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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

Nesting biology of three grassland passerines in the northern tallgrass prairie Nesting biology of three grassland passerines in the northern tallgrass prairie

Basic nesting information on grassland passerines is needed for improving grassland bird management. Among the information needs are (1) the suitability of nesting habitat, (2) periods during the breeding season in which birds are most vulnerable to disturbances, and (3) how to fit grasslands into a prioritization scheme for conservation. Comparisons of nesting parameters among grassland...
Authors
Maiken Winter, Douglas H. Johnson, Jill A. Shaffer, W. Daniel Svedarsky

Record high Wolf, Canis lupus, pack density Record high Wolf, Canis lupus, pack density

This report documents a year-around Wolf (Canis lupus) density of 18.2/100 km2 and a summer density of 30.8/100 km2, in a northeastern Minnesota Wolf pack. The previous record was a summer density of 14.1/100 km2, for a Wolf pack on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
Authors
L.D. Mech, S. Tracy

Patterns of variation in clutch sizes in a guild of temperate-nesting dabbling ducks Patterns of variation in clutch sizes in a guild of temperate-nesting dabbling ducks

Clutch sizes of temperate-nesting dabbling ducks vary widely within and between years. Biologists have long been interested in why such patterns exist but have had difficulty separating intrinsic effects from environmental influences. In an attempt to gain greater insight into the roles of intrinsic and environmental influences on clutch sizes of dabbling ducks, we compared clutch-size...
Authors
Gary L. Krapu, R. E. Reynolds, G.A. Sargeant, R.W. Renner

Unusual behavior by bison, Bison bison, toward elk, Cervus elaphus, and wolves, Canis lupus Unusual behavior by bison, Bison bison, toward elk, Cervus elaphus, and wolves, Canis lupus

Incidents are described of bison (Bison bison) in Yellowstone National Park mauling and possibly killing a young elk (Cervus elaphus) calf, chasing wolves (Canis lupus) off elk they had just killed or were killing, and keeping the wolves away for extended periods. During one of the latter cases, the bison knocked a wolf-wounded elk down. Bison were also seen approaching wolves that were...
Authors
L.D. Mech, R.T. McIntyre, D.W. Smith

Den site activity patterns of adult male and female Swift Foxes, Vulpes velox, in northwestern Texas Den site activity patterns of adult male and female Swift Foxes, Vulpes velox, in northwestern Texas

Activity of Swift Foxes (Vulpes velox) at den sites was studied in northwestern Texas during pup rearing seasons in 2000 and 2001 to determine role of males in parental care. Twenty-four percent of radio-collared females with a potential to breed successfully raised pups to eight weeks of age. We intensively monitored presence and absence of male and female Swift Foxes at two den sites...
Authors
P.R. Lemons, W.B. Ballard, R.M. Sullivan, M.A. Sovada

Does presence of permanent fresh water affect recruitment in prairie-nesting dabbling ducks? Does presence of permanent fresh water affect recruitment in prairie-nesting dabbling ducks?

In the Prairie Pothole Region (PPR) of North Dakota, USA, American mink (Mustela vison) are a major predator of ducklings. Mink populations plummet during severe droughts, but some mink survive where permanent fresh water is available. In 1992–1993, we evaluated whether development of a permanent water body, the 125-km McClusky Canal (MC), had affected survival of gadwall (Anas strepera)...
Authors
Gary L. Krapu, P.J. Pietz, D.A. Brandt, R. R. Cox

Invertebrate egg banks of restored, natural, and drained wetlands in the Prairie Pothole Region of the United States Invertebrate egg banks of restored, natural, and drained wetlands in the Prairie Pothole Region of the United States

Analogous to ‘seed banks,’ ‘egg banks’ are important for seasonal succession and maintenance of invertebrate species diversity throughout wet and dry cycles in the prairie pothole region. Further, recruitment of invertebrates from relic egg banks in the sediments and dispersal of eggs into wetlands is believed to be important for reestablishment of invertebrates in recently restored...
Authors
R.A. Gleason, N.H. Euliss, D.E. Hubbard, W.G. Duffy

Guidelines for finding nests of passerine birds in tallgrass prairie Guidelines for finding nests of passerine birds in tallgrass prairie

The productivity of birds is one of the most critical components of their natural history affected by habitat quality. Birds might occur at high densities in a given habitat patch but have low nesting success. Such "population sinks" would not be detected if observers relied solely on estimates of bird density. Therefore, it is essential to monitor nests and determine their outcomes...
Authors
Maiken Winter, Shawn E. Hawks, Jill A. Shaffer, Douglas H. Johnson

Historical and recent records and first nest records of Henslow's sparrow in North Dakota Historical and recent records and first nest records of Henslow's sparrow in North Dakota

The northwestern limit of the Henslow's sparrow (Ammodramus henslowii) breeding distribution occurs in southern Minnesota and central Wisconsin. In North Dakota, observations of Henslow's sparrows are reported infrequently, and there are no published nest records in the state. Herein, we summarize and review previous reports of Henslow's sparrows in North Dakota and document the first...
Authors
Jill A. Shaffer, Lawrence D. Igl, Frederick Vanhove

Status assessment and conservation plan for the Western Burrowing Owl in the United States Status assessment and conservation plan for the Western Burrowing Owl in the United States

The Western Burrowing Owl (Athene cunicularia hypugaea) is a grassland specialist distributed throughout w. North America, primarily in open areas with short vegetation and bare ground in desert, grassland, and shrub-steppe environments. Burrowing Owls are dependent on the presence of fossorial mammals (primarily prairie dogs and ground squirrels), whose burrows are used for nesting and...
Authors
David S. Klute, Loren W. Ayers, Michael T. Green, William H. Howe, Stephanie L. Jones, Jill A. Shaffer, Tara S. Zimmerman
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