Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

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

Combining band recovery data and Pollock's robust design to model temporary and permanent emigration Combining band recovery data and Pollock's robust design to model temporary and permanent emigration

Capture-recapture models are widely used to estimate demographic parameters of marked populations. Recently, this statistical theory has been extended to modeling dispersal of open populations. Multistate models can be used to estimate movement probabilities among subdivided populations if multiple sites are sampled. Frequently, however, sampling is limited to a single site, Models...
Authors
M. S. Lindberg, W. L. Kendall, J.E. Hines, Michael G. Anderson

Whooping cranes breeding at White Lake, Louisiana, 1939: observations by John J. Lynch, U.S. Bureau of Biological Survey Whooping cranes breeding at White Lake, Louisiana, 1939: observations by John J. Lynch, U.S. Bureau of Biological Survey

On 15 May 1939, John J. Lynch of the U.S. Bureau of Biological Survey located 13 whooping cranes (Grus americana), including 2 prefledged young, during an aerial survey near White Lake in southwestern Louisiana. His observation was the last historic record of whooping cranes breeding in the wild in the United States, and it confirmed the presence of a nonmigratory breeding population...
Authors
Rod C. Drewien, J. Tautin, M.L. Courville, G.M. Gomez

A reintroduction experiment involving mated pairs of parent-reared greater sandhill cranes in northern Arizona A reintroduction experiment involving mated pairs of parent-reared greater sandhill cranes in northern Arizona

In April 1997, 4 mated pairs of adult greater sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis tabida) were abrupt-released at Mormon Lake, Arizona. Five of 8 adult cranes died within 10 days of release. One crane flew from the release area within 10 days after release and was never relocated. One pair of cranes, with 1 pair member sustaining a broken wing 4 days after release, survived for 4 months and
Authors
D.P. Mummert, D. H. Ellis, C. L. Chambers

Effects of gulls on Piping Plover nest site selection at Monomoy National Wildlife Refuge, Massachusetts Effects of gulls on Piping Plover nest site selection at Monomoy National Wildlife Refuge, Massachusetts

We examined the effects of Herring and Great Black-backed Gulls on Piping Plover nest site selection on South Monomoy Island, MA, from 1998 to 2000. We compared Piping Plover behavior and nest site selection in a gull-free area to a gull area, and compared Piping Plover nesting area characteristics to areas not used by plovers. We found no difference in the frequency of disturbance by...
Authors
S. E. Keane, J.D. Fraser, P. A. Buckley

Access to bird population data Access to bird population data

Access to bird population data is critical for effective conservation planning and implementation. Although a tremendous volume of baseline data exists, it is often diffusely distributed and inaccessible to the resource manager and decision maker. A mechanism that facilitates assembly, documentation and delivery of avian data in a user-friendly manner is needed in order to integrate bird...
Authors
E. Martin, B.G. Peterjohn, M.D. Koneff

Results of the second (1996) experiment to lead cranes on migration behind a motorized ground vehicle Results of the second (1996) experiment to lead cranes on migration behind a motorized ground vehicle

Fourteen greater sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis tabida) were trained to follow a specially-equipped truck and 12 were led along a ca 620-km route from Camp Navajo in northern Arizona to the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge near the Arizona/Mexico border. Ten survived the trek, 380 km of which were flown, although only a few cranes flew every stage of the route. Major problems...
Authors
D. H. Ellis, B. Clauss, T. Watanabe, R.C. Mykut, M. Shawkey, D.P. Mummert, D.T. Sprague, Catherine H. Ellis, F.B. Trahan

Natural fertility in whooping cranes and Mississippi sandhill cranes at Patuxent Wildlife Research Center Natural fertility in whooping cranes and Mississippi sandhill cranes at Patuxent Wildlife Research Center

The first fertile whooping crane (Grus americana; WC) egg produced through natural breeding at Patuxent Wildlife Research Center (Patuxent) was laid in 1991. Prior to that time, all fertile whooping crane eggs were the result of artificial insemination. Since 1991, eight different whooping crane pairs at Patuxent have produced fertile eggs through natural breeding. Mean fertility...
Authors
Jane M. Nicolich, G.F. Gee, D. H. Ellis, Scott G. Hereford

Modeling avian detection probabilities as a function of habitat using double-observer point count data Modeling avian detection probabilities as a function of habitat using double-observer point count data

Point counts are a controversial sampling method for bird populations because the counts are not censuses, and the proportion of birds missed during counting generally is not estimated. We applied a double-observer approach to estimate detection rates of birds from point counts in Maryland, USA, and test whether detection rates differed between point counts conducted in field habitats as...
Authors
P.J. Heglund, J.D. Nichols, J.E. Hines, J. Sauer, J. Fallon, F. Fallon

Results of the first ultralight-led sandhill crane migration in eastern North America Results of the first ultralight-led sandhill crane migration in eastern North America

In 1997, we led 8 sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis) south from Ontario, Canada by ultralight aircraft to a wintering area near Warrenton, Virginia, an area without a wild population. Six others were transported south in a trailer in hopes they would return north with those that flew. The migration was 863 km long, included 14 stops, and took 21 days to complete. All 13 surviving birds...
Authors
Joseph W. Duff, William A. Lishman, D. A. Clark, G.F. Gee, D. H. Ellis

Frogs of Tambopata, Peru Frogs of Tambopata, Peru

No abstract available.
Authors
R. Cocroft, V.R. Morales, R.W. McDiarmid

Diets of nesting laughing gulls (Larus atricilla) at the Virginia Coast Reserve: observations from stable isotope analysis Diets of nesting laughing gulls (Larus atricilla) at the Virginia Coast Reserve: observations from stable isotope analysis

Food web studies often ignore details of temporal, spatial, and intrapopulation dietary variation in top-level consumers. In this study, intrapopulation dietary variation of a dominant carnivore, the Laughing Gull (Larus atricilla), was examined using carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur isotope analysis of gull tissues as well as their prey (fish, invertebrates, and insects) from the Virginia...
Authors
A. J. Knoff, S.A. Macko, R.M. Erwin
Was this page helpful?