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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

Incorporating precision, accuracy and alternative sampling designs into a continental monitoring program for colonial waterbirds Incorporating precision, accuracy and alternative sampling designs into a continental monitoring program for colonial waterbirds

A comprehensive monitoring program for colonial waterbirds in North America has never existed. At smaller geographic scales, many states and provinces conduct surveys of colonial waterbird populations. Periodic regional surveys are conducted at varying times during the breeding season using a variety of survey methods, which complicates attempts to estimate population trends for most...
Authors
Melanie J. Steinkamp, B.G. Peterjohn, J.L. Keisman

Forty-fourth supplement to the American Ornithologists' Union Check-list of North American birds Forty-fourth supplement to the American Ornithologists' Union Check-list of North American birds

This is the third Supplement since publication of the 7th edition of the Check-list of North American Birds (American Ornithologists' Union [AOU] 1998). It summarizes decisions made by the AOU's Committee on Classification and Nomenclature between 1 January 2002 and 31 December 2002.
Authors
R.C. Banks, C. Cicero, J.L. Dunn, A.W. Kratter, P.C. Rasmussen, J.V. Remsen, J.D. Rising, D.F. Stotz

SAS procedures for designing and analyzing sample surveys SAS procedures for designing and analyzing sample surveys

Complex surveys often are necessary to estimate occurrence (or distribution), density, and abundance of plants and animals for purposes of re-search and conservation. Most scientists are familiar with simple random sampling, where sample units are selected from a population of interest (sampling frame) with equal probability. However, the goal of ecological surveys often is to make...
Authors
Joshua D. Stafford, Kenneth J. Reinecke, Richard M. Kaminski

Relation of fatty acid composition in lead-exposed mallards to fat mobilization, lipid peroxidation and alkaline phosphatase activity Relation of fatty acid composition in lead-exposed mallards to fat mobilization, lipid peroxidation and alkaline phosphatase activity

The increase of n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) in animal tissues has been proposed as a mechanism of lead (Pb) poisoning through lipid peroxidation or altered eicosanoids metabolism. We have studied fatty acid (FA) composition in liver and brain of mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) feeding for 3 weeks on diets containing combinations of low or high levels of vitamin E (20 or 200 UI...
Authors
R. Mateo, W. N. Beyer, J. W. Spann, D. J. Hoffman

Windows of opportunity: white-tailed deer and the dynamics of northern hardwood forests of the northeastern US Windows of opportunity: white-tailed deer and the dynamics of northern hardwood forests of the northeastern US

Herbivory, lighting regimes, and site conditions are among the most important determinants of forest regeneration success, but these are affected by a host of other factors such as weather, predation, human exploitation, pathogens, wind and fire. We draw together > 50 years of research on the Huntington Wildlife Forest in the central Adirondack Mountains of New York to explore...
Authors
R.W. Sage, W.F. Porter, H.B. Underwood

Effects of the mosquito larvicide GB-1111 on red-winged blackbird embryos Effects of the mosquito larvicide GB-1111 on red-winged blackbird embryos

Golden Bear Oil (GB-111 I; legal trade name for GB-1313) is a petroleum distillate that is used in the United States and other countries as a larvicide for mosquito suppression. As part of a multi-species evaluation of the potential effects of GB-1111 on birds, red-winged blackbird eggs were collected, artificially incubated, and treated with one of five amounts of GB-1111 varying from 0...
Authors
P.H. Albers, D. J. Hoffman, D.M. Buscemi, M. J. Melancon

Local extinction and turnover rates at the edge and interior of species' ranges Local extinction and turnover rates at the edge and interior of species' ranges

One hypothesis for the maintenance of the edge of a species' range suggests that more central (and abundant) populations are relatively stable and edge populations are less stable with increased local extinction and turnover rates. To date, estimates of such metrics are equivocal due to design and analysis flaws. Apparent increased estimates of extinction and turnover rates at the edge...
Authors
P.F. Doherty, T. Boulinier, J.D. Nichols

Normality of raw data in general linear models: The most widespread myth in statistics Normality of raw data in general linear models: The most widespread myth in statistics

In years of statistical consulting for ecologists and wildlife biologists, by far the most common misconception we have come across has been the one about normality in general linear models. These comprise a very large part of the statistical models used in ecology and include t tests, simple and multiple linear regression, polynomial regression, and analysis of variance (ANOVA) and...
Authors
Marc Kery, Jeff S. Hatfield

Effects of life-state on detectability in a demographic study of the terrestrial orchid Cleistes bifaria Effects of life-state on detectability in a demographic study of the terrestrial orchid Cleistes bifaria

1. Most plant demographic studies follow marked individuals in permanent plots. Plots tend to be small, so detectability is assumed to be one for every individual. However, detectability could be affected by factors such as plant traits, time, space, observer, previous detection, biotic interactions, and especially by life-state. 2. We used a double-observer survey and closed population...
Authors
M. Kery, K.B. Gregg

Science deficiency in conservation practice: the monitoring of tiger populations in India Science deficiency in conservation practice: the monitoring of tiger populations in India

Conservation practices are supposed to get refined by advancing scientific knowledge. We study this phenomenon in the context of monitoring tiger populations in India, by evaluating the 'pugmark census method' employed by wildlife managers for three decades. We use an analytical framework of modem animal population sampling to test the efficacy of the pugmark censuses using scientific...
Authors
K. U. Karanth, J.D. Nichols, J. Seidensticker, Eric Dinerstein, J.L.D. Smith, C. McDougal, A.J.T. Johnsingh, Raghunandan S. Chundawat, V. Thapar

Adjusting multistate capture-recapture models for misclassification bias: manatee breeding proportions Adjusting multistate capture-recapture models for misclassification bias: manatee breeding proportions

Matrix population models are important tools for research and management of populations. Estimating the parameters of these models is an important step in applying them to real populations. Multistate capture-recapture methods have provided a useful means for estimating survival and parameters of transition between locations or life history states but have mostly relied on the assumption...
Authors
W. L. Kendall, J.E. Hines, J.D. Nichols

Aqueous-phase disappearance of atrazine, metolachlor, and chlorpyrifos in laboratory aquaria and outdoor macrocosms Aqueous-phase disappearance of atrazine, metolachlor, and chlorpyrifos in laboratory aquaria and outdoor macrocosms

Dissipation processes are described for a combination of commonly used pesticides—atrazine (6-chloro-4-ethylamino-6-isopropylamino-s-triazine), metolachlor (2-chloro-N-[2-ethyl-6-methyl-phenyl]-N-[2-methoxy-1-methylethyl] acetamide), and chlorpyrifos (O-O diethyl O-[3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridinyl] phosphorothioate)—in a laboratory and outdoor pond systems. Dosing rates and timing were...
Authors
L. Mazanti, C. Rice, K. Bialek, D. Sparling, C. Stevenson, W.E. Johnson, P. Kangas, J. Rheinstein
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