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
Landscape level reforestation priorities for forest breeding landbirds in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley Landscape level reforestation priorities for forest breeding landbirds in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley
Thousands of ha of cleared wetlands are being reforested annually in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley (MAV). Despite the expansive and long-term impacts of reforestation on the biological communities of the MAV, there is generally a lack of landscape level planning in its implementation. To address this deficiency we used raster-based digital data to assess the value of forest restoration...
Authors
D.J. Twedt, W.B. Uihlein
Status and conservation of the fish fauna of the Alabama River system Status and conservation of the fish fauna of the Alabama River system
The Alabama River system, comprising the Alabama, Coosa, and Tallapoosa subsystems, forms the eastern portion of the Mobile River drainage. Physiographic diversity and geologic history have fostered development in the Alabama River system of globally significant levels of aquatic faunal diversity and endemism. At least 184 fishes are native to the system, including at least 33 endemic...
Authors
Mary C. Freeman, E.R. Irwin, N.M. Burkhead, B. J. Freeman, H.L. Bart
Landscape characteristics influence pond occupancy by frogs after accounting for detectability Landscape characteristics influence pond occupancy by frogs after accounting for detectability
Many investigators have hypothesized that landscape attributes such as the amount and proximity of habitat are important for amphibian spatial patterns. This has produced a number of studies focusing on the effects of landscape characteristics on amphibian patterns of occurrence in patches or ponds, most of which conclude that the landscape is important. We identified two concerns...
Authors
M. J. Mazerolle, A. Desrochers, L. Rochefort
Using chaotic forcing to detect damage in a structure Using chaotic forcing to detect damage in a structure
In this work we develop a numerical test for Holder continuity and apply it and another test for continuity to the difficult problem of detecting damage in structures. We subject a thin metal plate with incremental damage to the plate changes, its filtering properties, and therefore the phase space trajectories of the response chaotic excitation of various bandwidths. Damage to the plate...
Authors
L. Moniz, J. Nichols, S. Trickey, M. Seaver, D. Pecora, L. Pecora
Inter-species variation in yolk steroid levels and a cowbird-host comparison Inter-species variation in yolk steroid levels and a cowbird-host comparison
We examined variability in yolk hormone levels among songbird species and the role of yolk steroids as a mechanism for enhanced exploitation of hosts by the parasitic Brown-headed Cowbird Molothrus ater. Within-clutch variation in yolk steroids has been found in several avian species in single species studies, but few comparisons have been made among species. We found a large range of...
Authors
D. Caldwell Hahn, Jeffrey S. Hatfield, Mahmoud A. Abdelnabi, Julie M. Wu, Lawrence D. Igl, Mary A. Ottinger
Pilot inventory of mammals, reptiles, and amphibians, Golden Gate National Recreation Area, California, 1990-1997 Pilot inventory of mammals, reptiles, and amphibians, Golden Gate National Recreation Area, California, 1990-1997
The United States Geological Survey Golden Gate Field Station conducted a baseline inventory of terrestrial vertebrates within the Golden Gate National Recreation Area (GGNRA), Marin, San Francisco, and San Mateo Counties, California between 1990 and 1997. We established 456 permanent study plots in 6 major park habitats, including grassland, coastal scrub, riparian woodland, coastal...
Authors
Marcia Semenoff-Irving, Judd A. Howell
Communicating Leave No Trace ethics and practices: Efficacy of two-day trainer courses Communicating Leave No Trace ethics and practices: Efficacy of two-day trainer courses
Heavy recreational visitation within protected natural areas has resulted in many ecological impacts. Many of these impacts may be avoided or minimized through adoption of low-impact hiking and camping practices. Although ?No Trace? messages have been promoted in public lands since the 1970s, few studies have documented the reception and effectiveness of these messages. The U.S. Leave No...
Authors
M.L. Daniels, J. L. Marion
Post-harvest field manipulations to conserve waste rice for waterfowl Post-harvest field manipulations to conserve waste rice for waterfowl
Rice seeds escaping collection by combines during harvest (hereafter, waste rice) provide quality forage for migrating and wintering waterfowl in the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley (MAV) and other rice growing regions in the United States. Recent sample surveys across the MAV have revealed abundance of waste rice in fields declined an average of 71% between harvest and late autumn...
Authors
J.D. Stafford, R.M. Kaminski, K. J. Reinecke, M.E. Kurtz, S.W. Manley
Monitoring Puerto Rican avifauna using roadside surveys Monitoring Puerto Rican avifauna using roadside surveys
In 1997 we began investigating the use of roadside point counts to monitor the long-term status and trends of Puerto Rican bird populations. If such a methodology proves feasible it may provide the empirical data needed for the development of sound conservation plans for the island's avifauna in much the same way that North American Breeding Bird Survey data are used by the avian...
Authors
K.L. Pardieck, B.G. Peterjohn
Abundance and distribution of the common eider in eastern North America during the molting season Abundance and distribution of the common eider in eastern North America during the molting season
Like most other sea ducks, male common eiders (Somateria mollissima) concentrate in large groups to molt following the breeding season. Although Maine conducted surveys in the 1980s, little was known of eider molting sites in Atlantic Canada until recently, when surveys and research conducted in Quebec, Newfoundland, Labrador, Nova Scotia and Maine revealed a number of important molting...
Authors
Jean-Pierre L. Savard, B. Allen, D. McAuley, G.R. Milton, S. Gililand
Surface elevation dynamics in a regenerating mangrove forest at Homebush Bay, Australia Surface elevation dynamics in a regenerating mangrove forest at Homebush Bay, Australia
Following the dieback of an interior portion of a mangrove forest at Homebush Bay, Australia, surface elevation tables and feldspar marker horizons were installed in the impacted, intermediate and control forest to measure vertical accretion, elevation change, and shallow subsidence. The objectives of the study were to determine current vertical accretion and elevation change rates as a...
Authors
K. Rogers, N. Saintilan, D. Cahoon