wildlife has become a management priority. We used single season occupancy models to compare the occurrence of larvae of four species of pond‐breeding amphibians in wetlands created for mitigation, wetlands impacted by road...
Authors
LK Swartz, WH Lowe, Erin L. Muths, Blake R. Hossack
Carbon chemistry of intact versus chronically drained peatlands in the southeastern USA Carbon chemistry of intact versus chronically drained peatlands in the southeastern USA
The Great Dismal Swamp (GDS) is a large temperate swamp in Virginia/North Carolina with peat soils historically resistant to microbial decomposition. However, this peatland has been subject to ~200 years of disturbance during which extensive drainage, fire suppression, and wide-spread logging have increased decomposition and dramatically decreased the distribution of Atlantic white cedar...
Authors
Craig A. Stricker, Judith Z. Drexler, Kevin A. Thorn, Jamie A. Duberstein, Sam Rossman