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
Tidal marshes: A global perspective on the evolution and conservation of their terrestrial vertebrates Tidal marshes: A global perspective on the evolution and conservation of their terrestrial vertebrates
Globally, tidal marshes are found in small pockets or narrow bands totaling only approximately 45,000 square kilometers. The combination of salinity, low floristic and structural complexity, and regular tidal inundation, as well as unpredictable catastrophic flooding, provides a unique selective environment that shapes local adaptations, including those that are morphological...
Authors
Russell Greenberg, Jesus Maldonado, Sam Droege, M.V. McDonald
Model weights and the foundations of multimodel inference Model weights and the foundations of multimodel inference
Statistical thinking in wildlife biology and ecology has been profoundly influenced by the introduction of AIC (Akaike?s information criterion) as a tool for model selection and as a basis for model averaging. In this paper, we advocate the Bayesian paradigm as a broader framework for multimodel inference, one in which model averaging and model selection are naturally linked, and in...
Authors
W.A. Link, R. J. Barker
Combining Breeding Bird Survey and distance sampling to estimate density of migrant and breeding birds Combining Breeding Bird Survey and distance sampling to estimate density of migrant and breeding birds
We combined Breeding Bird Survey point count protocol and distance sampling to survey spring migrant and breeding birds in Vicksburg National Military Park on 33 days between March and June of 2003 and 2004. For 26 of 106 detected species, we used program DISTANCE to estimate detection probabilities and densities from 660 3-min point counts in which detections were recorded within four...
Authors
S.G. Somershoe, D.J. Twedt, B. Reid
Planning for robust reserve networks using uncertainty analysis Planning for robust reserve networks using uncertainty analysis
Planning land-use for biodiversity conservation frequently involves computer-assisted reserve selection algorithms. Typically such algorithms operate on matrices of species presence?absence in sites, or on species-specific distributions of model predicted probabilities of occurrence in grid cells. There are practically always errors in input data?erroneous species presence?absence data
Authors
A. Moilanen, M.C. Runge, Jane Elith, A. Tyre, Y. Carmel, E. Fegraus, B.A. Wintle, M. Burgman, Y. Ben-Haim
Population trends and flight behavior of the American burying beetle, Nicrophorus americanus (Coleoptera: Silphidae), on Block Island, RI Population trends and flight behavior of the American burying beetle, Nicrophorus americanus (Coleoptera: Silphidae), on Block Island, RI
The endangered American burying beetle, Nicrophorus americanus, was monitored on Block Island, RI, USA, from 1991–2003 using mark-recapture population estimates of adults collected in pitfall traps. Populations increased through time, especially after 1994 when a program was initiated that provided carrion for beetle production. Beetle captures increased with increasing temperature and...
Authors
C.J. Raithel, H. S. Ginsberg, M.L. Prospero
Waste rice for waterfowl in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley Waste rice for waterfowl in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley
Flooded rice fields are important foraging habitats for waterfowl in the lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley (MAV). Waste rice previously was abundant in late autumn (140?492 kg/ha), but early planting and harvest dates in recent years may have increased losses of waste rice during autumn before waterfowl arrive. Research in Mississippi rice fields revealed waste-rice abundance decreased...
Authors
J.D. Stafford, R.M. Kaminski, K. J. Reinecke, S.W. Manley
Estimating the abundance of mouse populations of known size: promises and pitfalls of new methods Estimating the abundance of mouse populations of known size: promises and pitfalls of new methods
Knowledge of animal abundance is fundamental to many ecological studies. Frequently, researchers cannot determine true abundance, and so must estimate it using a method such as mark-recapture or distance sampling. Recent advances in abundance estimation allow one to model heterogeneity with individual covariates or mixture distributions and to derive multimodel abundance estimators that
Authors
P.B. Conn, A.D. Arthur, L.L. Bailey, G.R. Singleton
Phosphorus amendment reduces hepatic and renal oxidative stress in mallards ingesting lead-contaminated sediments Phosphorus amendment reduces hepatic and renal oxidative stress in mallards ingesting lead-contaminated sediments
Lead poisoning of waterfowl has been reported for decades in the Coeur d'Alene River Basin (CDARB) in Idaho as a result of the ingestion of lead-contaminated sediments. This study was conducted to determine whether the addition of phosphoric acid to CDARB sediments would reduce the bioavailability and toxicity of lead to the liver and kidney of mallards (Anas platyrhynchos). Mallards...
Authors
D. J. Hoffman, G. H. Heinz, D. J. Audet
High tides and rising seas: potential effects on estuarine waterbirds High tides and rising seas: potential effects on estuarine waterbirds
Coastal waterbirds are vulnerable to water-level changes especially under predictions of accelerating sea-level rise and increased storm frequency in the next century. Tidal and wind-driven fluctuations in water levels affecting marshes, their invertebrate communities, and their dependent waterbirds are manifested in daily, monthly, seasonal, annual, and supra-annual (e.g., decadal or 18...
Authors
R.M. Erwin, G.M. Sanders, D.J. Prosser, Donald R. Cahoon
Effects of methyl mercury on reproduction in American kestrels Effects of methyl mercury on reproduction in American kestrels
Methyl mercury (MeHg) readily passes through biological membranes, accumulates in individuals, and biomagnifies in higher order predators. It is acutely toxic to some birds at 5-15 parts per million (ppm) wet weight in the diet, and it can damage the central nervous system, impair reproduction, and retard growth and development. The effects of MeHg on reproduction in wild raptors are...
Authors
P.H. Albers, M.T. Koterba, R. Rossmann, J.B. French, R.S. Bennett, W.C. Bauer, W.A. Link
Contaminant exposure and potential effects on terrestrial vertebrates residing in the National Capital Region network and Mid-Atlantic network Contaminant exposure and potential effects on terrestrial vertebrates residing in the National Capital Region network and Mid-Atlantic network
Part of the mission of the National Park Service is to preserve the natural resources, processes, systems, and associated values of its units in an unimpaired condition. Environmental contamination and pollution processes are well recognized stressors addressed by its management policies and plans. A recent study indicates that contemporary terrestrial vertebrate ecotoxicological data...
Authors
Barnett A. Rattner, B.K. Ackerson
Implications of mitochondrial DNA polyphyly in two ecologically undifferentiated but morphologically distinct migratory birds, the masked and white-browed woodswallows Artamus spp. of inland Australia Implications of mitochondrial DNA polyphyly in two ecologically undifferentiated but morphologically distinct migratory birds, the masked and white-browed woodswallows Artamus spp. of inland Australia
The white-browed woodswallow Artamus superciliosus and masked woodswallow A. personatus(Passeriformes: Artamidae) are members of Australia's diverse arid- and semi-arid zone avifauna. Widely sympatric and among Australia's relatively few obligate long-distance temperate-tropical migrants, the two are well differentiated morphologically but not ecologically and vocally. They are pair...
Authors
Leo Joseph, Thomas Wilke, Jose Ten Have, R. Terry Chesser