Publications
Below is a list of available NOROCK peer reviewed and published science. If you are in search of a specific publication and cannot find it below or through a search, please contact twojtowicz@usgs.gov.
Filter Total Items: 1300
Global-scale environmental changes in mountain protected areas: The CLIMET project Global-scale environmental changes in mountain protected areas: The CLIMET project
No abstract available.
Authors
Daniel B. Fagre, D. L. Peterson
Forestry practices and aquatic biodiversity: Fish Forestry practices and aquatic biodiversity: Fish
In the Pacific Northwest, fish communities are found in a diverse array of aquatic habitats ranging from the large coastal rivers of the temperate rainforests, to the fragmented and sometimes ephemeral streams of the xeric interior basins, and high-elevation streams and lakes in the mountainous areas (Rieman et al. 2003). Only high-elevation lakes and streams isolated above barriers to...
Authors
Robert E. Gresswell
Yellowstone grizzly bear investigations: Annual report of the Interagency Grizzly Bear Study Team, 2004 Yellowstone grizzly bear investigations: Annual report of the Interagency Grizzly Bear Study Team, 2004
The contents of this Annual Report summarize results of monitoring and research from the 2004 field season. The report also contains a summary of nuisance grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis) management actions. The study team continues to work on issues associated with counts of unduplicated females with cubs-of-the-year (COY). These counts are used to establish a minimum population...
Describing spatial pattern in stream networks: A practical approach Describing spatial pattern in stream networks: A practical approach
The shape and configuration of branched networks influence ecological patterns and processes. Recent investigations of network influences in riverine ecology stress the need to quantify spatial structure not only in a two-dimensional plane, but also in networks. An initial step in understanding data from stream networks is discerning non-random patterns along the network. On the other...
Authors
L.M. Ganio, C.E. Torgersen, R. E. Gresswell
Monitoring temporal change in riparian vegetation of Great Basin National Park Monitoring temporal change in riparian vegetation of Great Basin National Park
Disturbance in riparian areas of semiarid ecosystems involves complex interactions of pulsed hydrologic flows, herbivory, fire, climatic effects, and anthropogenic influences. We resampled riparian vegetation within ten 10-m × 100-m plots that were initially sampled in 1992 in 4 watersheds of the Snake Range, east central Nevada. Our finding of significantly lower coverage of grasses...
Authors
Erik A. Beever, David A. Pyke, Jeanne C. Chambers, Fred Landau, S.D. Smith
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
American black bears and bee yard depredation at Okefenokee Swamp, Georgia American black bears and bee yard depredation at Okefenokee Swamp, Georgia
We studied American black bears (Ursus americanus), on the northwest periphery of Okefenokee Swamp in southeast Georgia, to assess landowner attitudes toward bears, estimate the extent of damage to commercial honey bee operations by bears, and evaluate methods to reduce bear depredations to apiaries. We collected 8,351 black bear radiolocations and identified 51 bee yards on our study...
Authors
J. D. Clark, S. Dobey, D.V. Masters, B.K. Scheick, M.R. Pelton, M.E. Sunquist
Ecology of Florida black bears in the Okefenokee-Osceola ecosystem Ecology of Florida black bears in the Okefenokee-Osceola ecosystem
The population status of the Florida black bear (Ursus americanus floridanus) is problematic within many portions of its range and its potential listing as a federally threatened species has been the subject of legal debate. We studied Florida black bears in 2 areas in the Okefenokee-Osceola ecosystem in southeast Georgia (i.e.,Okefenokee) and north Florida (i.e., Osceola) from 1995 to...
Authors
S. Dobey, D.V. Masters, B.K. Scheick, J. D. Clark, M.R. Pelton, M.E. Sunquist
Distribution patterns of lentic-breeding amphibians in relation to ultraviolet radiation exposure in western North America Distribution patterns of lentic-breeding amphibians in relation to ultraviolet radiation exposure in western North America
An increase in ultraviolet-B (UV-B) radiation has been posited to be a potential factor in the decline of some amphibian population. This hypothesis has received support from laboratory and field experiments showing that current levels of UV-B can cause embryo mortality in some species, but little research has addressed whether UV-B is influencing the distribution of amphibian...
Authors
M. J. Adams, B. R. Hossack, R.A. Knapp, P.S. Corn, S. A. Diamond, P.C. Trenham, D.B. Fagre
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
Duelling timescales of host mixing and disease spread determine invasion of disease in structured populations Duelling timescales of host mixing and disease spread determine invasion of disease in structured populations
The epidemic potential of a disease is traditionally assessed using the basic reproductive number, R0. However, in populations with social or spatial structure a chronic disease is more likely to invade than an acute disease with the same R0, because it persists longer within each group and allows for more host movement between groups. Acute diseases ‘perceive’ a more structured host...
Authors
P.C. Cross, James O. Lloyd-Smith, P.L.F. Johnson, W.M. Getz
Climate change and amphibians Climate change and amphibians
Amphibian life histories are exceedingly sensitive to temperature and precipitation, and there is good evidence that recent climate change has already resulted in a shift to breeding earlier in the year for some species. There are also suggestions that the recent increase in the occurrence of El Niño events has caused declines of anurans in Central America and is linked to elevated...
Authors
P.S. Corn