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Publications

These publications showcase the significant science conducted in our Science Centers.

Filter Total Items: 16731

Simulation of Transient Ground-Water Flow in the Valley-Fill Aquifers of the Upper Rockaway River Basin, Morris County, New Jersey Simulation of Transient Ground-Water Flow in the Valley-Fill Aquifers of the Upper Rockaway River Basin, Morris County, New Jersey

More than 90 percent of the public water supply in the upper Rockaway River Valley in Morris County, New Jersey, is obtained from ground-water withdrawals from the valley-fill aquifers. During 1997, an average of 9.6 million gallons per day of ground water was withdrawn from these aquifers. The aquifer system consists of an unconfined aquifer (upper aquifer) and a locally confined...
Authors
Alison D. Gordon

Feasibility of Acoustic Doppler Velocity Meters for the Production of Discharge Records from U.S. Geological Survey Streamflow-Gaging Stations Feasibility of Acoustic Doppler Velocity Meters for the Production of Discharge Records from U.S. Geological Survey Streamflow-Gaging Stations

It is feasible to use acoustic Doppler velocity meters (ADVM's) installed at U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) streamflow-gaging stations to compute records of river discharge. ADVM's are small acoustic current meters that use the Doppler principle to measure water velocities in a two-dimensional plane. Records of river discharge can be computed from stage and ADVM velocity data using the...
Authors
Scott E. Morlock, Hieu T. Nguyen, Jerry H. Ross

Magnesium compounds Magnesium compounds

Seawater and natural brines accounted for about 60% of US magnesium compounds production in 2001. Dead-burned and caustic-calcined magnesias were recovered from seawater in Florida by Premier Chemicals. They were also recovered from Michigan well brines by Dow Chemical, Martin Marietta Magnesia Specialties and Rohm & Haas. And Premier Chemicals recovered dead-burned and caustic-calcined...
Authors
D.A. Kramer

Sublethal effects in avocet and stilt hatchlings from selenium-contaminated sites Sublethal effects in avocet and stilt hatchlings from selenium-contaminated sites

Excess selenium (Se) in the aquatic food chain is embryotoxic and teratogenic to avocets, stilts, and other waterbirds. American avocet (Recurvirostra americana) and black-necked stilt (Himantopus mexicanus) eggs were collected from three sites in the Tulare Lake Basin of California, USA, and hatched in the laboratory. These sites included the Tulare Lake Drainage District-north (TLDD-N...
Authors
D. J. Hoffman, C. M. Marn, Katherine C. Marois, E. Sproul, M. Dunne, J. P. Skorupa

Disentangling sampling and ecological explanations underlying species-area relationships Disentangling sampling and ecological explanations underlying species-area relationships

We used a probabilistic approach to address the influence of sampling artifacts on the form of species-area relationships (SARs). We developed a model in which the increase in observed species richness is a function of sampling effort exclusively. We assumed that effort depends on area sampled, and we generated species-area curves under that model. These curves can be realistic looking...
Authors
E. Cam, J.D. Nichols, J.E. Hines, J.R. Sauer, R. Alpizar-Jara, C.H. Flather

Individual covariation in life-history traits: Seeing the trees despite the forest Individual covariation in life-history traits: Seeing the trees despite the forest

We investigated the influence of age on survival and breeding rates in a long-lived species Rissa tridactyla using models with individual random effects permitting variation and covariation in fitness components among individuals. Differences in survival or breeding probabilities among individuals are substantial, and there was positive covariation between survival and breeding...
Authors
E. Cam, W.A. Link, E.G. Cooch, J. #NAME? Monnat, E. Danchin

Variation in survivorship of a migratory songbird throughout its annual cycle Variation in survivorship of a migratory songbird throughout its annual cycle

1. Demographic data from both breeding and non-breeding periods are needed to manage populations of migratory birds, many of which are declining in abundance and are of conservation concern. Although habitat associations, and to a lesser extent, reproductive biology, are known for many migratory species, few studies have measured survival rates of these birds at different parts of their...
Authors
T. Scott Sillett, Richard T. Holmes

Conditions and limitations on learning in the adaptive management of mallard harvests Conditions and limitations on learning in the adaptive management of mallard harvests

In 1995, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service adopted a protocol for the adaptive management of waterfowl hunting regulations (AHM) to help reduce uncertainty about the magnitude of sustainable harvests. To date, the AHM process has focused principally on the midcontinent population of mallards (Anas platyrhynchos), whose dynamics are described by 4 alternative models...
Authors
Fred A. Johnson, W. L. Kendall, J.A. Dubovsky

Can non-breeding be a cost of breeding dispersal? Can non-breeding be a cost of breeding dispersal?

Breeding habitat selection and dispersal are crucial processes that affect many components of fitness. Breeding dispersal entails costs, one of which has been neglected: dispersing animals may miss breeding opportunities because breeding dispersal requires finding a new nesting site and mate, two time- and energy-consuming activities. Dispersers are expected to be prone to non-breeding...
Authors
E. Danchin, E. Cam

Three geese resembling Gray-Bellied Brant/Lawrence's Brant from Long Island, New York Three geese resembling Gray-Bellied Brant/Lawrence's Brant from Long Island, New York

Three oddly plumaged brant, intermediate in several respects between 'Atlantic' or 'Pale-bellied Brant' (hrota) and ?Black Brant? (nigricans) were photographed and described on western Long Island, New York during 2002 (two in March, the third in October). Their plumage corresponded to that of the little-studied, and apparently genetically distinctive small population known among goose...
Authors
P. A. Buckley, S. S. Mitra

What is a population? What is a population?

No abstract available.
Authors
W.R. Munns, W. N. Beyer, W.G. Landis, C. Menzie
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