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: 1303
Spatial and temporal patterns of debris flow deposition in the Oregon Coast Range, USA Spatial and temporal patterns of debris flow deposition in the Oregon Coast Range, USA
Patterns of debris-flow occurrence were investigated in 125 headwater basins in the Oregon Coast Range. Time since the previous debris-flows was established using dendrochronology, and recurrence interval estimates ranged from 98 to 357 years. Tributary basins with larger drainage areas had a greater abundance of potential landslide source areas and a greater frequency of scouring events...
Authors
Christine L. May, Robert E. Gresswell
USA: Glacier National Park, Biosphere Reserve and GLORIA Site USA: Glacier National Park, Biosphere Reserve and GLORIA Site
The National Park Service of the United States has 388 designated protected areas and parks that include historic and cultural sites as well as ‘natural resource’ parks set aside for their unique and outstanding natural features. Early efforts to create parks were focused on areas of beauty or unusual features but later efforts increasingly aimed to protect biodiversity and intact...
Authors
Daniel B. Fagre
Modeling survival: application of the Andersen-Gill model to Yellowstone grizzly bears Modeling survival: application of the Andersen-Gill model to Yellowstone grizzly bears
Wildlife ecologists often use the Kaplan-Meier procedure or Cox proportional hazards model to estimate survival rates, distributions, and magnitude of risk factors. The Andersen-Gill formulation (A-G) of the Cox proportional hazards model has seen limited application to mark-resight data but has a number of advantages, including the ability to accommodate left-censored data, time-varying
Authors
Christopher J. Johnson, Mark S. Boyce, Charles C. Schwartz, Mark A. Haroldson
Use of naturally occurring mercury to determine the importance of cutthroat trout to Yellowstone grizzly bears Use of naturally occurring mercury to determine the importance of cutthroat trout to Yellowstone grizzly bears
Spawning cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus clarki (Richardson, 1836)) are a potentially important food resource for grizzly bears (Ursus arctos horribilis Ord, 1815) in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. We developed a method to estimate the amount of cutthroat trout ingested by grizzly bears living in the Yellowstone Lake area. The method utilized (i) the relatively high, naturally...
Authors
L.A. Felicetti, C.C. Schwartz, R. O. Rye, K.A. Gunther, J.G. Crock, M.A. Haroldson, L. Waits, C.T. Robbins
Reproductive maturation and senescence in the female brown bear Reproductive maturation and senescence in the female brown bear
Changes in age-specific reproductive rates can have important implications for managing populations, but the number of female brown (grizzly) bears (Ursus arctos) observed in any one study is usually inadequate to quantify such patterns, especially for older females and in hunted areas. We examined patterns of reproductive maturation and senescence in female brown bears by combining data...
Authors
Charles C. Schwartz, Kim A. Keating, Harry V. Reynolds III, Victor G. Barnes, Richard A. Sellers, J. E. Swenson, Sterling D. Miller, B. N. McLellan, Jeffrey A. Keay, Robert McCann, Michael Gibeau, Wayne F. Wakkinen, Richard D. Mace, Wayne Kasworm, Rodger Smith, Steven Herrero
Modeling paleoclimates Modeling paleoclimates
Paleoclimatic data and climate models play a complimentary role in understanding climate change. This chapter provides an overview of the process of climate-system modeling, presents the taxonomy of the models recently applied in the study of Quaternary climate change and variation, and discusses the development of climate modeling since the 1965 International Union for Quaternary...
Authors
Patrick J Bartlein, Steven W. Hostetler
Predicting rare plant occurrence in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, USA Predicting rare plant occurrence in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, USA
We investigated the applicability of biometric habitat modeling to rare plant inventory and conservation by developing and field testing a geographically explicit model for Cardamine clematitis Shuttleworth ex A. Gray (mountain bittercress), an endemic plant of the southern Blue Ridge Mountains, USA. For each of 187 confirmed coordinates for C. clematitis in Great Smoky Mountains...
Authors
John R. Boetsch, Frank T. van Manen, Joseph D. Clark
Pleistocene glaciations of the Rocky Mountains Pleistocene glaciations of the Rocky Mountains
This chapter presents the status of Rocky Mountain glacial studies in 1965 and progress from that time to the present. The Rocky Mountains and the adjacent Basin and Range of the United States consist of about 100 ranges distributed in a northwest trending belt 2,000 km long and 200–800 km wide. In 1965, Rocky Mountain glacial subdivisions and correlations are closely linked with those...
Authors
Kenneth L. Pierce
Grizzly bear Ursus arctos Grizzly bear Ursus arctos
No abstract available.
Authors
C.C. Schwartz, S.D. Miller, M.A. Haroldson
Mitochondrial phylogeography of moose (Alces alces) in North America Mitochondrial phylogeography of moose (Alces alces) in North America
Nucleotide variation was assessed from the mitochondrial control region of North American moose (Alces alces) to test predictions of a model of range expansion by stepping-stone dispersal and to determine whether patterns of genetic variation support the current recognition of 4 subspecies. Haplotypes formed a star phylogeny indicative of a recent expansion of populations. Values of...
Authors
Kris J. Hundertmark, R. Terry Bowyer, Gerald F. Shields, Charles C. Schwartz
Hatching success in salamanders and chorus frogs at two sites in Colorado, USA: Effects of acidic deposition and climate Hatching success in salamanders and chorus frogs at two sites in Colorado, USA: Effects of acidic deposition and climate
The snowpack in the vicinity of the Mount Zirkel Wilderness Area is among the most acidic in the western United States. We analyzed water chemistry and examined hatching success in tiger salamanders and chorus frogs at ponds there and at nearby Rabbit Ears Pass (Dumont) to determine whether acid deposition affects amphibians or their breeding habitats at these potentially sensitive...
Authors
E. Muths, K. Campbell, P.S. Corn
Large carnivores response to recreational big game hunting along the Yellowstone National Park and Absaroka-Beartooth Wilderness boundary Large carnivores response to recreational big game hunting along the Yellowstone National Park and Absaroka-Beartooth Wilderness boundary
The Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem contains the rare combination of an intact guild of native large carnivores, their prey, and differing land management policies (National Park versus National Forest; no hunting versus hunting). Concurrent field studies on large carnivores allowed us to investigate activities of humans and carnivores on Yellowstone National Park's (YNP) northern boundary...
Authors
T.E. Ruth, D.W. Smith, M.A. Haroldson, P.C. Buotte, C.C. Schwartz, H.B. Quigley, S. Cherry, D. Tyres, K. Frey