Dicamptodon is the single, extant genus of the
ambystomatid subfamily Dicamptodontinae. Two species, D.
ensatus (Eschscholtz) and D. copei Nussbaum are recognized.
D. ensatus is found in the forested, mountain regions of
northwestern California and western Oregon, in the Willapa
Hills and Cascade Mountains of Washington, in extreme
southwestern British...
Laboratory experiments and simulated field conditions were
utilized to gain a better understanding of the ecology of the clouded
salamander.
Animals collected in western Oregon were utilized for studies
in habitat selection, where it was shown that there was a significant
pattern of selection of litter types (rock, bark, and...
This report summarizes the results of a field study of a population
of the Pacific mountain beaver, Aplodontia rufa pacifica, from
August 1965 through August 1967. The study site consisted of a 13. 5-
acre grid on a logged over area in the Coast Range Mountains of
Benton County, Oregon....
Analyses of sympatric and allopatric populations of Sceloporus
occidentalis and S. graciosus from central Oregon indicate a high degree
of similarity in diet. Relative abundance, the equivalent number of
equally common taxa (E), and the probability of similarity (SIMI) were
used in the analyses. Shifts in diet between populations of...
To gain a better foothold on the communication system of the
avifauna, calls and songs of the American Robin (Turdus migratorius)
were recorded and analyzed using the sound spectrograph. Ten different
calls were recognized as follows: three alarm calls, an excitement
call, challenge call, contact call, two flight calls and...
During the spring of 1963 and 1964 an investigation of a small
mammal community was made in McDonald Forest, near Corvallis, Oregon.
The revised North American Census of Small Mammals procedure was
used, and from this census the species composition of the community
was determined. The relationships of several genera...
With a growing emphasis on details of behavior comes an increasing
need for knowledge of natural behavior patterns. Studies
on the life history of Peromyscus maniculatus have long been available
in the literature. More recently, investigators have turned to
analyzing the behavior of some of the subspecies of P.m. in...
The ecology of a population of snowshoe hares, Lepus
americanus washingtonii, was studied in western Oregon from 1960
to 1962. Objectives were to obtain information to control hares,
which frequently cause damage to coniferous reproduction in the
region, and to compare the life history of this little-studied subspecies
with others....