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Articles 47341 - 47370 of 52464
Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Wildlife Damage In Australia: Constructive Contrasts With The United States, Terrell P. Salmon
Wildlife Damage In Australia: Constructive Contrasts With The United States, Terrell P. Salmon
Great Plains Wildlife Damage Control Workshop Proceedings
There are numerous wildlife damage problems in Australia. The major pests include rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculusl, foxes (Vulpes vulpes/, starlings (Sturnus vulgarisl, feral cats (felts catus/, donkeys (Equus asinusl, goats (Capra hircusl, buffalo (Bubalus trutralisl, pigs (Sus scrofal, all of which have been introduced. The dingo ICanis familiaris dingo/, classified as being a native species by most people, is the primary native animal causing problems, although others, such as kangaroos and several native bird species, are pests in some areas. The Australians spend considerable amounts of money on wildlife damage control research. The people of Western Australia take a regulatory approach …
The Effect Of Dietary Protein And Feed Size On The Assimilation Efficiency Of Starlings And Blackbirds, Daniel J. Twedt
The Effect Of Dietary Protein And Feed Size On The Assimilation Efficiency Of Starlings And Blackbirds, Daniel J. Twedt
Great Plains Wildlife Damage Control Workshop Proceedings
Starlings (Sturnus vulgarisl were fed 3 feed sizes and 3 protein levels of swine feeds to determine metabolizable energy and assimilation efficiency. Metabolizable energy (12 kcal/g of diet consumed) and assimilation efficiency (3296 of gross energy intake) were independent of feed size. A 46% crude protein diet was 5196 assimilated and yielded more energy per gram of diet consumed than a 2196 crude protein diet which was only 35% assimilated. Starlings failed to maintain their body weight on a cracked corn diet containing 14% crude protein. Feeding behaviors of starlings due to their assimilation efficiencies are discussed and contrasted with …
Thiram And Methiocarb As Deer Mouse Repellents And Agents For Conditioned Aversion, Bobbi A. Holm
Thiram And Methiocarb As Deer Mouse Repellents And Agents For Conditioned Aversion, Bobbi A. Holm
School of Natural Resources: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research
No abstract provided.
Monthly Planet, 1985, December, Robert Galford, Huxley College Of The Environment, Western Washington University
Monthly Planet, 1985, December, Robert Galford, Huxley College Of The Environment, Western Washington University
The Planet
No abstract provided.
The Prairie Naturalist Volume 17, No. 4. December 1985
The Prairie Naturalist Volume 17, No. 4. December 1985
The Prairie Naturalist
Paul B. Kannowski, Editor
Nikki R. Seabloom, Assistant Editor
Douglas H. Johnson, Book Review Editor
TABLE OF CONTENTS
MOVEMENTS AND HABITAT USE OF MALE RUFFED GROUSE IN THE TURTLE MOUNTAINS, NORTH DAKOTA ▪ E. L. Bakke and J. W. Schulz
THE BIRDS OF KONZA PRAIRIE RESEARCH NATURAL AREA, KANSAS ▪ J. L. Zimmerman
VASCULAR FLORA OF RANSOM, RICHLAND, AND SARGENT COUNTIES, NORTH DAKOTA ▪ G. J. Seder and W. T. Barker
NORTH DAKOTA FLEAS. IX. SIPHONAPTERANS OF MAMMALS IN SOUTHWESTERN NORTH DAKOTA ▪ O. R. Larson, M. G. McKenna, and N. R. Fellows
NOTES
Breakup and Sibling Dispersal of Two …
The Probe, Issue 58 - December 1985
The Probe, Issue 58 - December 1985
The Probe: Newsletter of the National Animal Damage Control Association
THE PROBE
National Animal Damage Control Association
DECEMBER, 1985
Rabies and the EPA
Growing Rat Problems in China
Anti-Hunters
World Wildlife Fund
Meetings
Vengeance
Pigeon Pill
Pigeon Feeding Patterns
Letters to Ye Ed
Coyote Parvovirus
Animal Rightists
Hate Man or Love Nature? by Kathryn Boggs
ADC to USDA
Oyster Spatfall In Virginia Rivers: 1985 Annual Survey, James Whitcomb
Oyster Spatfall In Virginia Rivers: 1985 Annual Survey, James Whitcomb
Reports
The Virginia Institute of Marine Science (VIMS) conducts weekly surveys from June through early October to obtain oyster spatfall information. Spat counts are made on oyster shells strung qn wire and suspended from stakes on public and private beds. The number of spat on shells is counted each week of the spawning season to determine the potential of a particular area for receiving a strike and to predict the most likely period the strikes will occur.
Interactive Modification Of Quadratic Multiobjective Water Resources Planning Strategies, Paul J. Killian, Richard C. Peralta
Interactive Modification Of Quadratic Multiobjective Water Resources Planning Strategies, Paul J. Killian, Richard C. Peralta
Arkansas Water Resources Center Technical Reports
An interactive method is presented for modifying a compromise solution to a multiobjective water resources planning stategy by changing constraining conditions on regional objectives and local variables. The method is illustrated by modifying a bicriterion, sustained groundwater withdrawal strategy for minimizing the cost of meeting regional water demand on the Arkansas Grand Prairie. The strategy was developed using a model in which the finite difference form of the two-dimensional groundwater flow equation is embedded in an optimization process. The quadratic optimization is accomplished by utilizing the General Differential Algorithm to obtain values of the drawdown, pumping rate, and recharge rate …
Water Current, Volume 17, No. 6, November/December 1985
Water Current, Volume 17, No. 6, November/December 1985
Water Current Newsletter
Director's Report
Clarification of September/October Director's Report
Call for Proposals
Proposals Funded
1986 Nebraska Water Conference
Water Resources Seminar Series
Kremer Lecture Series Speaker
Great Plains Symposium on Transition to Dryland Agriculture
Research Review: Nitrate Removal from Groundwater Supplies Using Biological Denitrification
The Probe, Issue 57 - November 1985
The Probe, Issue 57 - November 1985
The Probe: Newsletter of the National Animal Damage Control Association
THE PROBE
National Animal Damage Control Association
November, 1985 No. 57
Executive Board Meeting: Raleigh, NC
Agriculture goes to USDA?
Hunter Harassment
NADCA Dues
Behavior Affects Hunting Access
Welfare Program for the Grizzlies in Yellowstone
Rabies and the EPA
Letters to Ye Ed
Support for the Trapper
The Wildlife Legislative Fund of America
Assessment of Blackbird Damage to Sunflowers
The Humane Society and Mattel Toy
Fund for Animals
Rat Damage Control on Philippine Coconuts
NADCA Board Meeting
Multiple Trophic Levels In Soft-Bottom Communities, John A. Commito, William G. Ambrose Jr.
Multiple Trophic Levels In Soft-Bottom Communities, John A. Commito, William G. Ambrose Jr.
Environmental Studies Faculty Publications
In order to assess the general applicability of recent field experiments with predatory infauna, we searched the literature and found 48 well-documented cases of infaunal consumption by such predators. In 63 % of the cases detailed enough to make a determination, the predators ate other predators. Multiple trophic levels within the infauna are probably a common feature of many soft-bottom communities.
Innovative Transfer And Exchange Plans, Glenn E. Porzak
Innovative Transfer And Exchange Plans, Glenn E. Porzak
Colorado Water Issues and Options: The 90's and Beyond: Toward Maximum Beneficial Use of Colorado's Water Resources (October 8)
36 pages (includes maps).
Contains footnotes (page 32).
Voluntary Approaches To Basinwide Water Management, Neil S. Grigg
Voluntary Approaches To Basinwide Water Management, Neil S. Grigg
Colorado Water Issues and Options: The 90's and Beyond: Toward Maximum Beneficial Use of Colorado's Water Resources (October 8)
13 pages (includes illustration).
Contains references (page 11).
Engineering And Hydrologic Issues In Changing Water Uses, Leonard Rice
Engineering And Hydrologic Issues In Changing Water Uses, Leonard Rice
Colorado Water Issues and Options: The 90's and Beyond: Toward Maximum Beneficial Use of Colorado's Water Resources (October 8)
26 pages (includes maps, charts and illustrations).
Contains references (page 18).
Interstate Transfers Of Water: Many A Slip ‘Twixt The Cup And The Lip, Howard Holme
Interstate Transfers Of Water: Many A Slip ‘Twixt The Cup And The Lip, Howard Holme
Colorado Water Issues and Options: The 90's and Beyond: Toward Maximum Beneficial Use of Colorado's Water Resources (October 8)
44 pages (includes maps and tables).
Contains 6 pages of footnotes.
A Market-Based Approach To Water Rights: Evaluating Colorado’S System, Stephen F. Williams
A Market-Based Approach To Water Rights: Evaluating Colorado’S System, Stephen F. Williams
Colorado Water Issues and Options: The 90's and Beyond: Toward Maximum Beneficial Use of Colorado's Water Resources (October 8)
33 pages.
Contains footnotes.
Agenda: Colorado Water Issues And Options: The 90'S And Beyond: Toward Maximum Beneficial Use Of Colorado's Water Resources, University Of Colorado Boulder. Natural Resources Law Center, Colorado Water Resources Research Institute. Cooperative Extension Service
Agenda: Colorado Water Issues And Options: The 90'S And Beyond: Toward Maximum Beneficial Use Of Colorado's Water Resources, University Of Colorado Boulder. Natural Resources Law Center, Colorado Water Resources Research Institute. Cooperative Extension Service
Colorado Water Issues and Options: The 90's and Beyond: Toward Maximum Beneficial Use of Colorado's Water Resources (October 8)
Presented by Natural Resources Law Center, University of Colorado School of Law and Cooperative Extension Service, Colorado Water Resources Research Institute, Colorado State University.
Conference organizers and/or speakers included University of Colorado School of Law professors Lawrence J. MacDonnell, David H. Getches and Stephen F. Williams.
The conference theme is "Toward Maximum Beneficial Use of Colorado's Water Resources." The purpose of the conference is to provide a forum for public discussion of Colorado's system of water law and administration and to make recommendations for future action.
Nontributary Ground Water: A Continuing Dilemma, William A. Paddock
Nontributary Ground Water: A Continuing Dilemma, William A. Paddock
Colorado Water Issues and Options: The 90's and Beyond: Toward Maximum Beneficial Use of Colorado's Water Resources (October 8)
47 pages.
Contains 2 pages of footnotes.
The Development Of Colorado’S Water Law, Raphael J. Moses
The Development Of Colorado’S Water Law, Raphael J. Moses
Colorado Water Issues and Options: The 90's and Beyond: Toward Maximum Beneficial Use of Colorado's Water Resources (October 8)
23 pages.
Contains references (pages 22 - 23).
Meeting Colorado’S Water Requirements: An Overview Of The Issues, David H. Getches
Meeting Colorado’S Water Requirements: An Overview Of The Issues, David H. Getches
Colorado Water Issues and Options: The 90's and Beyond: Toward Maximum Beneficial Use of Colorado's Water Resources (October 8)
43 pages (includes tables and map).
Includes 3 pages of footnotes.
Administering Colorado’S Water: A Critique Of The Present Approach, Clyde O. Martz, Bennett W. Raley
Administering Colorado’S Water: A Critique Of The Present Approach, Clyde O. Martz, Bennett W. Raley
Colorado Water Issues and Options: The 90's and Beyond: Toward Maximum Beneficial Use of Colorado's Water Resources (October 8)
41 pages.
Contains footnotes.
Wasted Water: The Problems And Promise Of Improving Efficiency Under Western Water Law, Steven J. Shupe
Wasted Water: The Problems And Promise Of Improving Efficiency Under Western Water Law, Steven J. Shupe
Colorado Water Issues and Options: The 90's and Beyond: Toward Maximum Beneficial Use of Colorado's Water Resources (October 8)
61 pages.
Includes footnotes (pages 49-56).
Factors Affecting Colorado’S Water Future: Summary Of Results Of Survey Conducted April 1985, Lawrence J. Macdonnell
Factors Affecting Colorado’S Water Future: Summary Of Results Of Survey Conducted April 1985, Lawrence J. Macdonnell
Colorado Water Issues and Options: The 90's and Beyond: Toward Maximum Beneficial Use of Colorado's Water Resources (October 8)
7 pages.
Behavior And Ecological Interactions Of Larval Odonata, Clay L. Pierce, Philip H. Crowley, Dan M. Johnson
Behavior And Ecological Interactions Of Larval Odonata, Clay L. Pierce, Philip H. Crowley, Dan M. Johnson
Clay L. Pierce
Enallagma aspersum and E. traviatum (Odonata: Coenagrionidae) are the most abundant larval odonates in Bays Mountain Park (Sullivan County, Tennessee, USA), although their spatial distributions are essentially nonoverlapping. E. traviatum coexists with insectivorous fish in a small lake, whereas E. aspersum is restricted to a small fishless pond nearby. Behavioral observations revealed that E. aspersum larvae were more active than E. traviatum, and tended to occupy more conspicuous positions. E. aspersum also engaged in more confrontations than E. traviatum, especially at higher density. In laboratorye xperimentsw ith juvenile bluegills( Lepomism acrochirusa) s predators,E . aspersum larvae were more vulnerable to …
The Taman Negara Batek: A People In Transition, Paul Faulstich
The Taman Negara Batek: A People In Transition, Paul Faulstich
Pitzer Faculty Publications and Research
Batek Negritos from the vicinity of Taman Negara National Park in West Malaysia are a hunting and gathering people presently experiencing rapid encroachment by the modern world. Under the authority of the Malaysian government, they are being encouraged to settle and to emulate Malay subsistence farming communities. Unfortunately, this strategy has had a number of adverse effects on the Batek.
Somalia Fisheries Development: Past, Present And Future, Bruce Barbour
Somalia Fisheries Development: Past, Present And Future, Bruce Barbour
Marine Affairs Theses and Major Papers
This paper is being presented in three distinct parts. Each section deals with fisheries development in Somalia, East Africa, past, present and future. The first section focuses on a project proposal by a World Bank/U.N. FAO joint effort. This proposal exemplifies a traditional approach to development. This traditional approach will be defined and then evaluated. The second section is a report of the authors consultancy to the Somali government concerning the development of the fisheries within the Coastal Development Projects jurisdiction. The approach employed was one of first defining the problem and then working on solutions. This section is being …
Proceedings Of The First Arkansas Water Conference, Randy Young, Alice T. Gamache
Proceedings Of The First Arkansas Water Conference, Randy Young, Alice T. Gamache
Arkansas Water Resources Center Technical Reports
The purpose of this conference is to: Discuss Arkansas water problems and opportunities for addressing those problems. In the water resources management arena, Arkansas is truly the "Land of Opportunity" as our motto states. Serve as a public forum to stimulate thought and interest in Arkansas' water resources.
Leachate Monitoring In Naturally Saline Groundwater Chesapeake Landfill Chesapeake Virginia, T. Britt Mcmillan
Leachate Monitoring In Naturally Saline Groundwater Chesapeake Landfill Chesapeake Virginia, T. Britt Mcmillan
OES Theses and Dissertations
Groundwater chemistry around the Chesapeake municipal landfill was monitored over a one year period. Ten sample sites as well as two surface water sites were used to monitor water quality. Two wells, one at 3 m and the other at 10 m were located at each site. Surface water samples were taken from the Elizabeth River, north of the landfill, and a tidal channel, west of the landfill. Seven groundwater sites were downgradient of the landfill and three sites were upgradient (control sites).
The landfill overlies a tidal marsh, approximately 100 m south of the intracoastal waterway (Elizabeth River). Dredge …
Microbial Characteristics Of An Industrial Mixed Liquor After Exposure To Phenolic Compounds, Patricia L. Boyle
Microbial Characteristics Of An Industrial Mixed Liquor After Exposure To Phenolic Compounds, Patricia L. Boyle
Theses
The microbial characteristics of a mixed population from the Passaic Valley Sewerage Commissioners (PVSC) Wastewater Treatment Plant in Newark were examined. This plant handles about 250 million gallons per day of mixed sewerage, with a large industrial component. The microbial species were characterized using standard plating techniques, morphology, microscopic observation, and biochemical tests. These characteristics were determined for the fresh liquor, and after successive batch exposure to phenol (100 ppm) and 2-chlorophenol (20 ppm). Predator/prey, gram positive to gram negative bacteria ratios, and the fungi and protozoan populations were also determined. These results were compared with those previously obtained using …
Proceedings Of The Second Eastern Wildilfe Damage Control Conference (Complete Volume), Peter T. Bromley (Edited By)
Proceedings Of The Second Eastern Wildilfe Damage Control Conference (Complete Volume), Peter T. Bromley (Edited By)
Eastern Wildlife Damage Control Conference: 2nd (1985)
The papers and abstracts of the proceedings were reproduced from camera-ready materials provided by the authors. The quality of the published proceedings is a credit to the authors, who followed editorial directions very well and who painstakingly reviewed their papers. The proceedings contains only papers and abstracts submitted for publication; in a few instances authors did not provide papers or sent only an abstract, which would permit publication of their work in professional journals. Funds to support the publication were provided by North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission, USDA Extension Service, USDA Forest Service and USDI Fish and Wildlife Service.
The …