The effects of disking, food plantings, and wheat plantings on a population of California quail (Lophortyx californicus) were studied from fall 1976 to spring 1978 on the E.E. Wilson Wildlife Area, Oregon. Twelve 16.2-ha study sites were established: 3 study sites for each treatment and 3 control sites. Disked areas,...
Populations of Western Tragopans Tragopan melanocephalus were studied at two areas (Machiara and Salkhala) in the Neelum Valley of northeastern Pakistan. A total of 130 sightings of birds was noted during the breeding seasons in 1982 and 1983, but only 100 were re-located for vegetation analysis. More sightings of birds...
Despite the belief that fuels management, a form of prescribed fire that reduces accumulated fuels in commercially thinned forests, is necessary to restore forest 'health' in the Pacific Northwest, its effects on wildlife has received little attention in the scientific literature. Because fuels management is supported, funded, and implemented nationwide...
A feral pig population on Santa Catalina Island, California, was
studied for 17 months beginning in July 1980. Density was estimated
to be 21 to 34 pigs/km² (95% confidence interval) using capture-recapture
techniques. Dry season home ranges determined from
radio-telemetry data were small and differed significantly between
boars and sows....
The encroachment of western juniper into mountain big sagebrush plant communities and the subsequent development of juniper stands results in significant changes in vegetation structure and complexity. This study described and compared vegetative structure and bird community measures among four cover types representing a broad range of structural stages among...
Nutritional ecology of unhunted and sympatric populations of
Roosevelt elk, Cervus elaphus roosevelti, and Columbian black-tailed
deer, Odocoileus hemionus columbianus, was investigated in old-growth
forests of the Hoh Valley in Olympic National Park, Washington, from
September 1979 to November 1981. Seasonal diets of both cervids
generally were comprised of common...
California's Central Valley agricultural landscapes provide several important wintering regions for Pacific Flyway sandhill crane (Grus canadensis) populations; however, the value of those regions is being compromised by urban expansion, other developments, and conversions to incompatible crop types. Greater (G. c. tabida) and lesser sandhill cranes (G. c. canadensis) both...