28 research outputs found

    Lead Shot in Some Spring Migrant Ducks

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    The incidence of lead shot in l ,687 lesser scaup (Athya affinis) and 416 ring-necked ducks (Athya collaris) in spring migration in Minnesota and the implications as related to the bird population and hunting harvest the preceding fall are considered in this study. The ducks, which were examined for shot by photofluorographic radiography had died as a result of oil pollution on the Mississippi River in the vicinity of Red Wing in the spring of 1963. The birds were separated into two age groups and by sex. Yearling lesser scaup had a body shat incidence (proportion of birds containing shot) of 5.5 per cent and yearling ring-necked ducks 17.8 per cent. For both species, yearling males had a higher incidence of shot than yearling females, and the most common location of shot was just beneath the skin on the back and abdomen. By using shot incidence in conjunction with other data, the harvest rate during the preceding hunting season (1962) was estimated as being 15 to 20 per cent of the population for yearling lesser scaup of both sexes; 30 to 35 per cent far yearling female ring-necked ducks, 60 to 70 per cent for yearling males, and 45 to 55 per cent for yearlings of both sexes of ring-necked ducks combined. Incidence of ingested shot in the digestive tracts of the birds (mostly gizzard) was low, being 1.7 per cent for lesser scaup and 1.6 per cent far ring-necked ducks

    The Cedar Creek Natural History Area: A Progress Report

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    During the past five years, the utilization of the Cedar Creek Natural History Area by educators, research workers, and special, groups has increased steadily. Progress in administration, management, operations, and land acquisition is described in this paper, and the needs for the future are indicated

    Front Matter

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    Decadal changes and delayed avian species losses due to deforestation in the northern Neotropics

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    How avifauna respond to the long-term loss and fragmentation of tropical forests is a critical issue in biodiversity management. We use data from over 30 years to gain insights into such changes in the northernmost Neotropical rainforest in the Sierra de Los Tuxtlas of southern Veracruz, Mexico. This region has been extensively deforested over the past half-century. The Estación de Biología Tropical Los Tuxtlas, of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), protects a 640 ha tract of lowland forest. It became relatively isolated from other forested tracts between 1975 and 1985, but it retains a corridor of forest to more extensive forests at higher elevations on Volcán San Martín. Most deforestation in this area occurred during the 1970s and early 1980s. Forest birds were sampled on the station and surrounding areas using mist nets during eight non-breeding seasons from 1973 to 2004 (though in some seasons netting extended into the local breeding season for some species). Our data suggested extirpations or declines in 12 species of birds subject to capture in mist nets. Six of the eight species no longer present were captured in 1992–95, but not in 2003–2004. Presence/absence data from netting and observational data suggested that another four low-density species also disappeared since sampling began. This indicates a substantial time lag between the loss of habitat and the apparent extirpation of these species. Delayed species loss and the heterogeneous nature of the species affected will be important factors in tropical forest management and conservation

    Avian distribution and abundance records for the Sierra de Los Tuxtlas

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    ABSTRACT.-Between 1973 and 1987 we spent more than 36 months studying birds in the Sierra de Los Tuxtlas, on the Gulf coast of southern Veracruz, Mexico. This area contains the northernmost tropical rainforest in the western hemisphere, and has undergone relatively rapid deforestation in the past three decades. Its avifauna is diverse, consisting of both resident and migratory birds. We recorded 405 species, including 58 that have not been reported from the region before, as well as several that apparently have not been reported for Veracruz. Fully 350 species are documented by specimens; the remaining 55 consist of sight records only. We compare our results with past surveys of Los Tuxtlas and discuss 124 species whose status in the region is affected by our data. Of the 405 species we recorded in Los Tuxtlas, 96 (23.7%) appear on a list of bird species from the northern neotropics thought to be in danger due to tropical deforestation. Received 9 Jan. 1992, accepted 29 April 1992. The Sierra de Los Tuxtlas (hence Los Tuxtlas) is a rugged, mountainous region of volcanic origin, isolated from the Sierr

    Marsh wren

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    8 p. : ill., maps ; 26 cm.Includes bibliographical references (p. 8)."The short-billed marsh wrens (Cistothorus platensis (Latham)) of Mexico and Central America are reviewed. Nine subspecies, one a migrant (C.p. stellaris), are recognized from the region. Cistothorus platensis tinnulus has an extensive range in the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt. Other forms are more restricted in their distribution: C.p. potosinus (new), San Luis Potosí; C.p. jalapensis (new), central highlands of Veracruz; C.p. warneri (new), lowlands southern Veracruz, Tabasco, and adjacent Chiapas; C.p. elegans, highlands of Guatemala; C.p. russelli (new), British Honduras; C.p. graberi (new), Honduras; and C.p. lucidus, Costa Rica and Panama, with one record from Nicaragua. Maps showing ranges are included"--P. [1]

    Montana Kaimin, February 15, 1963

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    Student newspaper of the University of Montana, Missoula.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper/4963/thumbnail.jp

    The wired wilderness : electronic surveillance and environmental values in wildlife biology

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    Thesis (Ph. D. in History, Anthropology, and Science, Technology and Society (HASTS))--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Program in Science, Technology and Society, 2006.Includes bibliographical references.In the second half of the twentieth century, American wildlife biologists incorporated Cold War-era surveillance technologies into their practices in order to render wild animals and their habitats legible and manageable. One of the most important of these was wildlife radio-tracking, in which collars and tags containing miniature transmitters were used to locate individual animals in the field. In addition to producing new ecological insights, radio-tracking served as a site where relationships among scientists, animals, hunters, animal rights activists, environmentalists, and others involved in wildlife conservation could be embodied and contested. While scholars have tended to interpret surveillance technologies in terms of the extension of human control over nature and society, I show how technological, biological, and ecological factors made such control fragmentary and open to reappropriation. Wildlife radio-tracking created vulnerabilities as well as capabilities; it provided opportunities for connection as well as for control. I begin by showing how biologists in Minnesota and Illinois in the early 1960s used radio-tracking to establish intimate, technologically-mediated, situated relationships with game animals such as ruffed grouse, which they hoped would bolster their authority vis-a-vis recreational hunters. I then show how the technique was contested by environmentalists when biologists applied it to iconic "wilderness wildlife" such as grizzly bears in Yellowstone National Park in the 1960s and 1970s. One way for biologists to render radio-tracking acceptable in the face of such opposition was to emphasize its continuity with traditional practices, as they did in a radio-tagging study of tigers in Nepal in the 1970s.(cont.) Another way was to shift to less invasive techniques of remote sensing, such as the bioacoustic surveys of bowhead whales off Alaska's Arctic coast that were conducted in the 1980s after a proposal to radio-tag whales was rejected by marine mammalogists and Ifiupiat whalers. Finally, wildlife biologists could reframe radio-tracking as a means for popular connection rather than expert control, as they did by broadcasting the locations of satellite-tagged albatrosses to schoolchildren, gamblers, and the general public via the Internet in the 1990s and early 2000s.by Etienne Samuel Benson.Ph.D.in History, Anthropology, and Science, Technology and Society (HAST

    \u3ci\u3eNebraska Bird Review\u3c/i\u3e (October 1959) 27(4), WHOLE ISSUE.

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    Table of Contents Thirty-Fifth Annual Cooperative Spring Migration and Occurrence Report ............................................................................ 50 Fall Records .............................................................................................. 67 Birding in Kearney On The Run .................................................... 69 General Notes ............................................................................................ 73 Index to Volume XXVII........................................................................ 7

    A Museum of the North American Indian: a study and proposal for the preliminary development of a museum and its contiguous functions for the Crazy Horse Memorial in the Black Hills near Custer, South Dakota

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    Thesis (M.Arch.) Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Architecture, 1956.Accompanying drawings held by MIT Museum.Bibliography: leaves 37-38.by Carl Robert Nelson, Jr.M.Arch
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