Publications
This is a list of publications written by Patuxent employees since Patuxent opened in 1939. To search for Patuxent's publications by author or title, please click below to go to the USGS Publication Warehouse.
Filter Total Items: 8128
Bottomland hardwood restoration in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley: Looking past the trees to see the forest Bottomland hardwood restoration in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley: Looking past the trees to see the forest
Planned restoration of bottomland hardwoods is important to adequately address negative consequences resulting from the severe loss and fragmentation of forested wetlands in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley. Reforestation efforts have been promoted through government initiatives of state and federal agencies (e.g. Wetland Reserve Program) and private conservation groups. To clarify...
Authors
R.R. Wilson, J.M. Oliver, D.J. Twedt, W.B. Uihlein
[Book review] The history of ornithology in Virginia [Book review] The history of ornithology in Virginia
Virginia is arguably the birthplace of ornithology in North America. Captain John Smith and naturalist Mark Catesby were among the early describers of Virginia's common birds. David Johnston's book, however, begins by taking the reader back to the Tertiary period, some 65 million years ago, with Storrs Olson's description of fossils from tidewater Virginia. John Guilday, studying bone...
Authors
C.S. Robbins
Vector-borne diseases on Fire Island, New York (Fire Island National Seashore Science Synthesis Paper) Vector-borne diseases on Fire Island, New York (Fire Island National Seashore Science Synthesis Paper)
This paper discusses eleven tick-borne and five mosquito-borne pathogens that are known to occur at FIlS, or could potentially occur. The potential for future occurrence, and ecological factors that influence occurrence, are assessed for each disease. Lyme disease is the most common vector-borne disease on Fire Island. The Lyme spirochete, Borrelia burgdorferi, is endemic in local tick...
Authors
H. S. Ginsberg
[Book review] Massachusetts breeding bird atlas [Book review] Massachusetts breeding bird atlas
A glance at the dust jacket of this handsome volume drives home the conservation message that breeding bird atlases are designed to promote—that bird populations are changing over vast areas and, unless we become aware of changes in status and take remedial action, some species will disappear from our neighborhoods and even our county or state. A case in point involves the closely...
Authors
Chandler S. Robbins
Birds of the Baja California Peninsula: Status, distribution, and taxonomy Birds of the Baja California Peninsula: Status, distribution, and taxonomy
Birds of the Baja California Peninsula: Status, Distribution, and Taxonomy. By Richard A. Erickson and Steve N. G. Howell (Eds.). American Birding Association Monographs in Field Ornithology No. 3, Colorado Springs, Colorado. 2001: 261 pp. ISBN: 1878788396. $39.95 (paper). This volume is a collection of eight papers and five appendices on the status and distribution of the birds of Baja...
Authors
Mary Gustafson
From the Field: Carbofuran detected on weathered raptor carcass feet From the Field: Carbofuran detected on weathered raptor carcass feet
The cause of death for raptors poisoned at illegal carbofuran-laced predator baits is often not confirmed because the carcass matrices that are conventionally analyzed are not available due to decomposition and scavenging. However, many such carcasses retain intact feet that may have come into contact with carbofuran. Eastern screech owls (Otus asio) were exposed to carbofuran via...
Authors
Nimish B. Vyas, James W. Spann, Craig S. Hulse, W. Bauer, S. Olson
Geographic distribution: Hemidactylium scutatum (four-toed salamander.) USA: Maine Geographic distribution: Hemidactylium scutatum (four-toed salamander.) USA: Maine
No abstract available.
Authors
B. Windmiller, L. Weir, B. Barber, K. Blazej, G. Mittelhauser, P. Mittelhauser, K. Roen
Efficacy of selected coccidiostats in sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis) following challenge Efficacy of selected coccidiostats in sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis) following challenge
The anticoccidial efficacy of amprolium, clazuril, and monensin were studied in sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis) infected with a mixture of Eimeria spp. oocysts. Five groups of four 1-day-old sandhill crane chicks were maintained on a crumbled ration containing no coccidiostat, amprolium at 2.2 ppm, clazuril at 1.1 ppm, clazuril at 5.5 ppm, or monensin at 99 ppm. After 2 wk on their...
Authors
James W. Carpenter, Meliton N. Novilla, Jeffrey Hatfield
Designing occupancy studies: General advice and allocating survey effort Designing occupancy studies: General advice and allocating survey effort
1.The fraction of sampling units in a landscape where a target species is present (occupancy) is an extensively used concept in ecology. Yet in many applications the species will not always be detected in a sampling unit even when present, resulting in biased estimates of occupancy. Given that sampling units are surveyed repeatedly within a relatively short timeframe, a number of similar...
Authors
Darryl I. MacKenzie, J. Andrew Royle
Commentary on the type material of Tantilla gracilis Baird and Girard, 1853 and Tantilla nigriceps Kennicott, 1860 (Reptilia: Squamata), with a neotype designation for T. nigriceps Commentary on the type material of Tantilla gracilis Baird and Girard, 1853 and Tantilla nigriceps Kennicott, 1860 (Reptilia: Squamata), with a neotype designation for T. nigriceps
We demonstrate that USNM 2040 and not UMMZ 3781 (originally part of lot USNM 4500) was most likely the holotype of Tantilla gracilis. The type specimens of Tantilla nigriceps have been lost or destroyed. It is not possible to determine from the original description of Tantilla nigriceps if this name represents what is currently known as T. nigriceps or T. hobartsmithi. In order to...
Authors
S.W. Gotte, L.D. Wilson