Publications
Filter Total Items: 2066
Monitoring landscape-level distribution and migration Phenology of Raptors using a volunteer camera-trap network Monitoring landscape-level distribution and migration Phenology of Raptors using a volunteer camera-trap network
Conservation of animal migratory movements is among the most important issues in wildlife management. To address this need for landscape-scale monitoring of raptor populations, we developed a novel, baited photographic observation network termed the “Appalachian Eagle Monitoring Program” (AEMP). During winter months of 2008–2012, we partnered with professional and citizen scientists in...
Authors
David S. Jachowski, Todd E. Katzner, Jane L. Rodrigue, W. Mark Ford
Detecting significant change in stream benthic macroinvertebrate communities in wilderness areas Detecting significant change in stream benthic macroinvertebrate communities in wilderness areas
A major challenge in the biological monitoring of stream ecosystems in protected wilderness areas is discerning whether temporal changes in community structure are significantly outside of a reference condition that represents natural or acceptable annual variation in population cycles. Otherwise sites could erroneously be classified as impaired. Long-term datasets are essential for...
Authors
Alexander M. Milner, Andrea Woodward, Jerome E. Freilich, Robert W. Black, Vincent H. Resh
Science from genes to landscapes Science from genes to landscapes
Wherever flowering plants flourish, pollinating bees, birds, butterflies, bats, and other animals are at work, providing vital and often unnoticed services. Many of these species are in serious decline, a situation if unabated, threatens agricultural production, maintenance of natural plant communities, and other important services. Responding to this urgent challenge, the U.S...
Authors
Water Resources Division U.S. Geological Survey
Persistence at distributional edges: Columbia spotted frog habitat in the arid Great Basin, USA Persistence at distributional edges: Columbia spotted frog habitat in the arid Great Basin, USA
A common challenge in the conservation of broadly distributed, yet imperiled species is understanding which factors facilitate persistence at distributional edges, locations where populations are often vulnerable to extirpation due to changes in climate, land use, or distributions of other species. For Columbia spotted frogs (Rana luteiventris) in the Great Basin (USA), a genetically...
Authors
Robert S. Arkle, David S. Pilliod
Evidence of counter-gradient growth in western pond turtles (Actinemys marmorata) across thermal gradients Evidence of counter-gradient growth in western pond turtles (Actinemys marmorata) across thermal gradients
Counter-gradient growth, where growth per unit temperature increases as temperature decreases, can reduce the variation in ectothermic growth rates across environmental gradients. Understanding how ectothermic species respond to changing temperatures is essential to their conservation and management due to human-altered habitats and changing climates. Here, we use two contrasting...
Authors
Melissa Snover, M. J. Adams, Donald T. Ashton, Jamie B. Bettaso, Hartwell H. Welsh
Stress-gradient hypothesis explains susceptibility to Bromus tectorum invasion and community stability in North America's semi-arid Artemisia tridentata wyomingensis ecosystems Stress-gradient hypothesis explains susceptibility to Bromus tectorum invasion and community stability in North America's semi-arid Artemisia tridentata wyomingensis ecosystems
Questions: (1) What combinations of overlapping water and heat stress and herbivory disturbance gradients are associated with shifts in interactions between Artemisia tridentata subsp. wyomingensis (Artemisia) and herbaceous beneficiary species? (2) Do interactions between Artemisia and beneficiaries shift from competition to facilitation with increasing stress-disturbance where...
Authors
Michael D. Reisner, Paul S. Doescher, David A. Pyke
Instream cover and shade mediate avian predation on trout in semi-natural streams Instream cover and shade mediate avian predation on trout in semi-natural streams
Piscivory by birds can be significant, particularly on fish in small streams and during seasonal low flow when available cover from predators can be limited. Yet, how varying amounts of cover may change the extent of predation mortality from avian predators on fish is not clear. We evaluated size-selective survival of coastal cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus clarkii clarkii) in replicated...
Authors
Brooke E. Penaluna, Jason B. Dunham, David L. G. Noakes
Genetic signatures of historical dispersal of fish threatened by biological invasions: the case of galaxiids in South America Genetic signatures of historical dispersal of fish threatened by biological invasions: the case of galaxiids in South America
Aim The ecological effects of biological invasions are well documented, but little is known about the effects of invaders on the genetic structure of native species. We examined the phylogeography, genetic variation and population structuring of two galaxiid fishes, Aplochiton zebraand A. taeniatus, threatened by non-native salmonids, and whose conservation is complicated by...
Authors
Delphine Vanhaecke, Carlos Garcia de Leaniz, Gonzalo Gajardo, Jason Dunham, Guillermo Giannico, Sofia Consegura
Moisture rivals temperature in limiting photosynthesis by trees establishing beyond their cold-edge range limit under ambient and warmed conditions Moisture rivals temperature in limiting photosynthesis by trees establishing beyond their cold-edge range limit under ambient and warmed conditions
Climate change is altering plant species distributions globally, and warming is expected to promote uphill shifts in mountain trees. However, at many cold-edge range limits, such as alpine treelines in the western United States, tree establishment may be colimited by low temperature and low moisture, making recruitment patterns with warming difficult to predict. We measured response...
Authors
Andrew B. Moyes, Matthew J. Germino, Lara M. Kueppers
Soil organic matter regulates molybdenum storage and mobility in forests Soil organic matter regulates molybdenum storage and mobility in forests
The trace element molybdenum (Mo) is essential to a suite of nitrogen (N) cycling processes in ecosystems, but there is limited information on its distribution within soils and relationship to plant and bedrock pools. We examined soil, bedrock, and plant Mo variation across 24 forests spanning wide soil pH gradients on both basaltic and sedimentary lithologies in the Oregon Coast Range...
Authors
Jade A Marks, Steven Perakis, Elizabeth K. King, Julie Pett-Ridge
Rethinking the longitudinal stream temperature paradigm: region-wide comparison of thermal infrared imagery reveals unexpected complexity of river temperatures Rethinking the longitudinal stream temperature paradigm: region-wide comparison of thermal infrared imagery reveals unexpected complexity of river temperatures
Prevailing theory suggests that stream temperature warms asymptotically in a downstream direction, beginning at the temperature of the source in the headwaters and leveling off downstream as it converges to match meteorological conditions. However, there have been few empirical examples of longitudinal patterns of temperature in large rivers due to a paucity of data. We constructed...
Authors
Aimee H. Fullerton, Christian E. Torgersen, Joshua J. Lawler, Russell N. Faux, E. Ashley Steel, Timothy J. Beechie, Joseph L. Ebersole, Scott J. Leibowitz
Effects of changing climate on aquatic habitat and connectivity for remnant populations of a wide-ranging frog species in an arid landscape Effects of changing climate on aquatic habitat and connectivity for remnant populations of a wide-ranging frog species in an arid landscape
Amphibian species persisting in isolated streams and wetlands in desert environments can be susceptible to low connectivity, genetic isolation, and climate changes. We evaluated the past (1900–1930), recent (1981–2010), and future (2071–2100) climate suitability of the arid Great Basin (USA) for the Columbia spotted frog (Rana luteiventris) and assessed whether changes in surface water...
Authors
David S. Pilliod, Robert S. Arkle, Jeanne M. Robertson, Melanie Murphy, W. Chris Funk