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Publications

Below is a list of WERC's peer-reviewed publications. If you are searching for a specific publication and cannot find it in this list, please contact werc_web@usgs.gov

Filter Total Items: 3710

Interfacing models of wildlife habitat and human development to predict the future distribution of puma habitat Interfacing models of wildlife habitat and human development to predict the future distribution of puma habitat

The impact of human land uses on ecological systems typically differ relative to how extensively natural conditions are modified. Exurban development is intermediate-intensity residential development that often occurs in natural landscapes. Most species-habitat models do not evaluate the effects of such intermediate levels of human development and even fewer predict how future...
Authors
Christopher L. Burdett, Kevin R. Crooks, David M. Theobald, Kenneth R. Wilson, Erin E. Boydston, Lisa A. Lyren, Robert N. Fisher, T. Winston Vickers, Scott A. Morrison, Walter M. Boyce

Guiding concepts for park and wilderness stewardship in an era of global environmental change Guiding concepts for park and wilderness stewardship in an era of global environmental change

The major challenge to stewardship of protected areas is to decide where, when, and how to intervene in physical and biological processes, to conserve what we value in these places. To make such decisions, planners and managers must articulate more clearly the purposes of parks, what is valued, and what needs to be sustained. A key aim for conservation today is the maintenance and...
Authors
Richard J. Hobbs, David N. Cole, Laurie Yung, Erika S. Zavaleta, Gregory H. Aplet, F. Stuart Chapin, Peter B. Landres, David J. Parsons, Nathan L. Stephenson, Peter S. White, David M. Graber, Eric S. Higgs, Constance I. Millar, John M. Randall, Kathy A. Tonnessen, Stephen Woodley

Short-term effects of experimental fires on a Mojave Desert seed bank Short-term effects of experimental fires on a Mojave Desert seed bank

A Mojave Desert shrub community was experimentally burned to understand changes in seed bank of desert annual plant species in response to wildfire. Seed mortality ranged from 55 to 80%, and fire caused significant losses of native and alien annual seeds. Schismus arabicus, Schismus barbatus, Bromus madritensis, Bromus tectorum, Erodium cicutarium and Plantago spp. made up >95% of the...
Authors
Todd C. Esque, James A. Young, C. Richard Tracy

Making molehills out of mountains: Landscape genetics of the Mojave desert tortoise Making molehills out of mountains: Landscape genetics of the Mojave desert tortoise

Heterogeneity in habitat often influences how organisms traverse the landscape matrix that connects populations. Understanding landscape connectivity is important to determine the ecological processes that influence those movements, which lead to evolutionary change due to gene flow. Here, we used landscape genetics and statistical models to evaluate hypotheses that could explain...
Authors
Bridgette E. Hagerty, Kenneth E. Nussear, Todd C. Esque, C. Richard Tracy

Waterfowl ecology and avian influenza in california: Do host traits inform us about viral occurrence? Waterfowl ecology and avian influenza in california: Do host traits inform us about viral occurrence?

We examined whether host traits influenced the occurrence of avian influenza virus (AIV) in Anatidae (ducks, geese, swans) at wintering sites in California's Central Valley. In total, 3487 individuals were sampled at Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge and Conaway Ranch Duck Club during the hunting season of 2007-08. Of the 19 Anatidae species sampled, prevalence was highest in the...
Authors
N.J. Hill, John Y. Takekawa, C.J. Cardona, Joshua T. Ackerman, A.K. Schultz, K.A. Spragens, W.M. Boyce

Nocturnal movements of desert bighorn sheep in the Muddy Mountains, Nevada Nocturnal movements of desert bighorn sheep in the Muddy Mountains, Nevada

Adequate management of a species requires complete knowledge of its ecology, including both nocturnal and diurnal behavior. Knowledge of the movement behavior of bighorn sheep can provide insight for understanding spatial population processes as the combined result of individual behavior, physiological constraints, and fine-scale environmental influences. However, because of past...
Authors
Kathleen M. Longshore, Chris E. Lowrey, Matthew Jeffress, Daniel B. Thompson

Salton Sea Ecosystem Monitoring Project Salton Sea Ecosystem Monitoring Project

The Salton Sea is critically important for wintering and breeding waterbirds, but faces an uncertain future due to water delivery reductions imposed by the Interstate and Federal Quantification Settlement Agreement of 2003. The current preferred alternative for wetland restoration at the Salton Sea is saline habitat impoundments created to mitigate the anticipated loss of wetland habitat...
Authors
A. Keith Miles, Mark A. Ricca, Anne Meckstroth, Sarah E. Spring

Behavioral response of the coachwhip (Masticophis flagellum) to habitat fragment size and isolation in an urban landscape Behavioral response of the coachwhip (Masticophis flagellum) to habitat fragment size and isolation in an urban landscape

Habitat fragmentation is a significant threat to biodiversity worldwide. Habitat loss and the isolation of habitat fragments disrupt biological communities, accelerate the extinction of populations, and often lead to the alteration of behavioral patterns typical of individuals in large, contiguous natural areas. We used radio-telemetry to study the space-use behavior of the Coachwhip, a...
Authors
Milan J. Mitrovich, Jay E. Diffendorfer, Robert N. Fisher

Oxalosis in wild desert tortoises, Gopherus agassizii Oxalosis in wild desert tortoises, Gopherus agassizii

We necropsied a moribund, wild adult male desert tortoise (Gopherus agassizii) with clinical signs of respiratory disease and elevated plasma biochemical analytes indicative of renal disease (blood urea nitrogen [415 mg/dl], uric acid [11.8 mg/dl], sodium >180 mmol/l] and chloride [139 mmol/l]). Moderate numbers of birefringent oxalate crystals, based on infrared and electron microscopy...
Authors
Elliott R. Jacobson, Kristin H. Berry, Brian Stacy, Louis M. Huzella, Victor F. Kalasinsky, Michelle L. Fleetwood, Mark G. Mense

Parasitic castration: the evolution and ecology of body snatchers Parasitic castration: the evolution and ecology of body snatchers

Castration is a response to the tradeoff between consumption and longevity faced by parasites. Common parasitic castrators include larval trematodes in snails, and isopod and barnacle parasites of crustaceans. The infected host (with its many unique properties) is the extended phenotype of the parasitic castrator. Because an individual parasitic castrator can usurp all the reproductive...
Authors
Kevin D. Lafferty, Armand M. Kuris

Ecological factors influencing nest survival of greater sage-grouse in Mono County, California Ecological factors influencing nest survival of greater sage-grouse in Mono County, California

We studied nest survival of greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) in 5 subareas of Mono County, California, USA, from 2003 to 2005 to 1) evaluate the importance of key vegetation variables for nest success, and 2) to compare nest success in this population with other greater sage-grouse populations. We captured and radiotracked females (n  =  72) to identify nest sites and...
Authors
Eric J. Kolada, Michael L. Casazza, James S. Sedinger

Delayed genetic effects of habitat fragmentation on the ecologically specialized Florida sand skink (Plestiodon reynoldsi) Delayed genetic effects of habitat fragmentation on the ecologically specialized Florida sand skink (Plestiodon reynoldsi)

Populations rarely show immediate genetic responses to habitat fragmentation, even in taxa that possess suites of traits known to increase their vulnerability to extinction. Thus conservation geneticists must consider the time scale over which contemporary evolutionary processes operate to accurately portray the effects of habitat isolation. Here, we examine the genetic impacts of...
Authors
Jonathan Q. Richmond, Duncan T. Reid, Kyle G. Ashton, Kelly R. Zamudio
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