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School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

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Articles 271 - 300 of 1586

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Is Hay For The Birds? Investigating Landowner Willingness To Time Hay Harvests For Grassland Bird Conservation, Matthew P. Gruntorad, Katherine A. Graham, Nico Arcilla, Christopher J. Chizinski Jan 2021

Is Hay For The Birds? Investigating Landowner Willingness To Time Hay Harvests For Grassland Bird Conservation, Matthew P. Gruntorad, Katherine A. Graham, Nico Arcilla, Christopher J. Chizinski

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

Birds in agricultural environments have exhibited steep global population declines in recent decades, and effective conservation strategies targeting their populations are urgently needed. In grasslands used for hay production, breeding birds’ nest success improves substantially if hay harvests are delayed until after mid-July. However, few studies have investigated private hay producers’ willingness to alter their harvesting practices to support bird conservation, a critical factor for bird conservation where most land is privately owned, such as in the North American Great Plains. We surveyed Nebraska hay producers to examine whether livestock production, wildlife knowledge, and hunting activity affects their willingness to …


A Unified Vegetation Index For Quantifying The Terrestrial Biosphere, Gustau Camps-Valls, Manuel Campos-Taberner, Alvaro Moreno-Martinez, Sophia Walther, Gregory Duveiller, Alessandro Cescatti, Miguel D. Mahecha, Jordi Munoz-Mari, Francisco Javier Garcia-Haro, Luis Guanter, Martin Jung, John A. Gamon, Markus Reichstein, Steven W. Running Jan 2021

A Unified Vegetation Index For Quantifying The Terrestrial Biosphere, Gustau Camps-Valls, Manuel Campos-Taberner, Alvaro Moreno-Martinez, Sophia Walther, Gregory Duveiller, Alessandro Cescatti, Miguel D. Mahecha, Jordi Munoz-Mari, Francisco Javier Garcia-Haro, Luis Guanter, Martin Jung, John A. Gamon, Markus Reichstein, Steven W. Running

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

Empirical vegetation indices derived from spectral reflectance data are widely used in remote sensing of the biosphere, as they represent robust proxies for canopy structure, leaf pigment content, and, subsequently, plant photosynthetic potential. Here, we generalize the broad family of commonly used vegetation indices by exploiting all higher-order relations between the spectral channels involved. This results in a higher sensitivity to vegetation biophysical and physiological parameters. The presented nonlinear generalization of the celebrated normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) consistently improves accuracy in monitoring key parameters, such as leaf area index, gross primary productivity, and sun-induced chlorophyll fluorescence. Results suggest that …


Per- And Polyfluoroalkyl Substance (Pfas) Transport From Groundwater To Streams Near A Pfas Manufacturing Facility In North Carolina, Usa, Marie-Amélie Pétré, David P. Genereux, Lydia Koropeckyj-Cox, Detlef R.U. Knappe, Sandrine Duboscq, Troy E. Gilmore, Zachary R. Hopkins Jan 2021

Per- And Polyfluoroalkyl Substance (Pfas) Transport From Groundwater To Streams Near A Pfas Manufacturing Facility In North Carolina, Usa, Marie-Amélie Pétré, David P. Genereux, Lydia Koropeckyj-Cox, Detlef R.U. Knappe, Sandrine Duboscq, Troy E. Gilmore, Zachary R. Hopkins

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

We quantified per- and polyfluoroalkyl substance (PFAS) transport from groundwater to five tributaries of the Cape Fear River near a PFAS manufacturing facility in North Carolina (USA). Hydrologic and PFAS data were coupled to quantify PFAS fluxes from groundwater to the tributaries. Up to 29 PFAS were analyzed, including perfluoroalkyl acids and recently identified fluoroethers. Total quantified PFAS (ΣPFAS) in groundwater was 20−4773 ng/L (mean = 1863 ng/L); the range for stream water was 426−3617 ng/L (mean = 1717 ng/L). Eight PFAS constituted 98% of ΣPFAS; perfluoro-2-(perfluoromethoxy)propanoic acid (PMPA) and hexafluoropropylene oxide dimer acid (GenX) accounted for 61%. For PFAS …


Combining Uav-Rgb High-Throughput Field Phenotyping And Genome-Wide Association Study To Reveal Genetic Variation Of Rice Germplasms In Dynamic Response To Drought Stress, Zhao Jiang, Haifu Tu, Baowei Bai, Chenghai Yang, Biquan Zhao, Ziyue Guo, Qian Liu, Hu Zhao, Wanneng Yang, Lizhong Xiong, Jian Zhang Jan 2021

Combining Uav-Rgb High-Throughput Field Phenotyping And Genome-Wide Association Study To Reveal Genetic Variation Of Rice Germplasms In Dynamic Response To Drought Stress, Zhao Jiang, Haifu Tu, Baowei Bai, Chenghai Yang, Biquan Zhao, Ziyue Guo, Qian Liu, Hu Zhao, Wanneng Yang, Lizhong Xiong, Jian Zhang

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

Accurate and high-throughput phenotyping of the dynamic response of a large rice population to drought stress in the field is a bottleneck for genetic dissection and breeding of drought resistance.

Here, high-efficiency and high-frequent image acquisition by an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) was utilized to quantify the dynamic drought response of a rice population under field conditions. Deep convolutional neural networks (DCNNs) and canopy height models were applied to extract highly correlated phenotypic traits including UAV-based leaf-rolling score (LRS_uav), plant water content (PWC_uav) and a new composite trait, drought resistance index by UAV (DRI_uav).

The DCNNs achieved high accuracy (correlation …


Ecophysio-Optical Traits Of Semiarid Nebraska Grasslands Under Different Juniperus Virginiana And Pinus Ponderosa Canopy Covers, Anastasios Mazis, Julie A. Fowler, Jeremy Hiller, Yuzhen Zhou, Brian Wardlow, David A. Wedin, Tala Awada Jan 2021

Ecophysio-Optical Traits Of Semiarid Nebraska Grasslands Under Different Juniperus Virginiana And Pinus Ponderosa Canopy Covers, Anastasios Mazis, Julie A. Fowler, Jeremy Hiller, Yuzhen Zhou, Brian Wardlow, David A. Wedin, Tala Awada

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

Despite conservation efforts in the U.S. Great Plains, woody species have continued to expand at an unprecedented rate, threatening key ecosystem services and resilience. Cross-scale monitoring of these grasslands is key to successful integrative management strategies. In this study we measured plant optical traits derived from hyperspectral proximal sensing techniques with a field spectrometer, coupled with field-based measurements, including fluorescence and chlorophyll content, to determine the impacts of Juniperus virginiana and Pinus ponderosa expansion on grasslands health in Nebraska Sandhills, and investigated the use of optical-based approaches as indicators of successful monitoring of grasslands. Our results showed that higher woody …


Differentiating Early From Later Diagenesis Cretaceous Sandstone And Petroleum Reservoir Of The Cedar Mountain Formation In Utah, C. Robertson, G.A. Ludvigson, R.M. Joeckel, S. Mohammadi, J.I. Kirkland Jan 2021

Differentiating Early From Later Diagenesis Cretaceous Sandstone And Petroleum Reservoir Of The Cedar Mountain Formation In Utah, C. Robertson, G.A. Ludvigson, R.M. Joeckel, S. Mohammadi, J.I. Kirkland

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


How Well Do U.S. Western Water Markets Convey Economic Information, R. Rimsaite, K. Fisher-Vanden, S. Olmstead, D. Grogan Jan 2021

How Well Do U.S. Western Water Markets Convey Economic Information, R. Rimsaite, K. Fisher-Vanden, S. Olmstead, D. Grogan

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


A Satellite-Based Assessment Of The Relative Contribution Of Hydroclimatic Variables On Vegetation Growth In Global Agricultural And Non-Agricultural Regions, Akarsh Asoka, Brian Wardlow, Tsegaye Tadesse, Matthew Huber, Vimal Mishra Jan 2021

A Satellite-Based Assessment Of The Relative Contribution Of Hydroclimatic Variables On Vegetation Growth In Global Agricultural And Non-Agricultural Regions, Akarsh Asoka, Brian Wardlow, Tsegaye Tadesse, Matthew Huber, Vimal Mishra

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

Vegetation growth plays a crucial role in the carbon cycle and climate change mitigation. However, the relative contribution of hydroclimatic variables (relative humidity, terrestrial water storage, day and night-time land surface temperatures) on vegetation growth of agricultural and nonagricultural areas at the global scale remains unexplored. Using satellite-based datasets, we examined the changes in Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) and the four hydroclimatic variables during 2003–2014. Also, the relative contribution of the four hydroclimatic variables on vegetation growth in agricultural and nonagricultural areas was estimated. A significant (p-value < 0.05) greening has occurred in the agricultural regions of India and Brazil during 2003–2014. Whereas in nonagriculture areas, a considerable greening occurred only in India and China during the 2003–2014 period. Among the four hydroclimatic variables, both day-time and night-time land surface temperature are the significant contributors of vegetation growth in the two-thirds of the global landmass. Terrestrial water storage is a substantial contributor to the vegetation growth in the tropics and subtropics. Night-time land surface temperature is strongly associated with the vegetation growth in the colder regions. The hydroclimatic variables do not explain the considerable amount of the total variance of vegetation growth over the agricultural areas in China, which is due to human agricultural management practices. Generally, the response of hydroclimate variables on vegetation growth in the agricultural and nonagricultural areas has significant implications in many areas, including food security, carbon sequestration, water resource management, and climate change.


Assessing The Value Extension Adds To Decision Making Among Natural Resource Leaders, R. Rimsaite, M. Kreye Jan 2021

Assessing The Value Extension Adds To Decision Making Among Natural Resource Leaders, R. Rimsaite, M. Kreye

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Guiding Principles For Using Satellite-Derived Maps In Rangeland Management, B.W. Allred, M.K. Creutzburg, J.C. Carlson, C.J. Cole, C.M. Dovichin, M.C. Duniway, O. Jones, J.D. Maestas, D.E. Naugle, T.W. Nauman, G.S. Okin, M.C. Reeves, Matthew C. Rigge, L. Savage, Dirac Twidwell, D.R. Uden, B. Zhou Jan 2021

Guiding Principles For Using Satellite-Derived Maps In Rangeland Management, B.W. Allred, M.K. Creutzburg, J.C. Carlson, C.J. Cole, C.M. Dovichin, M.C. Duniway, O. Jones, J.D. Maestas, D.E. Naugle, T.W. Nauman, G.S. Okin, M.C. Reeves, Matthew C. Rigge, L. Savage, Dirac Twidwell, D.R. Uden, B. Zhou

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Improving Landsat Predictions Of Rangeland Fractional Cover With Multi-Task Learning And Uncertainty, B.W. Allred, B. Bestelmeyer, C.S. Boyd, C. Brown, K.W. Davies, M. Ellsworth, T. Erickson, S.D. Fuhlendorf, T.V. Griffiths, V. Jansen, M.O. Jones, J. Karl, A. Knight, J.D. Maestas, J.J. Maynard, S.E. Mccord, D.E. Naugle, H.D. Starns, D. Twidwell, D.R. Uden Jan 2021

Improving Landsat Predictions Of Rangeland Fractional Cover With Multi-Task Learning And Uncertainty, B.W. Allred, B. Bestelmeyer, C.S. Boyd, C. Brown, K.W. Davies, M. Ellsworth, T. Erickson, S.D. Fuhlendorf, T.V. Griffiths, V. Jansen, M.O. Jones, J. Karl, A. Knight, J.D. Maestas, J.J. Maynard, S.E. Mccord, D.E. Naugle, H.D. Starns, D. Twidwell, D.R. Uden

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Tracking Spatial Regimes As An Early Warning For A Species Of Conservation Concern, C.P. Roberts, D.R. Uden, S.M. Cady, B.W. Allred, S.D. Fuhlendorf, M.O. Jones, J.D. Maestas, D.E. Naugle, A.C. Olsen, J. Smith, J. Tack, D. Twidwell Jan 2021

Tracking Spatial Regimes As An Early Warning For A Species Of Conservation Concern, C.P. Roberts, D.R. Uden, S.M. Cady, B.W. Allred, S.D. Fuhlendorf, M.O. Jones, J.D. Maestas, D.E. Naugle, A.C. Olsen, J. Smith, J. Tack, D. Twidwell

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Iterative Scenarios For Social-Ecological Systems, D. Herrmann, K. Schwarz, C. Allen, D. Angeler, T. Eason, A. Garmestani Jan 2021

Iterative Scenarios For Social-Ecological Systems, D. Herrmann, K. Schwarz, C. Allen, D. Angeler, T. Eason, A. Garmestani

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Boundary Spanning: Its Role In Trust Development Between Stakeholders In Integrated Water Resource Management, Jodi Lynn Delozier, Mark E. Burbach Jan 2021

Boundary Spanning: Its Role In Trust Development Between Stakeholders In Integrated Water Resource Management, Jodi Lynn Delozier, Mark E. Burbach

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

This study sheds light on the importance of boundary spanners in developing the conditions that foster trust between stakeholders in integrated water resource management (IWRM). Boundary spanners routinely reach across organizational borders to build interconnections and interdependencies in order to manage complex problems, inform policy, and encourage knowledge sharing. The importance of the boundary spanning role has been shown in organizational business practices, urban planning, and higher education yet little research exists on its impact in IWRM. The mixed methods approach used in this study involved surveying and interviewing individuals with previous experience with IWRM in Nebraska. The results of …


Challenges And Opportunities For Agroforestry Practitioners To Participate In State Preferential Property Tax Programs For Agriculture And Forestry, Stephanie Chizmar, Rajan Parajuli, Gregory E. Frey, Robert E. Bardon, Robert Andrew Branan, Katherine Macfarland, Matthew Smith, Lord Ameyaw Jan 2021

Challenges And Opportunities For Agroforestry Practitioners To Participate In State Preferential Property Tax Programs For Agriculture And Forestry, Stephanie Chizmar, Rajan Parajuli, Gregory E. Frey, Robert E. Bardon, Robert Andrew Branan, Katherine Macfarland, Matthew Smith, Lord Ameyaw

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

All 50 states offer preferential property tax programs that lower the taxes paid on enrolled agricultural and/or forest lands. While agroforestry is a land-use that combines elements of both agriculture and forestry, eligibility criteria and other rules and regulations may prevent landowners from enrolling agroforestry practices in one or more of the agricultural and forestry tax programs. This pilot-scale study developed conceptual and methodological frameworks to identify the current barriers to and opportunities in preferential tax policies applicable to agroforestry practices. We conducted an extensive review of state preferential property tax programs relevant for agroforestry practices, following focus group discussions …


Panarchy And Management Of Lake Ecosystems, D. Angeler, C. Allen, A. Garmestani, L. Gunderson, R. Johnson Jan 2021

Panarchy And Management Of Lake Ecosystems, D. Angeler, C. Allen, A. Garmestani, L. Gunderson, R. Johnson

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Overcoming An “Irreversible” Threshold: A 15-Year Fire Experiment, Christine H. Bielski, Rheinhardt Scholtz, Victoria Donovan, Craig R. Allen, Dirac Twidwell Jan 2021

Overcoming An “Irreversible” Threshold: A 15-Year Fire Experiment, Christine H. Bielski, Rheinhardt Scholtz, Victoria Donovan, Craig R. Allen, Dirac Twidwell

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

A key pursuit in contemporary ecology is to differentiate regime shifts that are truly irreversible from those that are hysteretic. Many ecological regime shifts have been labeled as irreversible without exploring the full range of variability in stabilizing feedbacks that have the potential to drive an ecological regime shift back towards a desirable ecological regime. Removing fire from grasslands can drive a regime shift to juniper woodlands that cannot be reversed using typical fire frequency and intensity thresholds, and has thus been considered irreversible. This study uses a unique, long-term experimental fire landscape co-dominated by grassland and closed-canopy juniper woodland …


Transition, M.A. Janssen, C.R. Allen, L. Gunderson Jan 2021

Transition, M.A. Janssen, C.R. Allen, L. Gunderson

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Responses Of Multiple Structural And Functional Indicators Along Three Contrasting Disturbance Gradients, Amelie Truchy, Ryan A. Sponseller, Frauke Ecke, David G. Angeler, Maria Kahlert, Mirco Bundschuh, Richard K. Johnson, Brendan G. Mckie Jan 2021

Responses Of Multiple Structural And Functional Indicators Along Three Contrasting Disturbance Gradients, Amelie Truchy, Ryan A. Sponseller, Frauke Ecke, David G. Angeler, Maria Kahlert, Mirco Bundschuh, Richard K. Johnson, Brendan G. Mckie

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

Ecosystem functioning and community structure are recognized as key components of ecosystem integrity, but comprehensive, standardized studies of the responses of both structural and functional indicators to different types of anthropogenic pressures remain rare. Consequently, we lack an empirical basis for (i) identifying when monitoring ecosystem structure alone misses important changes in ecosystem functioning, (ii) recommending sets of structural and functional metrics best suited for detecting ecological change driven by different anthropogenic pressures, and (iii) understanding the cumulative effects of multiple, co-occurring stressors on structure and function. We investigated variation in community structure and ecosystem functioning of stream ecosystems along …


Joint Effects Of Climate, Tree Size, And Year On Annual Tree Growth Derived From Tree-Ring Records Of Ten Globally Distributed Forests, K.J. Anderson-Teixeira, V. Hermann, C.R. Rollinson, B. Gonzalez, E.B. Gonzalez-Akre, N. Pederson, M.R. Alexander, C.D. Allen, R. Alfaro-Sanchez, T. Awada, J.L. Baltzer, P. J. Baker, J. D. Birch, S. Bunyavejchewin, P. Cherubini, S. J. Davies, C. Dow, R. Helcoski, J. Kaspar, J. A. Lutz, E. Q. Margolis, J. T. Maxwell, S. M. Mcmahon, C. Piponiot, S. E. Russo, P. Samonil, A. E. Sniderhan, A. J. Tepley, I. Vasickova, M Vlam, P. A. Zuidema Jan 2021

Joint Effects Of Climate, Tree Size, And Year On Annual Tree Growth Derived From Tree-Ring Records Of Ten Globally Distributed Forests, K.J. Anderson-Teixeira, V. Hermann, C.R. Rollinson, B. Gonzalez, E.B. Gonzalez-Akre, N. Pederson, M.R. Alexander, C.D. Allen, R. Alfaro-Sanchez, T. Awada, J.L. Baltzer, P. J. Baker, J. D. Birch, S. Bunyavejchewin, P. Cherubini, S. J. Davies, C. Dow, R. Helcoski, J. Kaspar, J. A. Lutz, E. Q. Margolis, J. T. Maxwell, S. M. Mcmahon, C. Piponiot, S. E. Russo, P. Samonil, A. E. Sniderhan, A. J. Tepley, I. Vasickova, M Vlam, P. A. Zuidema

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Big Cats In The Big City: Spatial Ecology Of Mountain Lions In Greater Los Angeles, S. P. Riley, J. A. Sikich, J. F. Benson Jan 2021

Big Cats In The Big City: Spatial Ecology Of Mountain Lions In Greater Los Angeles, S. P. Riley, J. A. Sikich, J. F. Benson

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Snapshot Usa: The First Coordinated National Camera Trap Survey Of The United States, M. Cove, J. Benson Et Al. Jan 2021

Snapshot Usa: The First Coordinated National Camera Trap Survey Of The United States, M. Cove, J. Benson Et Al.

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Harnessing The Neon Data Revolution To Advance Open Environmental Science With Diverse And Data-Capable Community, R. C. Nagy, J. Corman Et Al. Jan 2021

Harnessing The Neon Data Revolution To Advance Open Environmental Science With Diverse And Data-Capable Community, R. C. Nagy, J. Corman Et Al.

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Multi-Feature Data Repository Development And Analytics For Image Cosegmentation In High-Throughput Plant Phenotyping, R. Quinones, F. Munoz-Arriola, S. Das Choudhury, A. Samal Jan 2021

Multi-Feature Data Repository Development And Analytics For Image Cosegmentation In High-Throughput Plant Phenotyping, R. Quinones, F. Munoz-Arriola, S. Das Choudhury, A. Samal

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Whooping Crane (Grus Americana) Family Consumes A Diversity Of Aquatic Vertebrates During Fall Migration Stopover At The Platte River, Nebraska, Andrew J. Caven, Keith D. Koupal, David M. Baasch, Emma M. Brinley Buckley, Jenna M. Malzahn, Michael David Forsberg, Mariah Lundgren Jan 2021

Whooping Crane (Grus Americana) Family Consumes A Diversity Of Aquatic Vertebrates During Fall Migration Stopover At The Platte River, Nebraska, Andrew J. Caven, Keith D. Koupal, David M. Baasch, Emma M. Brinley Buckley, Jenna M. Malzahn, Michael David Forsberg, Mariah Lundgren

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

The Aransas-Wood Buffalo population of Whooping Cranes (Grus americana) migrates approximately 4000 km through the central Great Plains biannually, between their breeding and wintering grounds. Whooping Cranes depend on stopover sites to provide secure resting locations and the caloric resources necessary to complete their migration, such as the USFWS-designated critical habitat area in the Central Platte River Valley (CPRV) of Nebraska. This area includes braided river habitat characterized by low-elevation and submerged sandbars, which provide important roosting and foraging opportunities for migrating Whooping Cranes. We used long-range photography, videography, and behavioral scan sampling to document forage items consumed by Whooping …


Effects Of Climate And Irrigation On Grace-Based Estimates Of Water Storage Changes In Major Us Aquifers, B. R. Scanlon, A. Rateb, D. R. Pool, W. Sanford, H. Save, A. Sun, D. Long, B. A. Fuchs Jan 2021

Effects Of Climate And Irrigation On Grace-Based Estimates Of Water Storage Changes In Major Us Aquifers, B. R. Scanlon, A. Rateb, D. R. Pool, W. Sanford, H. Save, A. Sun, D. Long, B. A. Fuchs

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Potential Caveats In Land Surface Model Evaluations Using The U.S. Drought Monitor: Roles Of Base Periods And Drought Indicators, H. Wang, L. Xu, M. Hughes, M. Chelliah, D. G. Dewitt, B. A. Fuchs, D. L. Jackson Jan 2021

Potential Caveats In Land Surface Model Evaluations Using The U.S. Drought Monitor: Roles Of Base Periods And Drought Indicators, H. Wang, L. Xu, M. Hughes, M. Chelliah, D. G. Dewitt, B. A. Fuchs, D. L. Jackson

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Coupling Spectral And Resource-Use Complementarity In Experimental Grassland And Forest Communites, A. K. Schweiger, J. Cavender-Bares, P. Townsend, M. Madritch, J. Grossman, H. Gholizadeh, R. Wang, J. Gamon Jan 2021

Coupling Spectral And Resource-Use Complementarity In Experimental Grassland And Forest Communites, A. K. Schweiger, J. Cavender-Bares, P. Townsend, M. Madritch, J. Grossman, H. Gholizadeh, R. Wang, J. Gamon

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Remotely Detected Plant Function In Two Midwestern Prairie Grassland Experiments Reveals Belowground Processes, J. Cavender-Bares, A. Schweiger, J. Gamon, H. Gholizadeh, K. Helzer, C. Lapadat, M. Madritch, P. Townsend, Z. Wang, S. Hobbie Jan 2021

Remotely Detected Plant Function In Two Midwestern Prairie Grassland Experiments Reveals Belowground Processes, J. Cavender-Bares, A. Schweiger, J. Gamon, H. Gholizadeh, K. Helzer, C. Lapadat, M. Madritch, P. Townsend, Z. Wang, S. Hobbie

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Motivations To Participate In Hunting And Angling: A Comparison Among Preferred Activities And State Of Residence, Matthew P. Hinrichs, Mark P. Vrtiska, Mark Pegg, Christopher J. Chizinski Jan 2021

Motivations To Participate In Hunting And Angling: A Comparison Among Preferred Activities And State Of Residence, Matthew P. Hinrichs, Mark P. Vrtiska, Mark Pegg, Christopher J. Chizinski

School of Natural Resources: Faculty Publications

Motivations for hunting and fishing extend beyond harvesting game and include social, psychological, emotional, and physical benefits. We used data from a web-based questionnaire to compare relationships between preferred hunting or fishing activity types, state of residence, and motivations of hunters and anglers across the central United States (U.S.). Exploratory factor analysis yielded four motivation factors: nature, social, food, and challenge. Differences in terms of state were negligible across all motivation factors (η2p < .01), indicating similarity across states. Nature (η2p = .01) and social (η2p < .01) factors were the first and …