Publications
USGS Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center staff publish results of their research in USGS series reports and in peer-reviewed journals. Publication links are below. Information on all USGS publications can be found at the USGS Publications Warehouse.
Filter Total Items: 1934
Estimating nest success: The Mayfield method and an alternative Estimating nest success: The Mayfield method and an alternative
Mayfield's method for calculating the success of a group of nests is examined in detail. The standard error of his estimator is developed. Mayfield's assumption that destroyed nests are at risk until the midpoint of the interval between visits leads to bias if nests are visited infrequently. A remedy is suggested, the Mayfield-40% method. I also present a competing model, which...
Authors
Douglas H. Johnson
Avian mortality from a severe hail storm Avian mortality from a severe hail storm
Abstract has not been submitted
Authors
J.L. Piehl
Marsh nesting by mallards Marsh nesting by mallards
Nest-site selection by mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) hens was studied on a 52-km2, privately owned area in the Missouri Coteau of south-central North Dakota during 1974-77. Sixty-six percent of 53 nests initiated by radio-marked and unmarked hens were in wetlands in dense stands of emergent vegetation and usually within 50 m of the wetland edge. These findings and other sources of...
Authors
Gary L. Krapu, L.G. Talent, T.J. Dwyer
Some ecological aspects of marbled godwits and willets in North Dakota Some ecological aspects of marbled godwits and willets in North Dakota
No abstract available.
Authors
K.F. Higgins, L.M. Kirsch, M.R. Ryan, Rochelle B. Renken
[Book review] Role of the wolf in a deer decline in the Superior National Forest, by L. David Mech and Patrick D. Karns [Book review] Role of the wolf in a deer decline in the Superior National Forest, by L. David Mech and Patrick D. Karns
Review of: Role of the Wolf in a Deer Decline in the Superior National Forest. Volume 148 of USDA Forest Service Research Paper. L. David Mech and Patrick D. Karns. North Central Forest Experiment Station, Forest Service, United States Department of Agriculture, 1977. 23 pages.
Authors
R. J. Greenwood
Last chance to save a priceless heritage Last chance to save a priceless heritage
Abstract has not been submitted
Authors
Gary L. Krapu
Display inventory of the torrent duck Display inventory of the torrent duck
Abstract has not been submitted
Authors
J.L. Eldridge
Fall foods of migrant common snipe in North Dakota Fall foods of migrant common snipe in North Dakota
Studies of foods consumed by common snipe (Capella gallinago) during fall migration (Sperry 1940, Erickson 1941, Choate in Tuck 1972, Tuck 1972) have shown that diets vary among habitats. More recently, Fogarty and Arnold (1977) expressed the need for more detailed information on snipe food habits and more refined knowledge of the snipe's range and adaptability to various food situations...
Authors
E.K. Fritzell, G.A. Swanson, M.I. Meyer
Early imprinting in wild and game-farm mallards (Anas platyrhynchos): Genotype and arousal Early imprinting in wild and game-farm mallards (Anas platyrhynchos): Genotype and arousal
Early imprinting was studied under laboratory conditions in five lines of mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) with different degrees of wildness obtained through pedigreed breeding. Data were analyzed by the least squares method. Wild ducklings imprinted better than game-farm (domesticated) ducklings, and heterosis was demonstrated to exist in imprinting traits. Nonadditive genetic variations...
Authors
K.M. Cheng, R.N. Shoffner, R.E. Phillips, L.J. Shapiro
A remote controlled system for capturing nesting waterfowl A remote controlled system for capturing nesting waterfowl
Abstract has not been submitted
Authors
Charles W. Shaiffer, Gary L. Krapu
Interpreting the results of nesting studies Interpreting the results of nesting studies
Nesting studies are used to assess the production of birds and to evaluate nesting habitats. Most such studies involve finding nests in a given area and subsequently determining the proportion that hatched. Unfortunately, the results are often biased by unrecognized differences in the probabilities of finding successful and unsuccessful nests. The observed hatch rates of 1,900 nests of...
Authors
H.W. Miller, Douglas H. Johnson