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- Specimens by Name (23)
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Articles 1 - 30 of 62
Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences
The Prairie Naturalist Volume 21, No.4 December 1989
The Prairie Naturalist Volume 21, No.4 December 1989
The Prairie Naturalist
SMALL MAMMALS IN TALL-GRASS PRAIRIE: PATTERNS ASSOCIATED WITH GRAZING AND BURNING ▪ E. K. Clark, D. W. Kaufman, E. J. Finck, and G. A. Kaufman
BURROW DISTRIBUTION OF THIRTEEN-LINED GROUND SQUIRRELS IN RELATION TO TREE CANOPIES ▪ J. L. Koprowski 185
SPRING AND SUMMER PREY REMAINS COLLECTED FROM MALE MINK DENS IN SOUTHWESTERN MANITOBA ▪ . T. W. Arnold and E. K. Fritzell
BREEDING CANVASBACKS: A TEST OF A HABITAT MODEL ▪ D. H. Johnson, M. C. Hammond, T. L. McDonald, C. L. Nustad, and M. D. Schwartz
A CHECKLIST OF THE ANTS OF OKLAHOMA ▪ G. C. Wheeler and …
Can Genetically Engineered Crops Become Weeds?, Kathleen H. Keeler
Can Genetically Engineered Crops Become Weeds?, Kathleen H. Keeler
School of Biological Sciences: Faculty Publications
There are significant differences if the distribution of weedy characteristics among weeds, normal plants, and crops. The world’s most serious weeds possess on the average 10 or 11 of these characters, a random collection of British plants have an average seven of the traits, and crop plants only five. For the average crop to become as “weedy” as the average weed, it would need to acquire five weedy traits. Even using the unlikely assumption that those traits are single loci in which a dominant mutation would provide the weedy character, this would require the simultaneous acquisition of five gene substitutions. …
Radio Transmitter Attachment For Chukars, Bartel T. Slaugh, Jerran T. Flinders, Jay A. Roberson, M. Ray Olson, N. Paul Johnston
Radio Transmitter Attachment For Chukars, Bartel T. Slaugh, Jerran T. Flinders, Jay A. Roberson, M. Ray Olson, N. Paul Johnston
Great Basin Naturalist
Thirty-seven Chukars (Alectoris chukar), fitted with conventional poncho-type radio transmitters, were released on Antelope Island in Utah's Great Salt Lake. Twenty-seven removed their radios, averaging three days after release. The remaining 10 died from predation (average 15 days). Twenty-two Chukars with pleated and six with harness ponchos were then released. Five of the pleated ponchos were removed (average four days), and 17 resulted in mortality (average two days). All six harness poncho-equipped birds were dead the following day. A consequential laboratory study comparing various attachment methods (conventional, pleated, harness, and "irreversible" flange poncho vs. bellystrap and wingstrap backpack) …
Parthenocissus Tricuspidata (Siebold & Zucc.) Planch., John E. Ebinger
Parthenocissus Tricuspidata (Siebold & Zucc.) Planch., John E. Ebinger
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
Vitis Aestivalis F.Michx., John E. Ebinger
Eremophila Goodwinii F. Muell., R. G. Covney, M. Savio, B. M. Wiecek
Eremophila Goodwinii F. Muell., R. G. Covney, M. Savio, B. M. Wiecek
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
The Prairie Naturalist Volume 21, No.3 September 1989
The Prairie Naturalist Volume 21, No.3 September 1989
The Prairie Naturalist
SEED DISPERSAL CHARACTERISTICS OF PLAINS SILVER SAGEBRUSH ▪ C. L. Wambolt, T. Walton, and R. S. White
ON THE TRAIL OF THE ANT, VEROMESSOR LOBOGNATHUS . ▪ G. C. Wheeler and J. Wheeler
LAND USE RELATIONSHIPS TO AVIAN CHOLERA OUTBREAKS IN THE NEBRASKA RAINWATER BASIN AREA ▪ B. J. Smith, K. F. Higgins, and C. F. Gritzner
INCIDENCE OF LEAD SHOT IN THE RAINWATER BASINS OF SOUTH CENTRAL NEBRASKA ▪ . D. W. Oates
REPRODUCTION, RECRUITMENT, AND SURVIVAL OF BROWN AND RAINBOW TROUT IN A PRAIRIE COTEAU STREAM ▪ C. L. Milewski and D. W. Willis
SIZE STRUCTURE AND CATCH …
Acer Palmatum Thunb., John E. Ebinger
Noteworthy Collections: Virginia, W. John Hayden
Noteworthy Collections: Virginia, W. John Hayden
Biology Faculty Publications
The above collections represent the second record for the state of Virginia, and may well establish the northernmost station for the species in the eastern United States. According to B.L. Lipscomb (Sida 8:320-327. 1980), this Old World weed is spreading throughout the warmer regions of North America. The only previous record of the species from the state is a Fernald specimen from Owl Creek in Virginia Beach. R.W. Tyndall, who found the species in northeastern North Carolina, was unable in 1978 to locate the plant at Fernald's Virginia Beach locality (Castanea 48:277-280. 1983). The Amelia County plants occur in two …
Sfa Gardens Newsletter, August 1989, Sfa Gardens, Stephen F. Austin State University
Sfa Gardens Newsletter, August 1989, Sfa Gardens, Stephen F. Austin State University
SFA Gardens Newsletters
No abstract provided.
The Genus Marasmius From The Southern Appalachian Mountains, Dennis Edmund Desjardin
The Genus Marasmius From The Southern Appalachian Mountains, Dennis Edmund Desjardin
Doctoral Dissertations
The genus Marasmius (Tricholomataceae, Agaricales, Basidiomycotina) constitutes one of the larger genera of litter-decomposing and litter-binding mushrooms, represented worldwide by approximately 500 species. Thirty-eight taxa representing eight sections of the genus are recognized as occurring in the southern Appalachian Mountains. Seven of these taxa are new to science, while an additional 14 are reported for the first time from the study area. In addition, one new section is proposed.
Descriptions of southern Appalachian species of Marasmius have been compiled from data on macro- and micromorphological features of basidiomata, supplemented with data on geographical and ecological distribution. Details on nomenclature and …
Parthenocissus Quinquefolia (L.) Planch., John E. Ebinger
Parthenocissus Quinquefolia (L.) Planch., John E. Ebinger
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
Lysimachia Lanceolata Walter, John E. Ebinger
Ligustrum Obtusifolium Siebold & Zucc., John E. E. Ebinger
Ligustrum Obtusifolium Siebold & Zucc., John E. E. Ebinger
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
Phyla Lanceolata (Michx.) Greene, John E. Ebinger
Phyla Lanceolata (Michx.) Greene, John E. Ebinger
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
Ligustrum Obtusifolium Siebold & Zucc., John E. E. Ebinger
Ligustrum Obtusifolium Siebold & Zucc., John E. E. Ebinger
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
Lysimachia Terrestris (L.) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb., Steven E. Clemants
Lysimachia Terrestris (L.) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb., Steven E. Clemants
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
Lysimachia Lanceolata Walter, R. Dale Thomas
Viola Rafinesquii Greene, John E. Ebinger
Vitis Aestivalis F.Michx., John E. Ebinger
Fraxinus Pennsylvanica Marsh., John E. E. Ebinger
Fraxinus Pennsylvanica Marsh., John E. E. Ebinger
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
Flora Of Richmond National Battlefield Park, Virginia, W. John Hayden, Melanie Lynn Haskins, Miles F. Johnson, James M. Gardner
Flora Of Richmond National Battlefield Park, Virginia, W. John Hayden, Melanie Lynn Haskins, Miles F. Johnson, James M. Gardner
Biology Faculty Publications
An inventory of the vascular flora of nine of eleven units of Richmond National Battlefield Park was compiled from 1985 to 1987. Each site was visited during the growing season in two to four week intervals; plant species were identified and recorded in the field and/or collected for later study. A total of 761 different species were identified in the surveyed units, and 2487 individual records of species per particular park unit were noted. Twenty-three percent of the flora consists of exotic species, largely from Eurasia. Voucher specimens are housed in the herbaria of the University of Richmond and Virginia …
Viola Rafinesquii Greene, John E. Ebinger
Vitis Riparia Michx., John E. Ebinger
Parthenocissus Quinquefolia (L.) Planch., John E. Ebinger
Parthenocissus Quinquefolia (L.) Planch., John E. Ebinger
Specimens by Name
No abstract provided.
Viola Triloba Schwein., John E. Ebinger
Dodecatheon Meadia L., John E. Ebinger
Claytonia Virginica L., John E. Ebinger
Viola Lanceolata L., John E. Ebinger
Viola Sagittata Ait., John E. Ebinger