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
Analysis and Management of Animal Populations: Modeling, Estimation and Decision Making Analysis and Management of Animal Populations: Modeling, Estimation and Decision Making
This book deals with the processes involved in making informed decisions about the management of animal populations. It covers the modeling of population responses to management actions, the estimation of quantities needed in the modeling effort, and the application of these estimates and models to the development of sound management decisions. The book synthesizes and integrates in a...
Authors
B. Kenneth Williams, J.D. Nichols, M.J. Conroy
Model-based estimation of individual fitness Model-based estimation of individual fitness
Fitness is the currency of natural selection, a measure of the propagation rate of genotypes into future generations. Its various definitions have the common feature that they are functions of survival and fertility rates. At the individual level, the operative level for natural selection, these rates must be understood as latent features, genetically determined propensities existing at...
Authors
William A. Link, Evan G. Cooch, Emmanuelle Cam
Approaches for the direct estimation of lambda, and demographic contributions to lambda, using capture-recapture data Approaches for the direct estimation of lambda, and demographic contributions to lambda, using capture-recapture data
We first consider the estimation of the finite rate of population increase or population growth rate, u i , using capture-recapture data from open populations. We review estimation and modelling of u i under three main approaches to modelling openpopulation data: the classic approach of Jolly (1965) and Seber (1965), the superpopulation approach of Crosbie & Manly (1985) and Schwarz &...
Authors
James D. Nichols, James E. Hines
Book review: Bird census techniques, Second edition Book review: Bird census techniques, Second edition
Conservation concerns, federal mandates to monitor birds, and citizen science programs have spawned a variety of surveys that collect information on bird populations. Unfortunately, all too frequently these surveys are poorly designed and use inappropriate counting methods. Some of the flawed approaches reflect a lack of understanding of statistical design; many ornithologists simply are...
Authors
John R. Sauer
Declining pollinators and natural communities Declining pollinators and natural communities
No abstract available.
Authors
H. S. Ginsberg
Assessing mark-recapture data with computer intensive statistics Assessing mark-recapture data with computer intensive statistics
No abstract available.
Authors
Darryl MacKenzie
FrogwatchUSA FrogwatchUSA
full text: Frogs and toads are perhaps the most approachable and available of all our wildlife. In many, if not most places, they are abundant. In wetter parts of the East, almost anyone outside on a warm rainy night in spring will hear their dream-like calls, bellows, trills and snores. Even in the deserts of the Southwest, a nocturnal trip after a summer monsoon will yield toads moving
Authors
Sam Droege
Sources, fate, and effects of PAHs in shallow water environments: a review with special reference to small watercraft Sources, fate, and effects of PAHs in shallow water environments: a review with special reference to small watercraft
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are aromatic hydrocarbons with two to seven fused carbon (benzene) rings that can have substituted groups attached. Shallow coastal, estuarine, lake, and river environments receive PAHs from treated wastewater, stormwater runoff, petroleum spills and natural seeps, recreational and commercial boats, natural fires, volcanoes, and atmospheric...
Authors
P.H. Albers
The use of photographic rates to estimate densities of tigers and other cryptic mammals: a comment on misleading conclusions The use of photographic rates to estimate densities of tigers and other cryptic mammals: a comment on misleading conclusions
The search for easy-to-use indices that substitute for direct estimation of animal density is a common theme in wildlife and conservation science, but one fraught with well-known perils (Nichols & Conroy, 1996; Yoccoz, Nichols & Boulinier, 2001; Pollock et al., 2002). To establish the utility of an index as a substitute for an estimate of density, one must: (1) demonstrate a functional
Authors
C.S. Jennelle, M.C. Runge, D.I. MacKenzie
Hierarchical modeling of population stability and species group attributes from survey data Hierarchical modeling of population stability and species group attributes from survey data
Many ecological studies require analysis of collections of estimates. For example, population change is routinely estimated for many species from surveys such as the North American Breeding Bird Survey (BBS), and the species are grouped and used in comparative analyses. We developed a hierarchical model for estimation of group attributes from a collection of estimates of population trend...
Authors
J.R. Sauer, W.A. Link
Morphometric changes in Yellow-headed Blackbirds during summer in central North Dakota Morphometric changes in Yellow-headed Blackbirds during summer in central North Dakota
Temporal stability of morphometric measurements is desirable when using avian morphology as a predictor of geographic origin. Therefore, to assess their temporal stability, we examined changes in morphology of Yellow-headed Blackbirds (Xanthocephalus xanthocephalus) from central North Dakota during summer. Measurements differed among age classes and between sexes. As expected, due to...
Authors
D.J. Twedt, G.M. Linz