Publications
These publications showcase the significant science conducted in our Science Centers.
Filter Total Items: 16727
The science of trail surveys: Recreation ecology provides new tools for managing wilderness trails The science of trail surveys: Recreation ecology provides new tools for managing wilderness trails
Recreation ecology examines the effects of recreation on protected area ecosystems. One core focus of recreation ecology research is trail science, including the development of efficient protocols to assess and monitor the type and severity of resource impacts, analyses to improve knowledge of factors that influence trail conditions, and studies to assist land managers in improving trail...
Authors
Jeffrey L. Marion, Jeremy F. Wimpey, Logan O. Park
Unmarked: An R package for fitting hierarchical models of wildlife occurrence and abundance Unmarked: An R package for fitting hierarchical models of wildlife occurrence and abundance
Ecological research uses data collection techniques that are prone to substantial and unique types of measurement error to address scientific questions about species abundance and distribution. These data collection schemes include a number of survey methods in which unmarked individuals are counted, or determined to be present, at spatially- referenced sites. Examples include site...
Authors
Ian J. Fiske, Richard B. Chandler
Using remote sensing and imagery exploitation to monitor the dynamics of East Timbalier Island, LA: 2000-2010 Using remote sensing and imagery exploitation to monitor the dynamics of East Timbalier Island, LA: 2000-2010
In 1999, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration-National Marine Fisheries Service and the State of Louisiana jointly undertook the restoration of East Timbalier, a barrier island along a sediment-starved portion of the Gulf of Mexico coast of Louisiana. High-resolution overhead imagery was used to monitor the course of this restoration effort. This article describes the...
Authors
James P. Thomas, Gary B. Fisher, Lisbeth A. Chandler, Kim M. Angeli, Douglas J. Wheeler, Robert P. Glover, Elizabeth J. Schenck-Gardner, Steve E. Wiles, Carolyn F. Lindley, Michael B. Peccini
The role of surface and subsurface processes in keeping pace with sea level rise in intertidal wetlands of Moreton Bay, Queensland, Australia The role of surface and subsurface processes in keeping pace with sea level rise in intertidal wetlands of Moreton Bay, Queensland, Australia
Increases in the elevation of the soil surfaces of mangroves and salt marshes are key to the maintenance of these habitats with accelerating sea level rise. Understanding the processes that give rise to increases in soil surface elevation provides science for management of landscapes for sustainable coastal wetlands. Here, we tested whether the soil surface elevation of mangroves and...
Authors
Catherine E. Lovelock, Vicki Bennion, Alistair Grinham, Donald R. Cahoon
The present and future role of coastal wetland vegetation in protecting shorelines: Answering recent challenges to the paradigm The present and future role of coastal wetland vegetation in protecting shorelines: Answering recent challenges to the paradigm
For more than a century, coastal wetlands have been recognized for their ability to stabilize shorelines and protect coastal communities. However, this paradigm has recently been called into question by small-scale experimental evidence. Here, we conduct a literature review and a small meta-analysis of wave attenuation data, and we find overwhelming evidence in support of established...
Authors
Keryn B. Gedan, Matthew L. Kirwan, Eric Wolanski, Edward B. Barbier, Brian R. Silliman
Dynamic resource allocation in conservation planning Dynamic resource allocation in conservation planning
Consider the problem of protecting endangered species by selecting patches of land to be used for conservation purposes. Typically, the availability of patches changes over time, and recommendations must be made dynamically. This is a challenging prototypical example of a sequential optimization problem under uncertainty in computational sustainability. Existing techniques do not scale...
Authors
D. Golovin, A. Krause, B. Gardner, Sarah J. Converse, S. Morey
Science, conservation, and camera traps Science, conservation, and camera traps
Biologists commonly perceive camera traps as a new tool that enables them to enter the hitherto secret world of wild animals. Camera traps are being used in a wide range of studies dealing with animal ecology, behavior, and conservation. Our intention in this volume is not to simply present the various uses of camera traps, but to focus on their use in the conduct of science and...
Authors
James D. Nichols, K. Ullas Karanth, Allan F. O’Connel
Informal trail monitoring protocols: Denali National Park and Preserve. Final Report, October 2011 Informal trail monitoring protocols: Denali National Park and Preserve. Final Report, October 2011
Managers at Alaska?s Denali National Park and Preserve (DENA) sponsored this research to assess and monitor visitor-created informal trails (ITs). DENA is located in south-central Alaska and managed as a six million acre wilderness park. This program of research was guided by the following objectives: (1) Investigate alternative methods for monitoring the spatial distribution, aggregate...
Authors
Jeffrey L. Marion, Jeremy F. Wimpey
Improving occupancy estimation when two types of observational error occur: Non-detection and species misidentification Improving occupancy estimation when two types of observational error occur: Non-detection and species misidentification
Efforts to draw inferences about species occurrence frequently account for false negatives, the common situation when individuals of a species are not detected even when a site is occupied. However, recent studies suggest the need to also deal with false positives, which occur when species are misidentified so that a species is recorded as detected when a site is unoccupied. Bias in...
Authors
David Miller, James D. Nichols, B.T. McClintock, Evan H. Campbell Grant, L.L. Bailey, L.A. Weir
Distribution and seasonal dynamics of arsenic in a shallow lake in northwestern New Jersey, USA Distribution and seasonal dynamics of arsenic in a shallow lake in northwestern New Jersey, USA
Elevated concentrations of arsenic (As) occurred during warm months in water from the outlet of Lake Mohawk in northwestern New Jersey. The shallow manmade lake is surrounded by residential development and used for recreation. Eutrophic conditions are addressed by alum and copper sulfate applications and aerators operating in the summer. In September 2005, arsenite was dominant in...
Authors
J. L. Barringer, Z. Szabo, T.P. Wilson, J.L. Bonin, T. Kratzer, K. Cenno, T. Romagna, M. Alebus, B. Hirst
Environmental endocrinology of salmon smoltification Environmental endocrinology of salmon smoltification
Smolting is a hormone-driven developmental process that is adaptive for downstream migration and ocean survival and growth in anadromous salmonids. Smolting includes increased salinity tolerance, increased metabolism, downstream migratory and schooling behavior, silvering and darkened fin margins, and olfactory imprinting. These changes are promoted by growth hormone, insulin-like growth...
Authors
Bjorn Thrandur Bjornsson, S.O. Stefansson, S. D. McCormick
Midcontinent microcosm: Geology of the Atkins lake - Marengo falls area (Field trip 2) Midcontinent microcosm: Geology of the Atkins lake - Marengo falls area (Field trip 2)
Archean and Proterozoic rocks exposed over about 16km2 between Atkins Lake and Coffee Lake in southeastern Bayfield County (Fig. 1) chronicle almost all of the major Precambrian geologic events in the history of the southern Superior Craton. The oldest rocks are part of a locally gneissic quartz monzonite complex, the Puritan Batholith, with an igneous Rb-Sr age of 2710+140 Ma (Sims et...
Authors
Marcia Bjornerud, William F. Cannon