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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

United States Biological Survey: A compendium of its history, personalities, impacts, and conflicts United States Biological Survey: A compendium of its history, personalities, impacts, and conflicts

In 1885, a small three-person unit was created in the U.S. Department of Agriculture to gather and analyze information on bird migrations. Originally called the Section of Economic Ornithology, over the next 55 years this unit underwent three name changes and accumulated ever-increasing responsibilities for the nation’s faunal resources. Transferred to the Department of the Interior in...

Retrospective: Adjusting contaminant concentrations in bird eggs to account for moisture and lipid Loss during their incubation Retrospective: Adjusting contaminant concentrations in bird eggs to account for moisture and lipid Loss during their incubation

By the 1960s, research and monitoring efforts on chlorinated pesticide residues in tissues of wildlife were well underway in North America and Europe. Conservationists and natural resource managers were attempting to resolve whether pesticide exposure and accumulated residues were related to population declines in several species of predatory and scavenging birds (e.g., bald eagle...
Authors
Barnett A. Rattner, Stanley N. Wiemeyer, Lawrence J. Blus

A review and synthesis of recreation ecology research findings on visitor impacts to wilderness and protected natural areas A review and synthesis of recreation ecology research findings on visitor impacts to wilderness and protected natural areas

The 50th anniversary of the US Wilderness Act of 1964 presents a worthy opportunity to review our collective knowledge on how recreation visitation affects wilderness and protected natural area resources. Studies of recreation impacts, examined within the recreation ecology field of study, have spanned 80 years and generated more than 1,200 citations. This article examines the recreation...
Authors
Jeffrey L. Marion, Yu-Fai Leung, Holly Eagleston, Kaitlin Burroughs

A review and synthesis of recreation ecology research supporting carrying capacity and visitor use management decisionmaking A review and synthesis of recreation ecology research supporting carrying capacity and visitor use management decisionmaking

Resource and experiential impacts associated with visitation to wilderness and other similar backcountry settings have long been addressed by land managers under the context of “carrying capacity” decisionmaking. Determining a maximum level of allowable use, below which high-quality resource and experiential conditions would be sustained, was an early focus in the 1960s and 1970s...
Authors
Jeffrey L. Marion

Cross-seasonal effects on waterfowl productivity: Implications under climate change Cross-seasonal effects on waterfowl productivity: Implications under climate change

Previous efforts to relate winter-ground precipitation to subsequent reproductive success as measured by the ratio of juveniles to adults in the autumn failed to account for increased vulnerability of juvenile ducks to hunting and uncertainty in the estimated age ratio. Neglecting increased juvenile vulnerability will positively bias the mean productivity estimate, and neglecting...
Authors
Erik E. Osnas, Qing Zhao, Michael C. Runge, G Scott Boomer

Adaptive management for improving species conservation across the captive-wild spectrum Adaptive management for improving species conservation across the captive-wild spectrum

Conservation of endangered species increasingly envisages complex strategies that integrate captive and wild management actions. Management decisions in this context must be made in the face of uncertainty, often with limited capacity to collect information. Adaptive management (AM) combines management and monitoring, with the aim of updating knowledge and improving decision-making over...
Authors
Stefano Canessa, Gurutzeta Guillera-Arroita, Jose J. Lahoz-Monfort, Darren M Southwell, Doug P. Armstrong, Iadine Chades, Robert C Lacy, Sarah J. Converse

Tracking domestic ducks: A novel approach for documenting poultry market chains in the context of avian influenza transmission Tracking domestic ducks: A novel approach for documenting poultry market chains in the context of avian influenza transmission

Agro-ecological conditions associated with the spread and persistence of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) are not well understood, but the trade of live poultry is suspected to be a major pathway. Although market chains of live bird trade have been studied through indirect means including interviews and questionnaires, direct methods have not been used to identify movements of...
Authors
Chang-Yong Choi, John Y. Takekawa, Yue Xiong, Martin Wikelski, George Heine, Diann J. Prosser, Scott H. Newman, John Edwards, Fusheng Guo, Xiangming Xiao

Fifty-seventh supplement to the American Ornithologists' Union Check-list of North American Birds Fifty-seventh supplement to the American Ornithologists' Union Check-list of North American Birds

This is the 16th supplement since publication of the 7th edition of the Check-list of North American Birds (American Ornithologists' Union [AOU] 1998). It summarizes decisions made between April 15, 2015, and April 15, 2016, by the AOU's Committee on Classification and Nomenclature—North and Middle America. The Committee has continued to operate in the manner outlined in the 42nd...
Authors
R. Terry Chesser, Kevin J Burns, Carla Cicero, Jon L. Dunn, Andrew W. Kratter, Irby J. Lovette, Pamela C. Rasmussen, J.V. Remsen, James D. Rising, Douglas F. Stotz, Kevin Winker

Conservation of avian species Conservation of avian species

Health of humans, animals, plants, and ecosystems are intertwined. Disturbance tips the balance in favor of weedy species, vectors, and disease agents. Biodiversity is important to prevent imbalance in nature. However, more scholarship is needed, and there is still much more to study, understand, and manage than we currently know.
Authors
Glenn H. Olsen, Lorenzo Crosta, Brett D. Gartrell, Philip M. Marsh, Cynthia E. Stringfield

Demography of an apex predator at the edge of its range: impacts of changing sea ice on polar bears in Hudson Bay Demography of an apex predator at the edge of its range: impacts of changing sea ice on polar bears in Hudson Bay

Changes in the abundance and distribution of wildlife populations are common consequences of historic and contemporary climate change. Some Arctic marine mammals, such as the polar bear (Ursus maritimus), may be particularly vulnerable to such changes due to the loss of Arctic sea ice. We evaluated the impacts of environmental variation on demographic rates for the Western Hudson Bay (WH...
Authors
Nicholas J. Lunn, Sabrina Servanty, Eric V. Regehr, Sarah J. Converse, Evan S. Richardson, Ian Stirling

Density-dependent home-range size revealed by spatially explicit capture–recapture Density-dependent home-range size revealed by spatially explicit capture–recapture

The size of animal home ranges often varies inversely with population density among populations of a species. This fact has implications for population monitoring using spatially explicit capture–recapture (SECR) models, in which both the scale of home-range movements σ and population density D usually appear as parameters, and both may vary among populations. It will often be...
Authors
M.G. Efford, Deanna K. Dawson, Y.V. Jhala, Q. Qureshi

Preserving reptiles for research Preserving reptiles for research

What are voucher specimens and why do we collect them? Voucher specimens are animals and/or their parts that are deposited in a research museum to document the occurrence of a taxon at a specific location in space and time (Pleijel et al., 2008; Reynolds and McDiarmid, 2012). For field biologists, vouchers are the repeatable element of a field study as they allow other biologists, now...
Authors
Steve W. Gotte, Jeremy F. Jacobs, George R. Zug
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