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Brunner, Elizabeth L.
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- Creator:
- Rockweit, Jeremy T., Jenkins, Julianna M. A., Hines, James E., Nichols, James D., Dugger, Katie M., Franklin, Alan B., Carlson, Peter C., Kendall, William L., Lesmeister, Damon B., McCafferty, Christopher, Ackers, Steven H., Andrews, L. Steven, Bailey, Larissa L., Burgher, Jesse, Burnham, Kenneth P., Chestnut, Tara, Conner, Mary M., Dilione, Krista E., Davis, Raymond J., Forsman, Eric D., Glenn, Elizabeth M., Gremel, Scott A., Hamm, Keith A., Herter, Dale R., Higley, J. Mark, Horn, Rob B., Lamphear, David W., McDonald, Trent L., Reid, Janice A., Schwarz, Carl J., Simon, David C., Sovern, Stan G., Swingle, James K., Wiens, J. David, Wise, Heather, and Yackulic, Charles B.
- Abstract:
- These datasets were used in the prospective meta-analysis of northern spotted owl reproductive rates over 25 years across 11 study areas located throughout the range of the owl. A multi-state occupancy file was created by collapsing site-specific information on owl reproductive status into bimonthly (2 per month) survey occasions. These...
- Resource Type:
- Dataset
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- Creator:
- Rockweit, Jeremy T., Jenkins, Julianna M. A., Hines, James E., Nichols, James D., Dugger, Katie M., Franklin, Alan B., Carlson, Peter C., Kendall, William L., Lesmeister, Damon B., McCafferty, Christopher, Ackers, Steven H., Andrews, L. Steven, Bailey, Larissa L., Burgher, Jesse, Burnham, Kenneth P., Chestnut, Tara, Conner, Mary M., Dilione, Krista E., Davis, Raymond J., Forsman, Eric D., Glenn, Elizabeth M., Gremel, Scott A., Hamm, Keith A., Herter, Dale R., Higley, J. Mark, Horn, Rob B., Lamphear, David W., McDonald, Trent L., Reid, Janice A., Schwarz, Carl J., Simon, David C., Sovern, Stan G., Swingle, James K., Wiens, J. David, Wise, Heather, and Yackulic, Charles B.
- Abstract:
- These datasets were used in the prospective meta-analysis of northern spotted owl reproductive rates over 25 years across 11 study areas located throughout the range of the owl. A multi-state occupancy file was created by collapsing site-specific information on owl reproductive status into bimonthly (2 per month) survey occasions. These...
- Resource Type:
- Dataset
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- Creator:
- Rockweit, Jeremy T, Jenkins, Julianna M. A., Hines, James E., Nichols, James D., Dugger, Katie M., Franklin, Alan B., Carlson, Peter C., Kendall, William L., Lesmeister, Damon B., McCafferty, Christopher, Ackers, Steven H., Andrews, L. Steven, Bailey, Larissa L., Burgher, Jesse, Burnham, Kenneth P., Chestnut, Tara, Conner, Mary M., Dilione, Krista E., Davis, Raymond J., Forsman, Eric D., Glenn, Elizabeth M., Gremel, Scott A., Hamm, Keith A., Herter, Dale R., Higley, J. Mark, Horn, Rob B., Lamphear, David W., McDonald, Trent L., Reid, Janice A., Schwarz, Carl J., Simon, David C., Sovern, Stan G., Swingle, James K., Wiens, J. David, Wise, Heather, and Yackulic, Charles B.
- Abstract:
- These datasets were used in the prospective meta-analysis of northern spotted owl reproductive rates over 25 years across 11 study areas located throughout the range of the owl. A multi-state occupancy file was created by collapsing site-specific information on owl reproductive status into bimonthly (2 per month) survey occasions. These...
- Resource Type:
- Dataset
- Date Created:
- 2021-06-11
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- Creator:
- Kagan, James S., Brunner, Rachel L., and Christy, John A.
- Abstract:
- This classification is an update of the 2004 classification of native vegetation of Oregon by Kagan, Christy, Murray and Titus. As before, this classification lists the native plant associations known to occur in Oregon, and includes both successional and climax vegetation types that were part of the presettlement landscape of...
- Resource Type:
- Technical Report
- Full Text:
- VEGETATION OF OREGON – 2019 James S. Kagan, Rachel L. Brunner, and John A. Christy: Oregon Biodiversity
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- Creator:
- Armisen, David, Rajakumar, Rajendhran, Friedrich, Markus, Benoit, Joshua B., Robertson, Hugh M., Panfilio, Kristen A., Ahn, Seung-Joon, Poelchau, Monica F., Chao, Hsu, Dinh, Huyen, Doddapaneni, Harsha Vardhan, Dugan, Shannon, Gibbs, Richard A., Hughes, Daniel S. T., Han, Yi, Lee, Sandra L., Murali, Shwetha C., Muzny, Donna M., Qu, Jiaxin, Worley, Kim C., Munoz-Torres, Monica, Abouheif, Ehab, Bonneton, Francois, Chen, Travis, Chiang, Li-Mei, Childers, Christopher P., Cridge, Andrew G., Crumiere, Antonin J. J., Decaras, Amelie, Didion, Elise M., Duncan, Elizabeth J., Elpidina, Elena N., Fave, Marie-Julie, Finet, Cedric, Jacobs, Chris G. C., Jarvela, Alys M. Cheatle, Jennings, Emily C., Jones, Jeffery W., Lesoway, Maryna P., Lovegrove, Mackenzie R., Martynov, Alexander, Oppert, Brenda, Lillico-Ouachour, Angelica, Rajakumar, Arjuna, Refki, Peter Nagui, Rosendale, Andrew J., Santos, Maria Emilia, Toubiana, William, van der Zee, Maurijn, Jentzsch, Iris M. Vargas, Lowman, Aidamalia Vargas, Viala, Severine, Richards, Stephen, and Khila, Abderrahman
- Abstract:
- Background: Having conquered water surfaces worldwide, the semi-aquatic bugs occupy ponds, streams, lakes, mangroves, and even open oceans. The diversity of this group has inspired a range of scientific studies from ecology and evolution to developmental genetics and hydrodynamics of fluid locomotion. However, the lack of a representative water strider...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- Dugan11, Richard A. Gibbs11, Daniel S. T. Hughes11, Yi Han11, Sandra L. Lee11, Shwetha C. Murali12, Donna
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- Creator:
- Sydeman, William J., Thompson, Sarah Ann, Anker-Nilssen, Tycho, Arimitsu, Mayumi, Bennison, Ashley, Bertrand, Sophie, Boersch-Supan, Philipp, Boyd, Charlotte, Bransome, Nicole C., Crawford, Robert J. M., Daunt, Francis, Furness, Robert W., Gianuca, Dimas, Gladics, Amanda J., Koehn, Laura, Lang, Jennifer W., Logerwell, Elizabeth, Morris, Taryn L., Phillips, Elizabeth M., Provencher, Jennifer, Punt, André E., Saraux, Claire, Shannon, Lynne, Sherley, Richard B., Simeone, Alejandro, Wanless, Ross M., Wanless, Sarah, and Zador, Stephani
- Abstract:
- Worldwide, in recent years capture fisheries targeting lower-trophic level forage fish and euphausiid crustaceans have been substantial (∼20 million metric tons [MT] annually). Landings of forage species are projected to increase in the future, and this harvest may affect marine ecosystems and predator-prey interactions by removal or redistribution of biomass...
- Resource Type:
- Article
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- Creator:
- Suryan, Robert M., Kuletz, Kathy J., Parker-Stetter, Sandra L., Ressler, Patrick H., Renner, Martin, Horne, John K., Farley, Edward V., and Labunski, Elizabeth A.
- Abstract:
- The Bering Sea is a highly productive ecosystem with abundant prey populations in the summer that support some of the largest seabird colonies in the Northern Hemisphere. In the fall, the Bering Sea is used by large numbers of migrants and post-breeding seabirds. We used over 22000 km of vessel-based...
- Resource Type:
- Article
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- Creator:
- Dugger, Katie M., Forsman, Eric D., Franklin, Alan B., Davis, Raymond J., White, Gary C., Schwarz, Carl J., Burnham, Kenneth P., Nichols, James D., Hines, James E., Yackulic, Charles B., Doherty, Paul F. Jr, Bailey, Larissa, Clark, Darren A., Ackers, Steven H., Andrews, Lawrence S., Augustine, Benjamin, Biswell, Brian L., Blakesley, Jennifer, Carlson, Peter C., Clement, Matthew J., Diller, Lowell V., Glenn, Elizabeth M., Green, Adam, Gremel, Scott A., Herter, Dale R., Higley, J. Mark, Hobson, Jeremy, Horn, Rob B., Huyvaert, Kathryn P., McCafferty, Christopher, McDonald, Trent, McDonnell, Kevin, Olson, Gail S., Reid, Janice A., Rockweit, Jeremy, Ruiz, Viviana, Saenz, Jessica, and Sovern, Stan G.
- Abstract:
- Estimates of species' vital rates and an understanding of the factors affecting those parameters over time and space can provide crucial information for management and conservation. We used mark–recapture, reproductive output, and territory occupancy data collected during 1985–2013 to evaluate population processes of Northern Spotted Owls (Strix occidentalis caurina) in...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- , Darren A. Clark, Steven H. Ackers, Lawrence S. Andrews, Benjamin Augustine, Brian L. Biswell, Jennifer
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- Creator:
- Quentin, Audrey G., Pinkard, Elizabeth A., Ryan, Michael G., Tissue, David T., Baggett, L. Scott, Adams, Henry D., Maillard, Pascale, Marchand, Jacqueline, Landhäusser, Simon M., Lacointe, André, Gibon, Yves, Anderegg, William R. L., Asao, Shinichi, Atkin, Owen K., Bonhomme, Marc, Claye, Caroline, Chow, Pak S., Clément-Vidal, Anne, Davies, Noel W., Dickman, L. Turin, Dumbur, Rita, Ellsworth, David S., Falk, Kristen, Galiano, Lucía, Grünzweig, José M., Hartmann, Henrik, Hoch, Günter, Hood, Sharon, Jones, Joanna E., Koike, Takayoshi, Kuhlmann, Iris, Lloret, Francisco, Maestro, Melchor, Mansfield, Shawn D., Martínez-Vilalta, Jordi, Maucourt, Mickael, McDowell, Nathan G., Moing, Annick, Muller, Bertrand, Nebauer, Sergio G., Niinemets, Ülo, Palacio, Sara, Piper, Frida, Raveh, Eran, Richter, Andreas, Rolland, Gaëlle, Rosas, Teresa, Saint Joanis, Brigitte, Sala, Anna, Smith, Renee A., Sterck, Frank, Stinziano, Joseph R., Tobias, Mari, Unda, Faride, Watanabe, Makoto, Way, Danielle A., Weerasinghe, Lasantha K., Wild, Birgit, Wiley, Erin, and Woodruff, David R.
- Abstract:
- Non-structural carbohydrates (NSC) in plant tissue are frequently quantified to make inferences about plant responses to environmental conditions. Laboratories publishing estimates of NSC of woody plants use many different methods to evaluate NSC. We asked whether NSC estimates in the recent literature could be quantitatively compared among studies. We also...
- Resource Type:
- Article
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- Creator:
- Piacenza, Susan E., Barner, Allison K., Benkwitt, Cassandra E., Boersma, Kate S., Cerny-Chipman, Elizabeth B., Ingeman, Kurt E., Kindinger, Tye L., Lee, Jonathan D., Lindsley, Amy J., Reimer, Jessica N., Rowe, Jennifer C., Shen, Chenchen, Thompson, Kevin A., Thurman, Lindsey L., and Heppell, Selina S.
- Abstract:
- While there is a persistent inverse relationship between latitude and species diversity across many taxa and ecosystems, deviations from this norm offer an opportunity to understand the conditions that contribute to large-scale diversity patterns. Marine systems, in particular, provide such an opportunity, as marine diversity does not always follow a...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- Susan E. Piacenza1☯*, Allison K. Barner2☯, Cassandra E. Benkwitt2☯, Kate S. Boersma2☯¤, Elizabeth B