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Publications

USGS research activities relevant to Alaska have yielded more than 9400 historical publications. This page features some of the most recent newsworthy research findings.

Filter Total Items: 3097

Deposition and persistence of beachcast seabird carcasses Deposition and persistence of beachcast seabird carcasses

Following a massive wreck of guillemots (Uria aalge) in late winter and spring of 1993, we monitored the deposition and subsequent disappearance of 398 beachcast guillemot carcasses on two beaches in Resurrection Bay, Alaska, during a 100 day period. Deposition of carcasses declined logarithmically with time after the original event. Since fresh carcasses were more likely to be removed...
Authors
Thomas I. van Pelt, John F. Piatt

Detection of sea otters in boat-based surveys of Prince William Sound, Alaska Detection of sea otters in boat-based surveys of Prince William Sound, Alaska

Boat-based surveys have been commonly used to monitor sea otter populations, but there has been little quantitative work to evaluate detection biases that may affect these surveys. We used ground-based observers to investigate sea otter detection probabilities in a boat-based survey of Prince William Sound, Alaska. We estimated that 30% of the otters present on surveyed transects were...
Authors
Mark S. Udevitz, James L. Bodkin, Daniel P. Costa

Polar bear research in the Beaufort Sea Polar bear research in the Beaufort Sea

Current research is designed to determine the status of the polar bear population in the Beaufort Sea and adjacent areas. One goal is to determine how polar bears are distributed relative to each other and habitat features, and to define population boundaries. Another goal is to determine the population size and trend, and assess how present and future management issues may affect...
Authors
Steven C. Amstrup, George M. Durner

Western North American shorebirds Western North American shorebirds

Shorebirds are a diverse group that includes oystercatchers, stilts, avocets, plovers, and sandpipers. They are familiar birds of seashores, mudflats, tundra, and other wetlands, but they also occur in deserts, high mountains, forests, and agricultural fields. Widespread loss and alteration of these habitats, especially wetlands and grasslands during the past 150 years, coupled with...
Authors
Robert E. Gill, Colleen M. Handel, Gary W. Page

Reproduction, preweaning survival, and survival of adult sea otters at Kodiak Island, Alaska Reproduction, preweaning survival, and survival of adult sea otters at Kodiak Island, Alaska

Radiotelemetry methods were used to examine the demographic characteristics of sea otters inhabiting the leading edge of an expanding population on Kodiak Island, Alaska. Fifteen male and 30 female sea otters were instrumented and followed from 1986 to 1990. Twenty-one percent of females were sexually mature (had pupped) at age 2, 57% by age 3, 88% by age 4, and 100% by age 5. Fifteen...
Authors
Daniel H. Monson, Anthony R. DeGange

Pack structure and genetic relatedness among wolf packs in a naturally-regulated population Pack structure and genetic relatedness among wolf packs in a naturally-regulated population

Observations of wolf pack dynamics over a six-year period in Denali National Park and Preserve, Alaska, found high rates of intraspecific strife, wolf pack dissolution and new pack formation, and the acceptance of new wolves into established packs. These observations corroborate genetic studies that found more genetic links between packs, and more genetic diversity within packs, than...
Authors
Thomas J. Meier, John W. Burch, L. David Mech, Layne G. Adams

Variation in brood behavior of Black Brant Variation in brood behavior of Black Brant

We studied behavior of broods of Black Brant (Branta bernicla nigricans) during five summers between 1987 and 1993, a period in which the local breeding population increased >3-fold. Goslings spent more time foraging than adults of either sex, while adult males spent more time alert and less time foraging than adult females. Percentage of time spent alert was positively correlated with...
Authors
James S. Sedinger, Michael W. Eichholz, Paul L. Flint

Some tests of the "migration hypothesis" for anadromous Dolly Varden (southern form) Some tests of the "migration hypothesis" for anadromous Dolly Varden (southern form)

Some aspects of a previously described migratory paradigm for the southern form of anadromous Dolly Varden Salvelinus malma were investigated with seven 3‐year mark–recapture experiments on fish that used lakes in eight watersheds as their winter residence. Weirs on Kodiak Island, around Prince William Sound, and near Juneau, Alaska, were used to capture Dolly Varden as they emigrated to...
Authors
David R. Bernard, Kelley R. Hepler, J. Douglas Jones, Mary E. Whalen, Douglas N. McBride

Survival rates of radio-collared female polar bears and their dependent young Survival rates of radio-collared female polar bears and their dependent young

Polar bears are hunted throughout most of their range. In addition to hunting, polar bears of the Beaufort Sea region are exposed to mineral and hydrocarbon extraction and related human activities such as shipping, road building, and seismic testing. As human populations increase and demands for polar bears and other arctic resources escalate, reliable estimates of survivorship
Authors
Steven C. Amstrup, George M. Durner

Earthquakes in Alaska Earthquakes in Alaska

Earthquake risk is high in much of the southern half of Alaska, but it is not the same everywhere. This map shows the overall geologic setting in Alaska that produces earthquakes. The Pacific plate (darker blue) is sliding northwestward past southeastern Alaska and then dives beneath the North American plate (light blue, green, and brown) in southern Alaska, the Alaska Peninsula, and the...
Authors
Peter J. Haeussler, George Plafker

Abundance, distribution and population status of Marbled Murrelets in Alaska Abundance, distribution and population status of Marbled Murrelets in Alaska

Ship-based surveys conducted throughout Alaska during the 1970's and 1980's, and more recent small boat surveys conducted in the northern Gulf of Alaska, suggest that about 280,000 murrelets reside in Alaska during summer. Most Marbled Murrelets are concentrated offshore of large tracts of coastal coniferous forests in southeast Alaska, Prince William Sound, and the Kodiak Archipelago...
Authors
John F. Piatt, Nancy L. Naslund

Habitat correlates of Pacific halibut and other groundfish species in Glacier Bay National Park Habitat correlates of Pacific halibut and other groundfish species in Glacier Bay National Park

Originally conceived as a modified Schnabel (1938) design mark-recapture study, the unique random sampling regime of this long line tagging study has allowed us to describe habitat correlates of Pacific halibut (Hippoglossus stenolepis) and other demersal fishes. Pacific halibut and other fish were captured by longline sets of constant length and hook number distributed in a random...
Authors
Gretchen H. Bishop, Philip N. Hooge, S. James Taggart
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