Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Zoology Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

PDF

1983

Discipline
Institution
Keyword
Publication
Publication Type

Articles 1 - 30 of 76

Full-Text Articles in Zoology

Brachyphylla Cavernarum, Pierre Swanepoel, Hugh H. Genoways Dec 1983

Brachyphylla Cavernarum, Pierre Swanepoel, Hugh H. Genoways

University of Nebraska State Museum: Mammalogy Papers

Brachyphylla Gray, 1834
Fruit-eating Bats


Brachyphylla Nana, Pierre Swanepoel, Hugh H. Genoways Dec 1983

Brachyphylla Nana, Pierre Swanepoel, Hugh H. Genoways

University of Nebraska State Museum: Mammalogy Papers

Brachyphylla nana Miller, 1902
Greater Antillean Fruit-eating Bat
Brachyphylla nana Miller, 1902:409. Type locality El Guami, Pinar de Rio, Cuba.
Brachyphylla pumila Miller. 1918:39. Type locality Port-de-Paix, Haiti.


1983 Fall Field Day Dec 1983

1983 Fall Field Day

Nebraska Bird Review

There were 55 who registered for the 1983 Fall Field Day, 24/25 September 1983, at the 4-H Camp at Halsey National Forest. With the benefit of good weather they tallied 94 species on or near the Forest, and a party that went up US 83 as far as the North Loup added 10 more (marked [N]), and 2 or 3 unidentified species of shore birds. The Scott's Oriole, near Wauneta, was selected as the best of the birds submitted for consideration, with the Black-necked Stilt, near Gothenburg, and the Glossy Ibis, at Lincoln, tied for second. After the slide show …


A Mississippi Kite In Hall County, Nebraska, Gary Lingle, Kari L. Haugh, Lee Morris, Babs Padelford, Loren Padelford Dec 1983

A Mississippi Kite In Hall County, Nebraska, Gary Lingle, Kari L. Haugh, Lee Morris, Babs Padelford, Loren Padelford

Nebraska Bird Review

The Mississippi Kite (lctinia mississippiensis) is considered extremely rare in Nebraska, with only 8 spring records and 2 fall records (Johnsgard, P.A., 1980, A revised list of the birds of Nebraska and adjacent Plains States, Occasional papers of the N.O.U., No.6, Lincoln, Nebraska, 114 pp.). On 10 July 1983, at 12:30 CDT, we sighted an adult Mississippi Kite circling above a flooded native hay meadow on Shoemaker Island, Hall Co. (Sec. 1, T9N R11W). The bird was identified by its frosted head and secondaries, pearly gray back and underside, and black retrices. It is believed this Kite was …


A Second Black-Shouldered Kite In Nebraska, With Notes On Its Food Habits, Gary Lingle, Kari L. Lingle Dec 1983

A Second Black-Shouldered Kite In Nebraska, With Notes On Its Food Habits, Gary Lingle, Kari L. Lingle

Nebraska Bird Review

On 31 August 1983 at about 1200 h COT, the junior author discovered a Black-shouldered Kite (Elanus caeruleus) on Mormon Island Crane Meadows, Hall County, Nebraska, perched in a plains cottonwood (Populus deltoides). The senior author visited the site at 1800 h COT and observed the bird in the same tree, with a 25x spotting scope. It was perched on a dead limb and was carefully observed for 15 min. The next day, 1 September, we visited the area at 1200 hand observed the Kite. We carefully noted plumage and soft parts coloration as follows: eye …


"Book Reviews" From Nebraska Bird Review (December 1983) 51(4), Rusty Cortelyou Dec 1983

"Book Reviews" From Nebraska Bird Review (December 1983) 51(4), Rusty Cortelyou

Nebraska Bird Review

Book Reviews

Bird Conservation: No.1, Stanley A. Temple, Editor, 148 pp. 6 x 9, The University of Wisconsin Press, Madison, Wis. No index, paper. $12.95

The Care and Breeding of Seed-eating Birds, Finches and Allied Species - Doves, Quail and Hemipodes. Jeffery Trollope, 336 pp. 5¾ x8¾, Blandford Press, England, Sterling Publishing Co. Inc., New York, bibliography, indexed, hardbound, $17.95.

Birds of North America, Expanded, Revised Edition Robbins, Bruun, and Zim, illustrated by Singer. 4½ x 7½, 360 pp. Golden Press, New York. $7.95 softcover, $10.95 hardcover.


Dues Are Due! Dec 1983

Dues Are Due!

Nebraska Bird Review

N.O.U. dues are on a calendar year basis, and in case you haven't already done so, sit right down and send your check, payable to N.O.U., to Mrs. Jack Shafer, RR2, Box61, Wood River, Nebraska 68883. The rates are: Student, $3.00; Active, $7.00; Sustaining, $15.00; Family Active $10.00; Family Sustaining $20.00; Life, $100.00

1984 Annual Meeting will be in Chadron on 19 and 20 May. Mark your calendar!


A New Nesting Species For Nebraska, Gary Lingle Dec 1983

A New Nesting Species For Nebraska, Gary Lingle

Nebraska Bird Review

The Chuck-will's widow (Caprimulgus carolinensis) is considered a highly local but regular migrant and presumed summer resident in Nebraska. Although it is known to breed in Kansas and Oklahoma, there were no nest records for Nebraska (Johnsgard, 1980). Egg dates for Kansas range from 21 April to 31 May (Johnsgard, 1979). On 4 June 1983 a Chuck-will's widow's nest with 2 eggs was discovered in a bur oak (Quercus macrocarpa)–red cedar (Juniperus virginiana) woodland at Camp Merrill, Saunders Co. (Sec 29 T17N RSW), approximately 6 miles southeast of Linwood (Janett Waever, pers. comm.) The …


"Notes," From Nebraska Bird Review (December 1983) 51(4) Dec 1983

"Notes," From Nebraska Bird Review (December 1983) 51(4)

Nebraska Bird Review

CORRECTIONS TO NBR 51:18. On line 8 of page 18 of the March 1983 Bird Review the number of parties for North Platte should be 3, rather than 30. At the bottom of the page, the Olivaceous Cormorant was taken at Sutherland, Lincoln County (Lincoln was left out).

MORE ON THE A.O.U. CHECKLIST. The 6th Edition of the A.O.U. Checklist has been released, and some of the loose ends in the previous report on it (NBR 50:74) can now be tied up. The Crested Tinamou (no Elegant) is listed in Appendix D - introduced species, either not established or …


Index To Volume 51 Dec 1983

Index To Volume 51

Nebraska Bird Review

Index A-Z

8 pages


Masthead From Nebraska Bird Review (December 1983) 51(4) Dec 1983

Masthead From Nebraska Bird Review (December 1983) 51(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.


Pine Siskin Nests At Wayne State College, A. Jewell Schock Dec 1983

Pine Siskin Nests At Wayne State College, A. Jewell Schock

Nebraska Bird Review

On 29 April 1976 I observed a number of Pine Siskins in the elm and blue spruce trees on the Wayne State College campus, Wayne, Nebraska. They were actively flying back and forth between the trees so I could not determine the exact number of them, but they would have numbered less than a dozen.

On 30 April I saw that a Pine Siskin appeared to be building a nest in a blue spruce tree, about five feet above the ground. I continued to watch from a safe distance for the next few days. By 5 May the nest appeared …


Whole Issue Nebraska Bird Review (December 1983) 51(4) Dec 1983

Whole Issue Nebraska Bird Review (December 1983) 51(4)

Nebraska Bird Review

A New Nesting Species for Nebraska ... 86
Book Reviews ... 87
A Second Black-shouldered Kite in Nebraska,
with Notes on Its Food Habits ... 88
Pine Siskin Nests at Wayne State College ... 89
1983 Fall Field Day ... 89
A Mississippi Kite in Hall County, Nebraska ... 90
Notes ... 91
Index of Volume ... 97


Bird Distributional And Breeding Records For Southeastern Idaho, Utah, And Adjacent Regions, Clayton M. White, Herbert H. Frost, Dennis L. Shirley, G. Merrill Webb, Richard D. Porter Oct 1983

Bird Distributional And Breeding Records For Southeastern Idaho, Utah, And Adjacent Regions, Clayton M. White, Herbert H. Frost, Dennis L. Shirley, G. Merrill Webb, Richard D. Porter

Great Basin Naturalist

New distributional records or the status for 33 species of birds that have occurred within Utah, adjacent southeastern portions of Idaho, or along the border of states surrounding Utah are reviewed. Four species, the Cattle Egret (Bubulcus ibis), Common Moorhen (Gallinula chloropus), Great-tailed Grackle (Quiscalus mexicanus), and Common Grackle (Quiscalus quiscula), represent new Utah breeding records established within the past decade, and they are commented upon. One other, the Black-tailed Gnatcatcher (Polioptila melanura), may be breeding in Utah. The Mockingbird (Mimus polyglottos) may likewise be breeding in southeastern …


Notes On Two Species Of Plants At The Margins Of Their Ranges In Cedarburg Bog, James A. Reinartz Oct 1983

Notes On Two Species Of Plants At The Margins Of Their Ranges In Cedarburg Bog, James A. Reinartz

Field Station Bulletins

In June 1983 two large patches of Fringed Polygala were found in the Cedar-Tamarack woods at the north end of Cedarburg Bog. These patches had obviously been established for a number of years but the species had never previously been noticed in the bog. These Ozaukee County populations are southern disjuncts separated by at least 60 miles from the main part of the species' distribution.


Recognition Of Brood-Mate Vocalizations By Northern Bobwhite (Colinus Virginianus) Chicks, Susan St. Clair Raye Oct 1983

Recognition Of Brood-Mate Vocalizations By Northern Bobwhite (Colinus Virginianus) Chicks, Susan St. Clair Raye

Field Station Bulletins

Unrelated bobwhite quail (Colinus virginianus) chicks were hatched together and raised together. Each chick was tested in an arena with tape recorded separation, contentment and distress calls from a brood-mate and an unfamiliar chick of the same age. Chicks at one, six and 19 days of age gave significantly more separation calls in response to the separation calls of their brood-mates than they gave in response to the separation calls of the strange chicks. Since the chicks were not related, this ability to recognize brood-mate vocalizations is probably learned. Sibling recognition in quail might function in inbreeding avoidance.


Ecological Studies Of The Surface Microlayer Of Small Ponds At The Uwm Field Station, Charles C. Remsen, James S. Maki, Savas C. Danos, Kenneth E. Estep Oct 1983

Ecological Studies Of The Surface Microlayer Of Small Ponds At The Uwm Field Station, Charles C. Remsen, James S. Maki, Savas C. Danos, Kenneth E. Estep

Field Station Bulletins

The seasonal variation and enrichment of nutrients, pigments, bacteria, fungi and algae in the surface microlayer and subsurface waters were investigated in three ponds at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Field Station, Saukville, Ozaukee County, Wisconsin. Samples were collected intermittently from June, 1978 through October, 1981. Microlayer samples were collected using a glass plate and a screen sampler. All ponds showed dramatic seasonal variations in nutrients, microorganisms and algae in both surface and subsurface waters. The data indicate that physical factors such as adsubble processes, antirain and atmospheric deposition, along with biological factors such as heterotrophic mineralization and autotrophic uptake, play …


Results Of The Alcoa Foundation-Suriname Expeditions. Vii. Records Of Mammals From Central And Southern Suriname, Stephen L. Williams, Hugh H. Genoways, Jane A. Groen Sep 1983

Results Of The Alcoa Foundation-Suriname Expeditions. Vii. Records Of Mammals From Central And Southern Suriname, Stephen L. Williams, Hugh H. Genoways, Jane A. Groen

University of Nebraska State Museum: Mammalogy Papers

The occurrence of three species of mammals previously unknown in Suriname is documented. The new taxa recorded include Vampyrops aurarius, Vampyrops lineatus, and Natalus tumidirostris. Additional information is provided on Centronycteris maximiliana, Sigmomys alstoni, Zygodontomys brevicauda, and Cavia aperea from Suriname.


1983 (Fifty-Eighth) Spring Occurrence Report Sep 1983

1983 (Fifty-Eighth) Spring Occurrence Report

Nebraska Bird Review

Two hundred eighty-eight species are listed in this report, plus 2 possibles, from 13 locations. The comparable figures for 1982 are 287 from 15 locations; 1981 298 from 12; and 1980 298 from 14.

The symbols used in the tabulation are:

Ja, Fe, Mr, Ap, My, and Je for the months

1 column heading for the Northwest Edge

2 column heading for Lower Southwest Corner.

3 column heading for Otoe Co.

b and B see Lower Southwest Corner

c and C see Lower Southwest Corner

h and H see Lower Southwest Corner


"Book Reviews," From Nebraska Bird Review (September 1983) 51(3) Sep 1983

"Book Reviews," From Nebraska Bird Review (September 1983) 51(3)

Nebraska Bird Review

Book Reviews

Wading Birds of the World, Eric and Richard Soothill. 334 pp., 6 x 9½, Blandford Press, England, Sterling Publishing Co. Inc., New York. Hardbound, indexed, $29.95.

The North American Black Duck (Anas rubripes); A Case Study of 28 Years of Failure in American Wildlife Management, John W. Grandy, Supplement to International Journal for the Study of Animal Problems, 4(4)1983. Washington, D.C.

The Bird Identification Calendar 1984, the Stephen Greene Press, Brattleboro, VT, 14 pp., 12¼ x 11, $6.95.


"Notes," From Nebraska Bird Review (September 1983) 51(3) Sep 1983

"Notes," From Nebraska Bird Review (September 1983) 51(3)

Nebraska Bird Review

LATE WOOD DUCK BROODS. I don't know if weather affected the nesting of some Wood Ducks or not, but 8 August (1982) seems a little late for baby woodies. At the Iowa Settling Pond, there were two hens with new families; one hen had two ducklings that were about 5 to 6 days old, and another hen had a brood that was only a few hours out of the nest. The Wood Duck raises but one brood in a season in any part of its wide range, according to Bent, and has always been considered and early nester. I searched …


Whole Issue Nebraska Bird Review (September 1983) 51(3) Sep 1983

Whole Issue Nebraska Bird Review (September 1983) 51(3)

Nebraska Bird Review

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1983 (Fifty-eighth) Spring Occurrence Report ...................66

Book Reviews ...................78

An Analysis of Winter Long·eared Owl Pellets from Lancaster County. Nebraska ...................79

Notes ...................82


Masthead From Nebraska Bird Review (September 1983) 51(3) Sep 1983

Masthead From Nebraska Bird Review (September 1983) 51(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 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.

All dues and subscriptions should be remitted to the Treasurer, Mrs. Jack Shafer, RR2, Box 61, Wood …


Full Issue, Vol. 7 Aug 1983

Full Issue, Vol. 7

Great Basin Naturalist Memoirs

No abstract provided.


End Matter, Vol. 7 Aug 1983

End Matter, Vol. 7

Great Basin Naturalist Memoirs

No abstract provided.


Front Matter, Vol. 7 Aug 1983

Front Matter, Vol. 7

Great Basin Naturalist Memoirs

No abstract provided.


Homing And Ecology In The Southern Flying Squirrel, Glaucomys Volans In Southeastern Virginia, Sherrie Lynn Sawyer Jul 1983

Homing And Ecology In The Southern Flying Squirrel, Glaucomys Volans In Southeastern Virginia, Sherrie Lynn Sawyer

Biological Sciences Theses & Dissertations

The purpose of this study was to determine whether homing occurred in the southern flying squirrel, Glauaomys volans, and if so, the greatest homing distance. Information on the squirrel's ecology, reproductive biology and use of artificial nest boxes was also obtained. The study was conducted from November 1978 through March 1981, using nest boxes placed in a deciduous forest in southeastern Virginia.

For the homing experiments, twenty squirrels were released a total of 29 times along three lines at distances of 250 m to 1.6 km from the homesites. Squirrels were found to home successfully up to 1,000 m.

The …


The High Uintas: Utah's Land Of Lake And Forest, C. Lynn Hayward Jun 1983

The High Uintas: Utah's Land Of Lake And Forest, C. Lynn Hayward

Books by Faculty of the Monte L. Bean Life Science Museum

This book details the exploration history, geology, hydrology, ecology, flora, and fauna of the High Uinta Range in Utah. Each chapter is written in a narrative style and includes photographs and identification for the various habitats and species discussed. In the Resources chapter, there is a collection of color photographs for greater aid in identification and appreciation of the beautiful Uinta region and the species that live there.

Table of Contents

Introduction

History

Rocks

Water

Forests

Meadows

Fishes

Birds

Mammals

Resources

Photo Credits


Additions To 1982 Occurrence Reports Jun 1983

Additions To 1982 Occurrence Reports

Nebraska Bird Review

ADDITIONS TO 1982 OCCURRENCE REPORTS

Information on sightings at the North Platte NWR in 1982 provide some additions to the species reported in the Scotts Bluff column, and some expansion of the dates, for both spring and fall reports, and some additions to the state list for the fall report. The North Platte NWR information has been included in the Scotts Bluff column for the last few years. Sherry McCoy was the reporter, and Kevin Brenner, Dan Walsworth, Jim McCole and Mike McCoy were the additional observers.

Spring 1982. The additional species reported were: Common Loon, Ap 16; American White …


1982 Nebraska Nesting Survey, Esther V. Bennett Jun 1983

1982 Nebraska Nesting Survey, Esther V. Bennett

Nebraska Bird Review

Data on the 1982 nesting season in Nebraska were received from 24 observers, reporting on 106 species from 40 counties. Counties in the tabulation are listed in a west to east order, with the northernmost of approximately equal locations given first. Numbers represent Nest Record Cards; C represents Cowbird eggs found in other nests; E represents eggs observed; F represents carrying food; M represents carrying nesting material; N represents nests observed for which no Nest Record Card was submitted; and Y represents young observed.

Fifty-three species were reported on 335 North American Nest Record Cards; in addition, out-of-state nests were …