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The Effectiveness Of Orco Mole Bait In Controlling Mole Damage, Dale K. Elshoff, Glenn R. Dudderar
The Effectiveness Of Orco Mole Bait In Controlling Mole Damage, Dale K. Elshoff, Glenn R. Dudderar
Wildlife Damage Management Conference
The tunneling damage caused by eastern moles (Scalopus aguaticus) and starnosed moles (Condylura cristata) is well known to professionals in lawn care, golfcourse maintenance, and turfgrass production, as well as many private landowners. Present damage control methods, including trapping, gas and smoke fumigants, and insecticide applications have a wide variety of limitations and prove impractical in some situations. An easily applied mole damage control method is needed that professional and nonprofessional applicators can use in a variety of environmental and physical conditions.
This study tested the effectiveness of Orco Mole Bait, a chlorophacinone pellet placed in …
Population Dynamics And Harvest Response Of Beaver, Neil F. Payne
Population Dynamics And Harvest Response Of Beaver, Neil F. Payne
Wildlife Damage Management Conference
"For when we speak of the fur trade, we mean the beaver trade. Other furs were handled; others -- notably the rich sea otter -- were more valuable by far. But the beaver was the root and core of the trade... Many men died, a continent was explored, an indigenous [human] race degraded and its culture crushed; all because beaver fur, with its tiny barbs, felted up better than any other" (Berry 1961:18).
Impact Of Root Competition On Survival And Growth Of Seedlings Of Important Great Basin Species, Günther Reichenberger
Impact Of Root Competition On Survival And Growth Of Seedlings Of Important Great Basin Species, Günther Reichenberger
All Graduate Theses and Dissertations, Spring 1920 to Summer 2023
Belowground competition is pronounced in the arid Great Basin sagebrush ecosystem. Plant demographic and root exclusion approaches were used to examine the influence of roots of adult Artemisia tridentata, Agropyron desertorum, and Agropyron spicatum individuals on seedling survival of Ar. tridentata, Ag. desertorum, Ag. spicatum, and Bromus tectorum. Furthermore, growth rates of Ar. tridentata seedlings and seed production of B. tectorum were assessed.
The probability of a seedling being alive versus dead significantly depended on the seedling species, the neighboring adult species, and on the depth to which root competition was excluded. As seedlings, …
Diel Vertical Migration And Feeding Of Underyearling Bear Lake Sculpin Cottus Extensus (Pisces, Cottidae), Darcy Neverman
Diel Vertical Migration And Feeding Of Underyearling Bear Lake Sculpin Cottus Extensus (Pisces, Cottidae), Darcy Neverman
All Graduate Theses and Dissertations, Spring 1920 to Summer 2023
Underyearling Bear Lake sculpin exhibit a diel pattern of vertical migration throughout the pelagic region of Bear Lake (Utah-Idaho) until they are approximately 22 mm standard length. Individuals move from the bottom of the lake (5° C) during the day into the water column (13-16° C) at night. The migration, however, is not related to feeding. Although the dominant copepod in the water column, Epischura nevadensis, do undergo a similar diel vertical migration, stomach analysis of juvenile sculpin captured by trawling shows that they do not feed in the water column. Instead, from July through October, their diet is dominated …
An Electron Microscopic Study Of The Adherence Of Lactobacillus Acidophilus To Human Intestinal Cells In Vitro, S. K. Hood, E. A. Zottola
An Electron Microscopic Study Of The Adherence Of Lactobacillus Acidophilus To Human Intestinal Cells In Vitro, S. K. Hood, E. A. Zottola
Food Structure
In this study, transmission electron microscopy was used to visualize the adherence of Lactobacillus acidophilus to human intestinal tissue cells (HITC) in vitro. There appeared to be a layer of electron dense material on the bacterial cell and on the intestinal cell which may mediate adherence. When L. acidophilus attached to intestinal tissue cells after a short contact period, it did not appear to disrupt the integrity of the intestinal cell. Treatment of the bacterium with sodium periodate and concanavalin A reduced the adherence to HITC, suggesting that a carbohydrate was involved. Electron micrographs of periodate-treated cells revealed that the …