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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: 2380

Effects of age and environment on stable carbon isotope ratios in tree rings of riparian Populus Effects of age and environment on stable carbon isotope ratios in tree rings of riparian Populus

Stable carbon isotopes of riparian tree rings are enabling improved reconstruction of past climate variability, but this advance is limited by difficulty distinguishing the effects of tree age from those of climate. We investigated relative influence of age and climate trends in genus Populus, which dominates floodplain forests in Europe, Asia and North America. We related precipitation...
Authors
Jonathan M. Friedman, Craig A. Stricker, Adam Z Csank, Honghua Zhou

Plague management of prairie dog colonies: Degree and duration of deltamethrin flea control Plague management of prairie dog colonies: Degree and duration of deltamethrin flea control

Plague is a flea-borne disease of mammalian hosts. On the grasslands of western North America, plague stifles populations of Cynomys spp. prairie dogs (PDs). To manage plague, PD burrows are treated with 0.05% deltamethrin dust that can suppress flea numbers and plague transmission. Here, we evaluate the degree and duration of deltamethrin flea control with three PD species at six sites...
Authors
David Austin Eads, Dean E. Biggins

Aquatic macroinvertebrate community responses to wetland mitigation in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem Aquatic macroinvertebrate community responses to wetland mitigation in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem

1. Wetlands are critical components of freshwater biodiversity and provide ecosystem services, but human activities have resulted in large-scale loss of these habitats across the globe. To offset this loss, mitigation wetlands are frequently constructed, but their ability to replicate the functions of natural wetlands remains uncertain. Further, monitoring of mitigation wetlands is...
Authors
LEAH K. SWARTZ, Blake R. Hossack, Erin L. Muths, Robert L. Newell, Winsor H. Lowe

Comparison of methods to examine diet of feral horses from non-invasively collected fecal samples Comparison of methods to examine diet of feral horses from non-invasively collected fecal samples

Feral horses (Equus ferus caballus) have become abundant on public lands in the American West, particularly over the past 10 yr. In areas where they are overabundant, there is risk of habitat degradation. Most previous studies on diet and habitat use of feral horses were conducted more than 20 yr ago; rangelands have changed considerably in that time, so it is useful to revisit horse...
Authors
Sarah R.B. King, Kathryn A. Schoenecker

Potential spread of cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum) by feral horses (Equus ferus caballus) in Western Colorado Potential spread of cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum) by feral horses (Equus ferus caballus) in Western Colorado

The invasive grass cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum L.) presents major challenges for land management and habitat conservation in the western United States. Feral horses (Equus ferus caballus) have become overabundant in some areas of the West and can impact fragile semiarid ecosystems. Amid ongoing efforts to control cheatgrass in the Great Basin, we conducted a study to determine if feral...
Authors
Sarah R.B. King, Kathryn A. Schoenecker, Daniel J. Manier

Relative abundance and molecular evolution of Lake Sinai Virus (Sinaivirus) clades Relative abundance and molecular evolution of Lake Sinai Virus (Sinaivirus) clades

Lake Sinai Viruses (Sinaivirus) are commonly detected in honey bees (Apis mellifera) but no disease phenotypes or fitness consequences have yet been demonstrated. This viral group is genetically diverse, lacks obvious geographic structure, and multiple lineages can co-infect individual bees. While phylogenetic analyses have been performed, the molecular evolution of LSV has not been...
Authors
Robert S. Cornman

Seasonal assembly of arthropod communities on milkweeds experiencing simulated herbivory Seasonal assembly of arthropod communities on milkweeds experiencing simulated herbivory

The seasonal assembly of arthropod communities is shaped by biotic and abiotic aspects of the habitat that limit the appearance or activity phenology of potential community members. In addition, previous interactions within the community, such as herbivore-induced plant defensive responses, aggregation, and predator avoidance likely affect the assembly of arthropod communities on...
Authors
Ian S. Pearse, Marshall McMunn, Louie H. Yang

Do observer fatigue and taxon-bias compromise visual encounter surveys for small vertebrates? Do observer fatigue and taxon-bias compromise visual encounter surveys for small vertebrates?

Context. Visual encounter surveying is a standard animal inventory method, modifications of which (e.g. distance sampling and repeated count surveys) are used for modelling population density. However, a variety of factors may bias visual survey counts. Aims. The aim of the present study was to evaluate three observer-related biases: (1) whether fatigue compromises detection rate as a...
Authors
Bjorn Lardner, Amy A. Yackel Adams, Adam J Knox, Julie A. Savidge, Robert Reed

Surface fire to Crown Fire: Fire history in the Taos Valley watersheds, New Mexico, USA Surface fire to Crown Fire: Fire history in the Taos Valley watersheds, New Mexico, USA

Tree-ring fire scars, tree ages, historical photographs, and historical surveys indicate that, for centuries, fire played different ecological roles across gradients of elevation, forest, and fire regimes in the Taos Valley Watersheds. Historical fire regimes collapsed across the three watersheds by 1899, leaving all sites without fire for at least 119 years. Historical photographs and...
Authors
Lane B Johnson, Ellis Q. Margolis

Diversity and abundance of wild bees in an agriculturally dominated landscape of eastern Colorado Diversity and abundance of wild bees in an agriculturally dominated landscape of eastern Colorado

Agricultural intensification has resulted in loss of natural and semi-natural habitats impacting several important ecosystem services. One group of organisms that has suffered greatly are the bees and hence pollination, the supporting ecosystem service they complete. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) has implemented conservation...
Authors
H. S. Arathi, Mark W. Vandever, Brian S. Cade

Not so normal normals: Species distribution model results are sensitive to choice of climate normals and model type Not so normal normals: Species distribution model results are sensitive to choice of climate normals and model type

Species distribution models have many applications in conservation and ecology, and climate data are frequently a key driver of these models. Often, correlative modeling approaches are developed with readily available climate data; however, the impacts of the choice of climate normals is rarely considered. Here, we produced species distribution models for five disparate species using...
Authors
Catherine S. Jarnevich, Nicholas E. Young

The area under the precision‐recall curve as a performance metric for rare binary events The area under the precision‐recall curve as a performance metric for rare binary events

Species distribution models are used to study biogeographic patterns and guide decision‐making. The variable quality of these models makes it critical to assess whether a model's outputs are suitable for the intended use, but commonly used evaluation approaches are inappropriate for many ecological contexts. In particular, unrealistically high performance assessments have been associated...
Authors
Helen Sofaer, Jennifer A. Hoeting, Catherine S. Jarnevich
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