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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

Long-term fitness consequences of early conditions in the kittiwake Long-term fitness consequences of early conditions in the kittiwake

1. The long-term fitness consequences of conditions during development are receiving growing attention: they are at the interface between ecological and evolutionary processes. We addressed the influence of the length of the rearing period and 'rank' on fitness components in a long-lived seabird species with deferred breeding: the kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla). Rank, which depends on...
Authors
E. Cam, J. #NAME? Monnat, J.E. Hines

Embryotoxic thresholds of mercury: Estimates from individual mallard eggs Embryotoxic thresholds of mercury: Estimates from individual mallard eggs

Eighty pairs of mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) were fed an uncontaminated diet until each female had laid 15 eggs. After each female had laid her 15th egg, the pair was randomly assigned to a control diet or diets containing 5, 10, or 20 μg/g mercury as methylmercury until she had laid a second set of 15 eggs. There were 20 pairs in each group. After the second set of 15 eggs, the pair...
Authors
G. H. Heinz, D. J. Hoffman

Motorized migrations: The future or mere fantasy? Motorized migrations: The future or mere fantasy?

In 15 experiments from 1993-2002, we led cranes, geese, or swans on their first southward migration with either ultralight aircraft or vehicles on the ground. These experiments reveal that large birds can be readily trained to follow and most will return north (and south) in subsequent migrations unassisted. These techniques can now be used to teach birds new (or forgotten) migration...
Authors
David H. Elliot, William J.L. Sladen, William A. Lishman, Kent R. Clegg, Joseph W. Duff, George F. Gee, James C. Lewis

The type specimen of Anoura geoffroyi lasiopyga (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae) The type specimen of Anoura geoffroyi lasiopyga (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae)

In 1868, Wilhelm Peters described Glossonycteris lasiopyga, based on a specimen provided by Henri de Saussure and collected in Mexico. The type specimen was presumed to be among those housed in the collections of the Zoologisches Museum of the Humboldt Universitat in Berlin, Germany. Our study of one of Saussure?s specimens from Mexico, discovered in the collections of the Museum d...
Authors
Joaquin Arroyo-Cabrales, A. L. Gardner

Survival and recovery rates of American woodcock banded in Michigan Survival and recovery rates of American woodcock banded in Michigan

American woodcock (Scolopax minor) population indices have declined since U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) monitoring began in 1968. Management to stop and/or reverse this population trend has been hampered by the lack of recent information on woodcock population parameters. Without recent information on survival rate trends, managers have had to assume that the recent declines in
Authors
David G. Krementz, James E. Hines, David R. Luukkonen

Annotated checklist of Georgia birds Annotated checklist of Georgia birds

This edition of the checklist includes 446 species, of which 407 are on the Regular Species List, 8 on the Provisional, and 31 on the Hypothetical. This new publication has been greatly expanded and much revised over the previous checklist (GOS Occasional Publ. No. 10, 1986, 48 pp., 6x9 inches) to a 7x10-inch format with an extensive Literature Cited section added, 22 species added to...
Authors
G. Beaton, P.W. Sykes, J.W. Parrish

The role of multiple stressor causes in declining amphibian populations: a wingspread workshop summary The role of multiple stressor causes in declining amphibian populations: a wingspread workshop summary

Numerous studies have documented the decline of amphibian populations over the past decade and no single factor has been the linked to these widespread declines. Determining the causes of declining amphibian populations worldwide has proven difficult because of the variety of anthropogenic and natural suspect agents. A Wingspread workshop, convened by The Society of Environmental...
Authors
S.K. Krest, G. Linder, D. W. Sparling

Lead in the environment Lead in the environment

Anthropogenic uses of lead have probably altered its availability and environmental distribution more than any other toxic element. Consequently, lead concentrations in many living organisms may be approaching thresholds of toxicity for the adverse effects of lead. Such thresholds are difficult to define, as they vary with the chemical and physical form of lead, exposure regime, other...
Authors
Oliver H. Pattee, Deborah J. Pain

Landscape change in the southern Piedmont: challenges, solutions, and uncertainty across scales Landscape change in the southern Piedmont: challenges, solutions, and uncertainty across scales

The southern Piedmont of the southeastern United States epitomizes the complex and seemingly intractable problems and hard decisions that result from uncontrolled urban and suburban sprawl. Here we consider three recurrent themes in complicated problems involving complex systems: (1) scale dependencies and cross-scale, often nonlinear relationships; (2) resilience, in particular the...
Authors
M.J. Conroy, Craig R. Allen, J.T. Peterson, L.J. Pritchard, C. T. Moore

Created versus natural coastal islands: Atlantic waterbird populations, habitat choices, and management implications Created versus natural coastal islands: Atlantic waterbird populations, habitat choices, and management implications

Nesting colonial waterbirds along the Atlantic Coast of the United States face a number of landscape-level threats including human disturbance, mammalian predator expansion, and habitat alteration. There have been changes from 1977 to the mid-1990s in use of nesting habitats and populations of a number of seabird species of concern in the region, including black skimmers Rynchops niger...
Authors
R.M. Erwin, D.H. Allen, D. Jenkins

Estimation by capture-recapture of recruitment and dispersal over several sites Estimation by capture-recapture of recruitment and dispersal over several sites

Dispersal in animal populations is intimately linked with accession to reproduction, i.e. recruitment, and population regulation. Dispersal processes are thus a key component of population dynamics to the same extent as reproduction or mortality processes. Despite the growing interest in spatial aspects of population dynamics, the methodology for estimating dispersal, in particular in...
Authors
J.D. Lebreton, J.E. Hines, R. Pradel, J.D. Nichols, J. A. Spendelow
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