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A Report On The Area Impacted By The Tug "Tunnel" Near The Mouth Of Onancock Creek From November 21 And 23, Dexter S. Haven
A Report On The Area Impacted By The Tug "Tunnel" Near The Mouth Of Onancock Creek From November 21 And 23, Dexter S. Haven
Reports
No abstract provided.
Virginia Eel Pot Study, Robert K. Dias
The Problems And Prospects Of The Kimberley Pastoral Industry, R B. Hacker
The Problems And Prospects Of The Kimberley Pastoral Industry, R B. Hacker
Resource management technical reports
The pastoral industry in the Kimberley region began in the early 1880s withthe introduction of cattle overlanded from Queensland and New South Wales into the East Kimberley and with the almost simultaneous introduction, by sea, ofboth sheep and cattle into the Fitzroy Valley.Occupation of the more accessible areas was gradually achieved by theprogressive extension of these two arms of settlement which ultimately metaround the present location of Fitzroy Crossing. Extensive development of themore rugged areas of the North Kimberley came later with the construction ofreasonable access roads to the few isolated stations which had been initiallyestablished in this area.
Determining Sex Of Plains Pocket Gophers By Incisor Width, Ronald M. Case, Alan B. Sargeant
Determining Sex Of Plains Pocket Gophers By Incisor Width, Ronald M. Case, Alan B. Sargeant
University of Nebraska State Museum: Mammalogy Papers
Biologists studying food habits of predators can often determine the prey species but not the sex of the prey from remains found at dens, in stomachs, scats, or pellets of predators. Knowledge of the sex of prey is useful in evaluating predator food habits as well as indicating sex specific differences in prey behavior.
Plains pocket gophers, Geomys bursarius, can be easily identified by the presence of two prominent grooves on the face of each upper incisor. This makes them ideal specimens for studying prey remains. In this paper, we present data that can be used to identify the …
Louisiana Waterthrush Nesting In Fontenelle Forest, Paul Bedell
Louisiana Waterthrush Nesting In Fontenelle Forest, Paul Bedell
Nebraska Bird Review
On 5 June 1982, I located a nest of the Louisiana Waterthrush (Seiurus motacilla) in Fontenelle Forest. The location had been determined on 26 April when I, with three others, Tanya Bray, Babs Padelford and B.J. Rose, saw a Waterthrush carrying nesting material. This site was later reported as abandoned. I had first seen a Waterthrush in this area on 15 April and identified it as a Louisiana by its song. On 21 April I saw two foraging together. On the date of the nest building they were silent and easily overlooked; but I heard occasional singing on …
"Index Of Volume 50," From Nebraska Bird Review (December 1982) 50(4)
"Index Of Volume 50," From Nebraska Bird Review (December 1982) 50(4)
Nebraska Bird Review
Index of Volume 50 (8 pages)
Accipter sp. 22
Adcock, Dorothy 7, 64
Alexander, Irene 19
Albino 60
Alfalfa 27
Anhinga 75
Ani, Groove-billed 80
Ash, green 29( 4)
Avocet, American 3,7,9, 26, 31, 38, 56, 78
............
Yellowlegs
Greater 8, 26, 31, 55, 79
Lesser n, 26, 31, 55, 79
Yellowthroat, Common 17, 26, 33, 35, 64, 85, 87
Zeillemaker, C. Fred 4(2), 7, 11
Melly 4, 7, 11
Whole Issue Nebraska Bird Review (December 1982) 50(4)
Whole Issue Nebraska Bird Review (December 1982) 50(4)
Nebraska Bird Review
TABLE OF CONTENTS
The New A.O.U. Checklist and Nebraska Birds .................74
Book Review .................87
1982 Fall Field Day .................87
Louisiana Waterthrush Nesting in Fontenelle Forest .................88
Notes .................89
Index of Volume 50 .................90
Book Review- Nebraska Bird Review (December 1982)
Book Review- Nebraska Bird Review (December 1982)
Nebraska Bird Review
The Kingfisher, David Boag, 120 pp. 6 ½ x 9 ½, Blandford Press, England, Sterling Publishing Co. Inc. New York Hardbound, indexed. $17.95.
This is a handsome book -thick paper, 66 color photographs (of various sizes) by the author. It is about the Kingfisher, Alcedo atthis, of Europe, about half the size of our Belted Kingfisher, and much more colorful. The text is interesting reading, giving the life history of the bird; description and distribution; territory and aggression; courtship and nest-building; eggs and young; food and feeding habits; mortality; myths and legend. And an appendix on photographic techniques, …
Note- Nebraska Bird Review (December 1982), Harold Turner, Steve Shupe
Note- Nebraska Bird Review (December 1982), Harold Turner, Steve Shupe
Nebraska Bird Review
Minden Notes. On 14 May 1982 I saw six or so White Pelicans over the Platte, south of Kearney, and a Swainson's Hawk, perched on a fence post, near Minden. I saw Lapland Longspurs 25 December, and then not again until 11 February, when they were present in large numbers. I usually saw Marsh Hawks when I got out this winter, and Rough-legged, and Red-tailed Hawks, and a few Kestrels. Prairie Falcons were not much seen, however. I flushed a Sprague's Pipit, northwest of minden, plus a few Savannah Sparrows. Red Crossbills were common feeders in town, earlier in the …
The New A.O.U. Checklist And Nebraska Birds
The New A.O.U. Checklist And Nebraska Birds
Nebraska Bird Review
The Sixth Edition of The A O. U Checklist of North American Birds will be published in 1983. The Fifth Edition was published in 1957, and the last changes in it were by the 33rdSupplement, issued in 1976. The scientific and common names of the birds to be listed in the Sixth Edition, in the order to be used in that edition, are given in a 34th Supplement, published July 1982 as a supplement to The Auk, Vol. 99, No.3. But that supplement, unlike previous ones, contains no explanations or comments. Stuart Keith, Birding XIV (2):40, who in working …
1982 Fall Field Day
Nebraska Bird Review
Those who came in Friday to the 4-H Camp at Halsey National Forest ran into rain there or on the way in, but Saturday and Sunday, 2 and 3 October, were bright, but a little too windy and a little too chilly to be perfect. Sixty-three registered for the meeting. Of the birds submitted for consideration, the directors selected the Scarlet Tanager at Scotts Bluff as the best and the Cattle Egret in Sioux Co. as second. (NBR 50:65 and 67). It was decided to have a new field card, on stiffer stock and smaller sized than the present …
Masthead From Nebraska Bird Review (December 1982) 50(4)
Masthead From Nebraska Bird Review (December 1982) 50(4)
Nebraska Bird Review
Published quarterly in March, June, September, and December by the Nebraska Ornithologists' Union, Inc. as its official journal and sent free to all members who are not in arrears for dues. Subscriptions (on calendar year basis only) are $7.00 per year in the United States and $9.00 per year in all other countries, payable in advance. Single copies are $2.25 each, postpaid.
Memberships (on a calendar year basis only): Student, $3.00; Active. $7.00; Sustaining, $15.00; Family Active, $10.00; Family Sustaining, $20.00; Life, $100.00.
Kentucky Warbler (Vol. 58, No. 4), Kentucky Library Research Collections
Kentucky Warbler (Vol. 58, No. 4), Kentucky Library Research Collections
Kentucky Warbler
No abstract provided.
Karyotypic Relationships Within The Short-Tailed Shrews, Genus Blarina, Sarah B. George, Hugh H. Genoways, Jerry R. Choate, Robert J. Baker
Karyotypic Relationships Within The Short-Tailed Shrews, Genus Blarina, Sarah B. George, Hugh H. Genoways, Jerry R. Choate, Robert J. Baker
University of Nebraska State Museum: Mammalogy Papers
Short-tailed shrews of the genus Blarina exhibit considerable geographic variation in both diploid number and fundamental number. Four chromosomal groups are recognized within the genus: Blarina brevicauda, FN = 48; 2N = 50, 49, or 48; B. carolinensis, FN = 45 or 44; 2N = 46, 39, 38, or 37; B. c. peninsulae, FN = 52; 2N = 52, 51, or 50; B. hylophaga, FN = 62, 61, or 60; 2N = 52. B. c. peninsulae also may be a distinct species, but exact determination must await location and analysis of a zone of contact with …
Effects Of Flooding On Herbaceous Species Of The White Cedar-Tamarack Woods In Cedarburg Bog, James A. Reinartz, Steven Kroeger
Effects Of Flooding On Herbaceous Species Of The White Cedar-Tamarack Woods In Cedarburg Bog, James A. Reinartz, Steven Kroeger
Field Station Bulletins
A part of the northern lowland forest of Cedarburg Bog was flooded about eight years ago as a result of clogged road culverts. Studies of the effects of flooding on species composition, productivity, hydrology and soils were begun in 1982. Post flooding studies will commence when the natural water levels are restored (ca 1984). This paper compares the frequencies of herbaceous species in the flooded woods with an adjacent portion of unflooded woods. The pattern of species' abundances within the flooded woods is related to the degree of inundation and grazing history of the site. Significantly different frequencies were found …
Behavioral Studies Of Black-Capped Chickadees At The Uwm Field Station, Millicent S. Ficken
Behavioral Studies Of Black-Capped Chickadees At The Uwm Field Station, Millicent S. Ficken
Field Station Bulletins
This report summarizes studies of the behavior of Black-capped Chickadees (Parus atricapillus) conducted at the UWM Field Station since 1970. Vocalizations and responses to predators are emphasized. Chickadees are very social and their calls are more complex than those of non-social avian species.
Utilization Of The Intact Male For Red Meat Production: A Review, S. C. Seideman, H. R. Cross, R. R. Oltjen, B. D. Schanbacher
Utilization Of The Intact Male For Red Meat Production: A Review, S. C. Seideman, H. R. Cross, R. R. Oltjen, B. D. Schanbacher
Contraception and Sterilization
Castration has long been a traditional practice in the United States. Research studies indicate that intact males grow more rapidly, utilize feed more efficiently and produce a higher-yielding carcass with less fat and more edible product. The disadvantages of the intact male include aggressive behavior (bull and boar); undesirable odors and flavors (boar and ram); lower quality grade (bull); lower meat tenderness (bull and ram) and undesirable meat color (bull and ram). Research is needed to develop antemortem and(or) postmortem handling procedures that offset the disadvantages of the intact male so that the meat and livestock industry can take advantage …
An Overview Of The Status Of Alosa Stocks In Virginia, Steven M. Atran, Joseph G. Loesch, William H. Kriete Jr.
An Overview Of The Status Of Alosa Stocks In Virginia, Steven M. Atran, Joseph G. Loesch, William H. Kriete Jr.
Reports
No abstract provided.
Memorials: Vincent H. Arthauld, Kenneth J. Drewry, David L. Mackintosh
Memorials: Vincent H. Arthauld, Kenneth J. Drewry, David L. Mackintosh
Department of Animal Science: Faculty Publications
Vincent H. Arthaud, Professor Emeritus of the Animal Science Department, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, died at his home August 7, 1982. He was born September 7, 1911 at Cambridge, Nebraska and was reared on a general livestock farm in Southwest Nebraska. After receiving his B.S. degree in Animal Husbandry in 1936 from the University of Nebraska, he returned to his home area and engaged in general farming. He served with the U.S. Army from 1942 to 1945 and joined the Animal Science Department in 1945 as Research Farm Manager. He retired in 1977 following his many years of service as …
Monoclonal Antibodies To Novel Myeloid Antigens Reveal Human Neutrophil Heterogeneity., Edward D. Ball, Robert F. Graziano, Li Shen, Michael W. Fanger
Monoclonal Antibodies To Novel Myeloid Antigens Reveal Human Neutrophil Heterogeneity., Edward D. Ball, Robert F. Graziano, Li Shen, Michael W. Fanger
Dartmouth Scholarship
Three cytotoxic murine monoclonal antibodies that recognize myeloid-specific antigens have been produced by immunization with normal human neutrophils or myeloblasts from a patient with acute myelomonocytic leukemia. Two of these, PMN 6 and PMN 29, are specific for neutrophils; the third monoclonal antibody, AML-2-23, is reactive with the majority of normal monocytes as well as a subpopulation of mature neutrophils. Although neutrophils from all individuals tested expressed these antigens, cytofluorographic analysis revealed that the percentage of cells bearing the PMN 6 and AML-2-23 antigens varied among individuals. Significant additional heterogeneity in the density of each antigen among antigen-bearing cells was …
1982 (Fifty-Seventh) Spring Occurrence Report
1982 (Fifty-Seventh) Spring Occurrence Report
Nebraska Bird Review
1982 (Fifty-Seventh) Spring Occurrence Report
Two hundred eighty-seven species are listed in this report, from 15 locations. The comparable figures for 1981 are 298 species from 12 locations; 1980 298 from 14; and 1979 292 from 12.
The symbols used in the tabulation are:
Ja, Fe, Mr, Ap, My, and Je for the months.
Masthead From Nebraska Bird Review (September 1982) 50(3)
Masthead From Nebraska Bird Review (September 1982) 50(3)
Nebraska Bird Review
Published quarterly in March, June, September, and December by the Nebraska Ornithologists' Union, Inc. as its official journal and sent free to all members who are not in arrears for dues. Subscriptions (on calendar year basis amy) are $7.00 per year in the United States and $9.00 per year in all other countries, payable in advance. Single copies are $2.25 each, postpaid.
Memberships (on a calendar year basis only): Student, $3.00; Active, $7.00; Sustaining, $15.00; Family Active, $10.00; Family Sustaining, $20.00; Life, $100.00.
Whole Issue Nebraska Bird Review (September 1982) 50(3)
Whole Issue Nebraska Bird Review (September 1982) 50(3)
Nebraska Bird Review
Table of Contents
Book Reviews .....................50
Note .....................50
1982 (Fifty-seventh) Spring Occurrence Report .....................51
The 1982 Least Tern and Piping Plover Breeding Season on the Lower Platte River, Nebraska .....................68
Note--Nebraska Bird Review (September 1982), George W. Brown
Note--Nebraska Bird Review (September 1982), George W. Brown
Nebraska Bird Review
BARN OWL NEST. A Barn Owl nested 2.5 miles southwest of Sutherland, Lincoln Co. The Owl selected a ledge above an overhead door in a farm grain elevator building, built of steel. The ledge was about 8 inches wide and 12 feet above the driveway. The door was opened and closed during the nesting and that didn't seem to cause a problem. Six eggs were laid and all hatched. The day I observed the site (28 July 1982) two young had left the nest and the other four were about ready to leave. The female was at the nest and …
Book Reviews- Nebraska Bird Review (September 1982), R.G. Cortelyou
Book Reviews- Nebraska Bird Review (September 1982), R.G. Cortelyou
Nebraska Bird Review
A Twitcher's Diary. The Birdwatching Year of Richard Millington, Richard Millington, 192 pp., 6½ x 9½, Blandford Press, England, Sterling Publishing Co. Inc, New York. Hardbound, indexed, $24.95.
Twitching is the British term for listing, but Mr. Millington is more than just a lister. He made five visits to get "crippling views" of a Scops Owl, which had been heard and poorly seen on previous attempts. Of course, he is a bird artist (a good one) and a "crippling view" of the Owl is one of the over 200 drawings in the book, including 14in color. The text is …
Estimates Of Abundance : Vims Small Fish Trawl Survey, York And Rappahannock Rivers, 1955 To 1982, Frank J. Wojcik, Herbert M. Austin
Estimates Of Abundance : Vims Small Fish Trawl Survey, York And Rappahannock Rivers, 1955 To 1982, Frank J. Wojcik, Herbert M. Austin
Reports
This report presents information on catch of iuvenile fish with a 30 ft. semi-ballon trawl in the York and Rappahannock Rivers, and graphically compares those with the commercial landings in Virqinia waters for the years 1955 throuqh part of 1982 .
Kentucky Warbler (Vol. 58, No. 3), Kentucky Library Research Collections
Kentucky Warbler (Vol. 58, No. 3), Kentucky Library Research Collections
Kentucky Warbler
No abstract provided.
The Influence Of Livestock Feed Size On Feed Consumption By Starlings (Sturnus Vulgaris), Daniel Twedt
The Influence Of Livestock Feed Size On Feed Consumption By Starlings (Sturnus Vulgaris), Daniel Twedt
Masters Theses & Specialist Projects
Ground meal and 4 sizes of pelleted feeds (3/16, ¼, 3/8 and ½ inch diameters) were offered to captive Starlings (Sturnus vulgaris, Linnaeus) to determine the minimum feed size they were unable to consume in significant amounts. The ground meal, 3/8 and ½ inch diameter pellets substantially decreased feed consumption compared with 3/16 and ¼ inch diameter pellets. Additionally, ½ inch pellets were consumed substantially less than ground meal or 3/8 inch pellets. Supplemental feed was require to prevent mortality among Starlings offered only ½ inch pellets.
Two pellet sizes, the 3/16 inch pellet which was readily consumed by …
Progress Report For The Dairy Research Advisory Board, Various Authors
Progress Report For The Dairy Research Advisory Board, Various Authors
Other Documents
No abstract provided.
Position Of The Virginia Institute Of Marine Science On The Use Of The "High-Roller Gill Net" In The Chesapeake Bay For The Taking Of Bluefish And Weakfish, Herbert M. Austin
Position Of The Virginia Institute Of Marine Science On The Use Of The "High-Roller Gill Net" In The Chesapeake Bay For The Taking Of Bluefish And Weakfish, Herbert M. Austin
Reports
No abstract provided.