Search Constraints
1 - 8 of 8
Number of results to display per page
Search Results
-
- Creator:
- Nahashon, Samuel N.
- Abstract:
- Six experiments were carried out with Single Comb White Leghorn laying chickens to assess the effect of feeding a source of direct-fed microbials (Lactobacillus; Lacto) and its carrier [condensed cane molasses solubles (CCMS)] on the retentions of fat, nitrogen and several minerals; on the status of the pH of the...
- Resource Type:
- Dissertation
- Full Text:
- comb white leghorn chickens AN ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS OF Samuel N. Nahashon for the degree of Doctor
-
- Creator:
- Yohn, Haley N., Catena, Michele, Ross, Samantha, Govindan, Aparna, Moshofsky, Samuel, Sabet, Andrina, Galloway, James Cole, and Logan, Samuel W.
- Abstract:
- Self-directed mobility is a fundamental human right. Typically developing children engage in mobility for a majority of their day, but children with disabilities do not have the same opportunities. Children with disabilities are at a disadvantage and have a greater risk for developmental delays in physical and cognitive skills, along...
- Resource Type:
- Poster
- Full Text:
- Govindan; Samuel Moshofsky; Andrina Sabet, PT; James Cole Galloway, PT, Ph.D.; Samuel W. Logan, Ph.D
-
- Creator:
- Nash, Jonathan D., Kelly, Samuel M., Shroyer, Emily L., Moum, James N., and Duda, Timothy F.
- Abstract:
- Packets of nonlinear internal waves (NLIWs) in a small area of the Mid-Atlantic Bight were 10 times more energetic during a local neap tide than during the preceding spring tide. This counterintuitive result cannot be explained if the waves are generated near the shelf break by the local barotropic tide...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- State University, Corvallis, Oregon SAMUEL M. KELLY University of Western Australia, Perth, Western
-
- Creator:
- Schleeweis, Karen, Goward, Samuel N., Huang, Chengquan, Masek, Jeffrey G., Moisen, Gretchen, Kennedy, Robert E., and Thomas, Nancy E.
- Abstract:
- The history of forest change processes is written into forest age and distribution and affects earth systems at many scales. No one data set has been able to capture the full forest disturbance and land use record through time, so in this study, we combined multiple lines of evidence to...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- change and underlying causal processes in the contiguous U.S. Karen Schleeweis,1,2 Samuel N. Goward,2
-
- Creator:
- Masek, Jeffrey G., Goward, Samuel N., Kennedy, Robert E., Cohen, Warren B., Moisen, Gretchen G., Schleeweis, Karen, and Huang, Chengquan
- Abstract:
- Disturbance events strongly affect the composition, structure, and function of forest ecosystems; however, existing US land management inventories were not designed to monitor disturbance. To begin addressing this gap, the North American Forest Dynamics (NAFD) project has examined a geographic sample of 50 Landsat satellite image time series to assess...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- Using Landsat Time Series Jeffrey G. Masek,1* Samuel N. Goward,2 Robert E. Kennedy,3,4 Warren B. Cohen
-
- Creator:
- Wilson, Samuel T., Barone, Benedetto, Ascani, Francois, Bidigare, Robert R., Church, Matthew J., del Valle, Daniela A., Dyhrman, Sonya T., Ferrón, Sara, Fitzsimmons, Jessica N., Juranek, Laurie W., Kolber, Zbigniew S., Letelier, Ricardo M., Martínez‐García, Sandra, Nicholson, David P., Richards, Kelvin J., Rii, Yoshimi M., Rouco, Mónica, Viviani, Donn A., White, Angelicque E., Zehr, Jonathan P., and Karl, David M.
- Abstract:
- Time-series observations are critical to understand the structure, function, and dynamics of marine ecosystems. The Hawaii Ocean Time-series program has maintained near-monthly sampling at Station ALOHA (22°45′N, 158°00′W) in the oligotrophic North Pacific Subtropical Gyre (NPSG) since 1988 and has identified ecosystem variability over seasonal to interannual timescales. To further...
- Resource Type:
- Article
-
- Creator:
- Soranno, Patricia A., Bissell, Edward G., Cheruvelil, Kendra S., Christel, Samuel T., Collins, Sarah M., Fergus, C. Emi, Filstrup, Christopher T., Lapierre, Jean-Francois, Lottig, Noah R., Oliver, Samantha K., Scott, Caren E., Smith, Nicole J., Stopyak, Scott, Yuan, Shuai, Bremigan, Mary Tate, Downing, John A., Gries, Corinna, Henry, Emily N., Skaff, Nick K., Stanley, Emily H., Stow, Craig A., Tan, Pang-Ning, Wagner, Tyler, and Webster, Katherine E.
- Abstract:
- Although there are considerable site-based data for individual or groups of ecosystems, these datasets are widely scattered, have different data formats and conventions, and often have limited accessibility. At the broader scale, national datasets exist for a large number of geospatial features of land, water, and air that are needed...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- science and data reuse Patricia A. Soranno1*, Edward G. Bissell1, Kendra S. Cheruvelil1, Samuel T
-
- Creator:
- Laurance, William F., Useche, D. Carolina, Rendeiro, Julio, Kalka, Margareta, Bradshaw, Corey J. A., Sloan, Sean P., Laurance, Susan G., Campbell, Mason, Abernethy, Kate, Alvarez, Patricia, Arroyo-Rodriguez, Victor, Ashton, Peter, Benitez-Malvido, Julieta, Blom, Allard, Bobo, Kadiri S., Cannon, Charles H., Cao, Min, Carroll, Richard, Chapman, Colin, Coates, Rosamond, Cords, Marina, Danielsen, Finn, De Dijn, Bart, Dinerstein, Eric, Donnelly, Maureen A., Edwards, David, Edwards, Felicity, Farwig, Nina, Fashing, Peter, Forget, Pierre-Michel, Foster, Mercedes, Gale, George, Harris, David, Harrison, Rhett, Hart, John, Karpanty, Sarah, Kress, W. John, Krishnaswamy, Jagdish, Logsdon, Willis, Lovett, Jon, Magnusson, William, Maisels, Fiona, Marshall, Andrew R., McClearn, Deedra, Mudappa, Divya, Nielsen, Martin R., Pearson, Richard, Pitman, Nigel, van der Ploeg, Jan, Plumptre, Andrew, Poulsen, John, Quesada, Mauricio, Rainey, Hugo, Robinson, Douglas, Roetgers, Christiane, Rovero, Francesco, Scatena, Frederick, Schulze, Christian, Sheil, Douglas, Struhsaker, Thomas, Terborgh, John, Thomas, Duncan, Timm, Robert, Urbina-Cardona, J. Nicolas, Vasudevan, Karthikeyan, Wright, S. Joseph, Arias-G, Juan Carlos, Arroyo, Luzmila, Ashton, Mark, Auzel, Philippe, Babaasa, Dennis, Babweteera, Fred, Baker, Patrick, Banki, Olaf, Bass, Margot, Bila-Isia, Inogwabini, Blake, Stephen, Brockelman, Warren, Brokaw, Nicholas, Bruehl, Carsten A., Bunyavejchewin, Sarayudh, Chao, Jung-Tai, Chave, Jerome, Chellam, Ravi, Clark, Connie J., Clavijo, Jose, Congdon, Robert, Corlett, Richard, Dattaraja, H. S., Dave, Chittaranjan, Davies, Glyn, Beisiegel, Beatriz de Mello, da Silva, Rosa de Nazarepaes, Di Fiore, Anthony, Diesmos, Arvin, Dirzo, Rodolfo, Doran-Sheehy, Diane, Eaton, Mitchell, Emmons, Louise, Estrada, Alejandro, Ewango, Corneille, Fedigan, Linda, Feer, Francois, Fruth, Barbara, Willis, Jacalyn Giacalone, Goodale, Uromi, Goodman, Steven, Guix, Juan C., Guthiga, Paul, Haber, William, Hamer, Keith, Herbinger, Ilka, Hill, Jane, Huang, Zhongliang, Sun, I. Fang, Ickes, Kalan, Itoh, Akira, Ivanauskas, Natalia, Jackes, Betsy, Janovec, John, Janzen, Daniel, Jiangming, Mo, Jin, Chen, Jones, Trevor, Justiniano, Hermes, Kalko, Elisabeth, Kasangaki, Aventino, Killeen, Timothy, King, Hen-biau, Klop, Erik, Knott, Cheryl, Kone, Inza, Kudavidanage, Enoka, Ribeiro, Jose Lahoz da Silva, Lattke, John, Laval, Richard, Lawton, Robert, Leal, Miguel, Leighton, Mark, Lentino, Miguel, Leonel, Cristiane, Lindsell, Jeremy, Ling-Ling, Lee, Linsenmair, K. Eduard, Losos, Elizabeth, Lugo, Ariel, Lwanga, Jeremiah, Mack, Andrew L., Martins, Marlucia, McGraw, W. Scott, McNab, Roan, Montag, Luciano, Thompson, Jo Myers, Nabe-Nielsen, Jacob, Nakagawa, Michiko, Nepal, Sanjay, Norconk, Marilyn, Novotny, Vojtech, O'Donnell, Sean, Opiang, Muse, Ouboter, Paul, Parker, Kenneth, Parthasarathy, N., Pisciotta, Katia, Prawiradilaga, Dewi, Pringle, Catherine, Rajathurai, Subaraj, Reichard, Ulrich, Reinartz, Gay, Renton, Katherine, Reynolds, Glen, Reynolds, Vernon, Riley, Erin, Roedel, Mark-Oliver, Rothman, Jessica, Round, Philip, Sakai, Shoko, Sanaiotti, Tania, Savini, Tommaso, Schaab, Gertrud, Seidensticker, John, Siaka, Alhaji, Silman, Miles R., Smith, Thomas B., de Almeida, Samuel Soares, Sodhi, Navjot, Stanford, Craig, Stewart, Kristine, Stokes, Emma, Stoner, Kathryn E., Sukumar, Raman, Surbeck, Martin, Tobler, Mathias, Tscharntke, Teja, Turkalo, Andrea, Umapathy, Govindaswamy, van Weerd, Merlijn, Rivera, Jorge Vega, Venkataraman, Meena, Venn, Linda, Verea, Carlos, de Castilho, Carolina Volkmer, Waltert, Matthias, Wang, Benjamin, Watts, David, Weber, William, West, Paige, Whitacre, David, Whitney, Ken, Wilkie, David, Williams, Stephen, Wright, Debra D., Wright, Patricia, Xiankai, Lu, Yonzon, Pralad, and Zamzani, Franky
- Abstract:
- The rapid disruption of tropical forests probably imperils global biodiversity more than any other contemporary phenomenon¹⁻³. With deforestation advancing quickly, protected areas are increasingly becoming final refuges for threatened species and natural ecosystem processes. However, many protected areas in the tropics are themselves vulnerable to human encroachment and other environmental...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- Light-loving butterflies Human diseases 2 9 0 | N A T U R E | V O L 4 8 9 | 1 3 S E P T E M B E R 2 0 1