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
Status of the Island Night Lizard and Two Non-Native Lizards on Outlying Landing Field San Nicolas Island, California Status of the Island Night Lizard and Two Non-Native Lizards on Outlying Landing Field San Nicolas Island, California
More than 900 individually marked island night lizards (Xantusia riversiana) were captured on San Nicolas Island, California, between 1984 and 2007 as part of an ongoing study to monitor the status of this threatened species. Our data suggest that at least a few lizards are probably more than 20 years old, and one lizard would be 31.5 years old if it grew at an average rate for the...
Authors
Gary M. Fellers, Charles A. Drost, Thomas G. Murphey
The California Clapper Rail and multispecies recovery planning The California Clapper Rail and multispecies recovery planning
The California clapper rail (Rallus longirostris obsoletus) lives in remnant tidal marshes of San Francisco Bay, where less than 20 percent of the historic tidal wetlands remain. Listed as an endangered species in 1970 by the Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), this enigmatic bird faces a myriad of threats, including habitat loss due to urban encroachment, sea-level rise caused by climate...
Authors
Michael L. Casazza, Cory T. Overton, Melissa A. Farinha, John Y. Takekawa, Tobias M. Rohmer
Fire management and invasive plants- A handbook Fire management and invasive plants- A handbook
Fire management can help maintain natural habitats, increase forage for wildlife, reduce fuel loads that might otherwise lead to catastrophic wildfire, and maintain natural succession. Today, there is an emerging challenge that fire managers need to be aware of: invasive plants. Fire management activities can create ideal opportunities for invasions by nonnative plants, potentially...
Authors
Matthew L. Brooks, Michael Lusk
Responses in bird communities to wildland fires in southern California Responses in bird communities to wildland fires in southern California
There is a growing body of literature covering the responses of bird species to wildland fire events. Our study was unique among these because we investigated the effects of large-scale wildland fires on entire bird communities across multiple vegetation types. We conducted avian point counts during the breeding seasons for two years before and two years after the Cedar and Otay Fires in...
Authors
Mark B. Mendelsohn, Cheryl S. Brehme, Carlton J. Rochester, Drew C. Stokes, Stacie A. Hathaway, Robert N. Fisher
Endangered light-footed clapper rail affects parasite community structure in coastal wetlands Endangered light-footed clapper rail affects parasite community structure in coastal wetlands
An extinction necessarily affects community members that have obligate relationships with the extinct species. Indirect or cascading effects can lead to even broader changes at the community or ecosystem level. However, it is not clear whether generalist parasites should be affected by the extinction of one of their hosts. We tested the prediction that loss of a host species could affect...
Authors
Kathleen L. Whitney, Ryan F. Hechinger, Armand M. Kuris, Kevin D. Lafferty
An experimental evaluation of host specificity: The role of encounter and compatibility filters for a rhizocephalan parasite of crabs An experimental evaluation of host specificity: The role of encounter and compatibility filters for a rhizocephalan parasite of crabs
The encounter/compatibility paradigm of host specificity provides three qualitative pathways to the success or failure of a potential host-parasite interaction. It is usually impossible to distinguish between two of these (encounter and compatibility filters closed versus encounter filter open and compatibility filter closed) because unsuccessful infection attempts are difficult to...
Authors
Armand M. Kuris, Jeffrey H. R. Goddard, Mark E. Torchin, Nicole Murphy, Robert Gurney, Kevin D. Lafferty
Taxonomic revisions in the genus Arctostaphylos (Ericaceae) Taxonomic revisions in the genus Arctostaphylos (Ericaceae)
Changes are made in the nomenclature of species and subspecies in the genus Arctostaphylos(Ericaceae). In this study, the focus is on species found in the coast ranges of California. Changes are made in A. nortensis from the area around the Oregon border with California, in the A. nevadensiscomplex in the North Coast Ranges, in the A. nummularia complex of the north to central coast, in...
Authors
V. Thomas Parker, Michael C. Vasey, Jon E. Keeley
The kelp highway hypothesis: Marine ecology, the coastal migration theory, and the peopling of the Americas The kelp highway hypothesis: Marine ecology, the coastal migration theory, and the peopling of the Americas
In this article, a collaborative effort between archaeologists and marine ecologists, we discuss the role kelp forest ecosystems may have played in facilitating the movement of maritime peoples from Asia to the Americas near the end of the Pleistocene. Growing in cool nearshore waters along rocky coastlines, kelp forests offer some of the most productive habitats on earth, with high...
Authors
Jon M. Erlandson, Michael H. Graham, Bruce J. Bourque, Debra Corbett, James A. Estes, Robert S. Steneck
Sea otters in a dirty ocean Sea otters in a dirty ocean
No abstract available.
Authors
David A. Jessup, Melissa A. Miller, Christine Kreuder Johnson, Patricia A. Conrad, M. Tim Tinker, James A. Estes, Jonna A.K. Mazet
Differential gene expression induced by exposure of captive mink to fuel oil: A model for the sea otter Differential gene expression induced by exposure of captive mink to fuel oil: A model for the sea otter
Free-ranging sea otters are subject to hydrocarbon exposure from a variety of sources, both natural and anthropogenic. Effects of direct exposure to unrefined crude oil, such as that associated with the Exxon Valdez oil spill, are readily apparent. However, the impact of subtle but pathophysiologically relevant concentrations of crude oil on sea otters is difficult to assess. The present...
Authors
Lizabeth Bowen, F. Riva, C. Mohr, B. Aldridge, J. Schwartz, A. Keith Miles, J.L. Stott
Desert tortoise hibernation: Temperatures, timing, and environment Desert tortoise hibernation: Temperatures, timing, and environment
This research examined the onset, duration, and termination of hibernation in Desert Tortoises (Gopherus agassizii) over several years at multiple sites in the northeastern part of their geographic range, and recorded the temperatures experienced by tortoises during winter hibernation. The timing of hibernation by Desert Tortoises differed among sites and years. Environmental cues acting...
Authors
K.E. Nussear, T. C. Esque, D.F. Haines, C.R. Tracy
Thamnophis hammondii foraging behavior Thamnophis hammondii foraging behavior
Thamnophis hammondii is considered one of the most aquatic of the gartersnakes and is closely associated with creeks and impoundments (Fitch 1940. Univ. California Publ. Zool. 44:1–150) with a diet consisting largely of both the larvae and transformed stages of amphibians (Spea, Bufo, Rana, Pseudacris) and small fish (Oncorhynchus, Gasterosteus, Eucyclogobius, and Cottus) (Jennings and...
Authors
Edward L. Ervin, Robert N. Fisher