Publications
Click below for access to more than 170,000 publications written by USGS scientists over the century-plus history of the bureau.
Filter Total Items: 828
Population status of the Tinian Monarch (Monarcha takatsukasae) on Tinian, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands Population status of the Tinian Monarch (Monarcha takatsukasae) on Tinian, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands
We conducted surveys to evaluate the current population status of the Tinian Monarch (Monarcha takatsukasae), an insectivorous forest bird restricted to the island of Tinian, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands. In 1996, we recounted transects surveyed in 1982 and used the same analysis procedure to compare 1982 and 1996 population estimates. The 1996 population estimate was 55...
Authors
Michael Lusk, Steve C. Hess, Michelle H. Reynolds, Scott Johnston
Ranchers and biologists in Hawai‘i — Keeping a business strong and protecting native forests at Ulupalakua Ranch, Maui Ranchers and biologists in Hawai‘i — Keeping a business strong and protecting native forests at Ulupalakua Ranch, Maui
The loss of ranchland to critical habitat has been a major concern to ranchers and other large landowners in recent years. On the island of Maui, a novel approach is in the works which seems to have merit both for conservation of endangered species and for helping a landowner ethically manage an ecologically sensitive area.
Authors
Sumner Erdman, Arthur C. Medeiros, Anthony Durso, Lloyd Loope
Food habits of introduced rodents in high-elevation shrubland of Haleakala National Park, Maui, Hawai'i Food habits of introduced rodents in high-elevation shrubland of Haleakala National Park, Maui, Hawai'i
Mus musculus and Rattus rattus are ubiquitous consumers in the high-elevation shrubland of Haleakala National Park. Food habits of these two rodent species were determined from stomach samples obtained by snaptrapping along transects located at four different elevations during November 1984 and February, May, and August 1985. Mus musculus fed primarily on fruits, grass seeds, and...
Authors
F. Russell Cole, Lloyd L. Loope, Arthur C. Medeiros, Cameron E. Howe, Laurel J. Anderson
Toward a global information system for invasive species Toward a global information system for invasive species
The growing frequency and impact of biological invasions worldwide threaten biodiversity, ecosystem functioning, resource availability, national economies, and human health (Ruesink et al. 1995, Simberloff 1996, Vitousek et al. 1997). Organisms are spreading into new regions at unprecedented rates. As a result, hundreds to thousands of nonindigenous species of invertebrates, vertebrates...
Authors
Anthony Ricciardi, William W.M. Steiner, Richard N. Mack, Daniel Simberloff
Notes on status and ecology of the endangered Hawaiian annual Awiwi, Centaurium sebaeoides (Gentianaceae) Notes on status and ecology of the endangered Hawaiian annual Awiwi, Centaurium sebaeoides (Gentianaceae)
The annual, endemic, coastal herb Centaurium sebaeoides is the only native Hawaiian species in the gentian family. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service listed it as Endangered under the Endangered Species Act on 29 October 1991. Before surveys reported here, the total population of this species statewide was estimated at 80-110 individuals in eight populations. During counts made in April...
Authors
Arthur C. Medeiros, Charles G. Chimera, Lloyd L. Loope, Stephanie M. Joe, Paul D. Krushelnycky
Home range and diet of feral cats in Hawaii forests Home range and diet of feral cats in Hawaii forests
Feral cat Felis catus home range in a Hawaiian montane wet forest and their diet in three habitats - montane wet forest, subalpine dry forest, and lowland dry forest ? were determined to provide baseline ecological data and to assess potential impacts to native terrestrial fauna. Seven cats (three males and four females) were captured in 624 trap nights. Mean weight of adult cats was 2...
Authors
T.D. Smucker, G.D. Lindsey, S.M. Mosher
Water Resources Data: Hawaii and Other Pacific Areas, Water Year 1999. Volume 1. Hawaii Water Resources Data: Hawaii and Other Pacific Areas, Water Year 1999. Volume 1. Hawaii
This report includes records on both surface and ground water in the State. Specifically, it contains: (1) Discharge records for 74 stream-gaging stations, 71 miscellaneous streamflow stations, and 88 crest-stage partial-record streamflow stations; (2) water-quality records for 6 streamflow-gaging stations, and 28 partial-record streamflow stations; (3) water-level records for 84...
Authors
B. R. Hill, R. A. Fontaine, R.I. Taogoshi, P.C. Teeters
Occurrence of organochlorine pesticides in streambed sediment and fish from selected streams on the island of Oahu, Hawaii, 1998 Occurrence of organochlorine pesticides in streambed sediment and fish from selected streams on the island of Oahu, Hawaii, 1998
Organochlorine pesticides were heavily used from the mid-1940s to the mid-1980s. The persistence of organochlorine pesticides, their tendency to accumulate in soil, sediment, and biota, and their harmful effects on wildlife brought this class of compounds into disfavor and eventually resulted in restriction or cancellation of most of them in the United States (Nowell and others, 1999)...
Authors
Anne M. D. Brasher, Stephen S. Anthony
Site Selection for a Deep Monitor Well, Kualapuu, Molokai, Hawaii Site Selection for a Deep Monitor Well, Kualapuu, Molokai, Hawaii
Management of the ground-water resources near Kualapuu on the island of Molokai, Hawaii, is hindered by the uncertainty in the vertical salinity structure in the aquifer. In the State of Hawaii, vertical profiles of ground-water salinity are commonly obtained from deep monitor wells, and these profiles are used to estimate the thicknesses of the freshwater part of the ground-water flow...
Authors
Delwyn S. Oki
Reproductive ecology of the Maui Parrotbill Reproductive ecology of the Maui Parrotbill
The endangered Maui Parrotbill (Pseudonestor xanthophrys) is an excavating, insectivorous Hawaiian honeycreeper endemic to the high elevation rain forests of east Maui, Hawaii. From March 1994 to June 1997, we studied various aspects of their breeding ecology. We color-banded 18 individuals, located and monitored 9 active nests, and took behavioral data during 440 hrs of nest observation...
Authors
John C. Simon, Thane K. Pratt, Kim E. Berlin, James R. Kowalsky
Hydrology and Water and Sediment Quality at James Campbell National Wildlife Refuge near Kahuku, Island of Oahu, Hawaii Hydrology and Water and Sediment Quality at James Campbell National Wildlife Refuge near Kahuku, Island of Oahu, Hawaii
The James Campbell National Wildlife Refuge occupies two lowland marsh and pond complexes on the northern coastal plain of Oahu: the mostly natural ponds and wetlands of the Punamano Unit and the constructed ponds of the Kii Unit. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service manages the Refuge primarily to protect and enhance habitat for four endangered species of Hawaiian waterbirds. Kii Unit is...
Authors
Charles D. Hunt, Eric H. De Carlo
Summary of ground-water data for Tutuila and Aunuu, American Samoa, for October 1987 through September 1997 Summary of ground-water data for Tutuila and Aunuu, American Samoa, for October 1987 through September 1997
Ground-water and rainfall data for the period October 1987 through September 1997 from Tutuila and Aunuu, American Samoa, are plotted in time-series graphs and summarized. The data include pumpage and chloride concentrations from 53 production wells on Tutuila, including 5 new wells that were put into production between October 1996 and September 1997, 3 production wells on Aunuu, water...
Authors
Scot K. Izuka