John Piatt, Ph.D. (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 18
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Changes in proximate composition and somatic energy content for Pacific sand lance (Ammodytes hexapterus) from Kachemak Bay, Alaska relative to maturity and season Changes in proximate composition and somatic energy content for Pacific sand lance (Ammodytes hexapterus) from Kachemak Bay, Alaska relative to maturity and season
Mean dry-weight energy values of adult Pacific sand lance (Ammodytes hexapterus) peaked in spring and early summer (20.91 kJg−1 for males, 21.08 kJg−1 for females), then declined by about 25% during late summer and fall (15.91 kJg−1 for males, 15.74 kJg−1 for females). Late summer declines in energy density paralleled gonadal development. Gender differences in energy density (males
Authors
Martin D. Robards, Jill A. Anthony, George A. Rose, John F. Piatt
The adrenocorical stress-response of Black-legged Kittiwake chicks in relation to dietary restrictions The adrenocorical stress-response of Black-legged Kittiwake chicks in relation to dietary restrictions
In this study we examined hormonal responses of Black-legged Kittiwake (Rissatridactyla) chicks to experimental variations in energy content and nutritional quality (low or high lipid to protein ratio, LPR) of their food. Starting at the age of 10 days, chicks were fed either high or low LPR fish at 30, 50, 70 and 100% of ad libitum energy intake. After 20 days of treatment, chicks were...
Authors
A.S. Kitaysky, John F. Piatt, J.C. Wingfield, M. Romano
Time-budgets of Common Murres at a declining and increasing colony in Alaska Time-budgets of Common Murres at a declining and increasing colony in Alaska
We observed Common Murres (Uria aalge) at two breeding sites in lower Cook Inlet, Alaska, to determine whether food availability was reflected in their time-budgets at each colony. Catches of forage fish in nets and relative biomass were greater around a murre colony that has been increasing for the past 25 years than around a colony that has been decreasing over the same time period...
Authors
Stephani Zador, John F. Piatt
Marine birds and mammals of the Pacific Subarctic Gyres Marine birds and mammals of the Pacific Subarctic Gyres
The importance of the subarctic gyres of the North Pacific Ocean to marine birds and mammals is poorly known because of a paucity of data spanning appropriate scales of time and space. The little information that is available indicates the western subarctic gyre (WSAG) is more productive than the eastern subarctic gyre (ESAG). In summer the WSAG supports a greater density and higher...
Authors
A.M. Springer, John F. Piatt, V.P. Shuntov, Gus B. Van Vliet, V.L. Vladimirov, A.E. Kuzin, A.S. Perlov
Vocalizations of the Kittlitz's Murrelet Vocalizations of the Kittlitz's Murrelet
We present the first documentation of Kittlitz's Murrelet (Brachyramphus brevirostris) vocalizations, based on recordings made in Glacier Bay, Alaska, in 1994. We identified two apparently related types of calls: groan and quack. The Kittlitz's Murrelet calls were markedly different from the most common calls of the congeneric Marbled Murrelet (Brachyramphus marmoratus), but shared...
Authors
Thomas I. van Pelt, John F. Piatt, Gus B. Van Vliet
Dynamics of food availability, body condition and physiological stress response in breeding Black-legged Kittiwakes Dynamics of food availability, body condition and physiological stress response in breeding Black-legged Kittiwakes
1. The seasonal dynamics of body condition (BC), circulating corticosterone levels (baseline, BL) and the adrenocortical response to acute stress (SR) were examined in long-lived Black-legged Kittiwakes, Rissa tridactyla, breeding at Duck (food-poor colony) and Gull (food-rich colony) Islands in lower Cook Inlet, Alaska. It was tested whether the dynamics of corticosterone levels reflect...
Authors
A.S. Kitaysky, J.C. Wingfield, John F. Piatt
Temporal and geographic variation in fish communities of lower Cook Inlet, Alaska Temporal and geographic variation in fish communities of lower Cook Inlet, Alaska
Nearshore and shelf fish communities were studied in three areas of lower Cook Inlet, Alaska: the Barren Islands (oceanic and well-mixed waters), Kachemak Bay (mixed oceanic waters with significant freshwater runoff), and Chisik Island (estuarine waters). Fish were sampled with beach seines (n=413 sets) and midwater trawls (n=39 sets). We found that lower Cook Inlet supported a diverse...
Authors
Martin D. Robards, John F. Piatt, Arthur B. Kettle, Alisa A. Abookire
Community reorganization in the Gulf of Alaska following ocean climate regime shift Community reorganization in the Gulf of Alaska following ocean climate regime shift
A shift in ocean climate during the late 1970s triggered a reorganization of community structure in the Gulf of Alaska ecosystem, as evidenced in changing catch composition on long-term (1953 to 1997) small-mesh trawl surveys. Forage species such as pandalid shrimp and capelin declined because of recruitment failure and predation, and populations have not yet recovered. Total trawl catch...
Authors
P.J. Anderson, John F. Piatt
Annotated bibliography Annotated bibliography
This bibliography contains over 1,700 published and unpublished references on the family Ammodytidae with an emphasis on the genus Ammodytes. The references are alphabetical by author and then by year of publication. Abstracts and summaries are included for the references we have seen and those provided electronically by others. Abstracts written by the original authors are within...
Authors
Robert H. Armstrong, Mary F. Willson, Martin D. Robards, John F. Piatt
Marbled murrelets have declined in Alaska Marbled murrelets have declined in Alaska
In the last issue of Northwest Science, Hayward and Iverson (“Long-Term Trends in Marbled Murrelets in Southeast Alaska Based on Christmas Bird Counts”) failed to mention other evidence for 40-75% declines in murrelet populations, or discuss implications of a climate regime shift that has reduced populations of seabirds in Alaska, or present any useful information on the status of old...
Authors
John F. Piatt
Hermit crabs in the diet of Pigeon Guillemots at Kachemak Bay, Alaska Hermit crabs in the diet of Pigeon Guillemots at Kachemak Bay, Alaska
Guillemots (Cepphus spp.) feed their chicks a diet that is almost exclusively fish. We observed Pigeon Guillemots (C. columba) at two colonies in Alaska where hermit crabs (Crustacea: Anomura) were a major part of the diet for some nestlings. Hermit crabs were delivered to three of five observed nests at one colony, comprised between 2% and 22% of the items delivered at those nests, and...
Authors
Michael A. Litzow, John F. Piatt, Jared D. Figurski
Foods of Spectacled Eiders Somateria fischeri in the Bering Sea, Alaska Foods of Spectacled Eiders Somateria fischeri in the Bering Sea, Alaska
The winter diet of Spectacled Eiders living in marine habitats is known only from two individuals described by Cottam (1939). Here we examine marine diets from 36 stomachs collected near St. Lawrence Island, Bering Sea, Alaska, during May-June in 1987 and 1992. All Spectacled Eiders ate Mollusca, including Gastropoda (snails; frequency of occurrence 20.0%; sole taxon 0.0%) and Bivalvia...
Authors
Margaret R. Petersen, John F. Piatt, K.A. Trust
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 18
No Result Found
Filter Total Items: 200
Changes in proximate composition and somatic energy content for Pacific sand lance (Ammodytes hexapterus) from Kachemak Bay, Alaska relative to maturity and season Changes in proximate composition and somatic energy content for Pacific sand lance (Ammodytes hexapterus) from Kachemak Bay, Alaska relative to maturity and season
Mean dry-weight energy values of adult Pacific sand lance (Ammodytes hexapterus) peaked in spring and early summer (20.91 kJg−1 for males, 21.08 kJg−1 for females), then declined by about 25% during late summer and fall (15.91 kJg−1 for males, 15.74 kJg−1 for females). Late summer declines in energy density paralleled gonadal development. Gender differences in energy density (males
Authors
Martin D. Robards, Jill A. Anthony, George A. Rose, John F. Piatt
The adrenocorical stress-response of Black-legged Kittiwake chicks in relation to dietary restrictions The adrenocorical stress-response of Black-legged Kittiwake chicks in relation to dietary restrictions
In this study we examined hormonal responses of Black-legged Kittiwake (Rissatridactyla) chicks to experimental variations in energy content and nutritional quality (low or high lipid to protein ratio, LPR) of their food. Starting at the age of 10 days, chicks were fed either high or low LPR fish at 30, 50, 70 and 100% of ad libitum energy intake. After 20 days of treatment, chicks were...
Authors
A.S. Kitaysky, John F. Piatt, J.C. Wingfield, M. Romano
Time-budgets of Common Murres at a declining and increasing colony in Alaska Time-budgets of Common Murres at a declining and increasing colony in Alaska
We observed Common Murres (Uria aalge) at two breeding sites in lower Cook Inlet, Alaska, to determine whether food availability was reflected in their time-budgets at each colony. Catches of forage fish in nets and relative biomass were greater around a murre colony that has been increasing for the past 25 years than around a colony that has been decreasing over the same time period...
Authors
Stephani Zador, John F. Piatt
Marine birds and mammals of the Pacific Subarctic Gyres Marine birds and mammals of the Pacific Subarctic Gyres
The importance of the subarctic gyres of the North Pacific Ocean to marine birds and mammals is poorly known because of a paucity of data spanning appropriate scales of time and space. The little information that is available indicates the western subarctic gyre (WSAG) is more productive than the eastern subarctic gyre (ESAG). In summer the WSAG supports a greater density and higher...
Authors
A.M. Springer, John F. Piatt, V.P. Shuntov, Gus B. Van Vliet, V.L. Vladimirov, A.E. Kuzin, A.S. Perlov
Vocalizations of the Kittlitz's Murrelet Vocalizations of the Kittlitz's Murrelet
We present the first documentation of Kittlitz's Murrelet (Brachyramphus brevirostris) vocalizations, based on recordings made in Glacier Bay, Alaska, in 1994. We identified two apparently related types of calls: groan and quack. The Kittlitz's Murrelet calls were markedly different from the most common calls of the congeneric Marbled Murrelet (Brachyramphus marmoratus), but shared...
Authors
Thomas I. van Pelt, John F. Piatt, Gus B. Van Vliet
Dynamics of food availability, body condition and physiological stress response in breeding Black-legged Kittiwakes Dynamics of food availability, body condition and physiological stress response in breeding Black-legged Kittiwakes
1. The seasonal dynamics of body condition (BC), circulating corticosterone levels (baseline, BL) and the adrenocortical response to acute stress (SR) were examined in long-lived Black-legged Kittiwakes, Rissa tridactyla, breeding at Duck (food-poor colony) and Gull (food-rich colony) Islands in lower Cook Inlet, Alaska. It was tested whether the dynamics of corticosterone levels reflect...
Authors
A.S. Kitaysky, J.C. Wingfield, John F. Piatt
Temporal and geographic variation in fish communities of lower Cook Inlet, Alaska Temporal and geographic variation in fish communities of lower Cook Inlet, Alaska
Nearshore and shelf fish communities were studied in three areas of lower Cook Inlet, Alaska: the Barren Islands (oceanic and well-mixed waters), Kachemak Bay (mixed oceanic waters with significant freshwater runoff), and Chisik Island (estuarine waters). Fish were sampled with beach seines (n=413 sets) and midwater trawls (n=39 sets). We found that lower Cook Inlet supported a diverse...
Authors
Martin D. Robards, John F. Piatt, Arthur B. Kettle, Alisa A. Abookire
Community reorganization in the Gulf of Alaska following ocean climate regime shift Community reorganization in the Gulf of Alaska following ocean climate regime shift
A shift in ocean climate during the late 1970s triggered a reorganization of community structure in the Gulf of Alaska ecosystem, as evidenced in changing catch composition on long-term (1953 to 1997) small-mesh trawl surveys. Forage species such as pandalid shrimp and capelin declined because of recruitment failure and predation, and populations have not yet recovered. Total trawl catch...
Authors
P.J. Anderson, John F. Piatt
Annotated bibliography Annotated bibliography
This bibliography contains over 1,700 published and unpublished references on the family Ammodytidae with an emphasis on the genus Ammodytes. The references are alphabetical by author and then by year of publication. Abstracts and summaries are included for the references we have seen and those provided electronically by others. Abstracts written by the original authors are within...
Authors
Robert H. Armstrong, Mary F. Willson, Martin D. Robards, John F. Piatt
Marbled murrelets have declined in Alaska Marbled murrelets have declined in Alaska
In the last issue of Northwest Science, Hayward and Iverson (“Long-Term Trends in Marbled Murrelets in Southeast Alaska Based on Christmas Bird Counts”) failed to mention other evidence for 40-75% declines in murrelet populations, or discuss implications of a climate regime shift that has reduced populations of seabirds in Alaska, or present any useful information on the status of old...
Authors
John F. Piatt
Hermit crabs in the diet of Pigeon Guillemots at Kachemak Bay, Alaska Hermit crabs in the diet of Pigeon Guillemots at Kachemak Bay, Alaska
Guillemots (Cepphus spp.) feed their chicks a diet that is almost exclusively fish. We observed Pigeon Guillemots (C. columba) at two colonies in Alaska where hermit crabs (Crustacea: Anomura) were a major part of the diet for some nestlings. Hermit crabs were delivered to three of five observed nests at one colony, comprised between 2% and 22% of the items delivered at those nests, and...
Authors
Michael A. Litzow, John F. Piatt, Jared D. Figurski
Foods of Spectacled Eiders Somateria fischeri in the Bering Sea, Alaska Foods of Spectacled Eiders Somateria fischeri in the Bering Sea, Alaska
The winter diet of Spectacled Eiders living in marine habitats is known only from two individuals described by Cottam (1939). Here we examine marine diets from 36 stomachs collected near St. Lawrence Island, Bering Sea, Alaska, during May-June in 1987 and 1992. All Spectacled Eiders ate Mollusca, including Gastropoda (snails; frequency of occurrence 20.0%; sole taxon 0.0%) and Bivalvia...
Authors
Margaret R. Petersen, John F. Piatt, K.A. Trust
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