Pages that link to "Item:Q54562"
From geokb
The following pages link to Josh T Ackerman (Q54562):
Displayed 50 items.
- South San Francisco Bay Salt Pond Restoration Project—A synthesis of Phase-1 mercury studies (Q55395) (← links)
- Archiving California’s historical duck nesting data (Q59286) (← links)
- Effects of human disturbance on waterbird nesting and reproductive success at restoration pond SF2, south San Francisco Bay, California (Q59876) (← links)
- Waterbird egg mercury concentrations in response to wetland restoration in south San Francisco Bay, California (Q60008) (← links)
- Waterbird nest monitoring program in San Francisco Bay (2005-10) (Q61959) (← links)
- Of mice and mallards: Positive indirect effects of coexisting prey on waterfowl nest success (Q143889) (← links)
- Mercury in birds of the San Francisco Bay-Delta: trophic pathways, bioaccumulation and ecotoxicological risk to avian reproduction (Q144230) (← links)
- Life and death on a salt pond: avocets and stilts survive amidst mercury pollution and invasive gulls (Q144337) (← links)
- Prey fish returned to Forster’s tern colonies suggest spatial and temporal differences in fish composition and availability (Q145106) (← links)
- Foraging and fasting can influence contaminant concentrations in animals: an example with mercury contamination in a free-ranging marine mammal (Q145257) (← links)
- Egg turning behavior and incubation temperature in Forster’s terns in relation to mercury contamination (Q145269) (← links)
- Nocturnal incubation recess and flushing behavior by duck hens (Q145862) (← links)
- Demethylation of methylmercury in bird, fish, and earthworm (Q145887) (← links)
- Foraging in marine habitats increases mercury concentrations in a generalist seabird (Q145983) (← links)
- Isotope fractionation from In Vivo methylmercury detoxification in waterbirds (Q146006) (← links)
- Egg morphometrics and egg shape coefficients for White-faced Ibis (Plegadis chihi) (Q146277) (← links)
- Interrupted incubation: How dabbling ducks respond when flushed from the nest (Q146331) (← links)
- Waterfowl use of wetland habitats informs wetland restoration designs for multi‐species benefits (Q146452) (← links)
- Unintended consequences of management actions in salt pond restoration: cascading effects in trophic interactions (Q147797) (← links)
- Experimental dosing of wetlands with coagulants removes mercury from surface water and decreases mercury bioaccumulation in fish (Q147917) (← links)
- Sexing California gulls using morphometrics and discriminant function analysis (Q148638) (← links)
- Agricultural wetlands as potential hotspots for mercury bioaccumulation: Experimental evidence using caged fish (Q148655) (← links)
- Space use and habitat selection of migrant and resident American Avocets in San Francisco Bay (Q148668) (← links)
- Embryo malposition as a potential mechanism for mercury-induced hatching failure in bird eggs (Q148725) (← links)
- Colony attendance patterns by mated Forster's Terns Sterna forsteri using an automated data-logging receiver system (Q148842) (← links)
- A nonlethal microsampling technique to monitor the effects of mercury on wild bird eggs (Q149007) (← links)
- Moving at the speed of flight: Dabbling duck-movement rates and the relationship with electronic tracking interval (Q149094) (← links)
- Current state of knowledge on biological effects from contaminants on arctic wildlife and fish (Q149259) (← links)
- Wetland management strategy to reduce mercury export in water and bioaccumulation in fish (Q149373) (← links)
- Feather mercury concentrations in North American raptors sampled at migration monitoring stations (Q149849) (← links)
- Dabbling duck eggs hatch after nest abandonment in the wild (Q150425) (← links)
- Postbreeding movements and molting ecology of female gadwalls and mallards (Q150641) (← links)
- Predator movements in relation to habitat features reveal vulnerability of duck nests to predation (Q150654) (← links)
- Avian influenza antibody prevalence increases with mercury contamination in wild waterfowl (Q150693) (← links)
- Reservoirs and water management influence fish mercury concentrations in the western United States and Canada (Q151249) (← links)
- Island characteristics within wetlands influence waterbird nest success and abundance (Q151428) (← links)
- Assessing potential health risks to fish and humans using mercury concentrations in inland fish from across western Canada and the United States (Q151477) (← links)
- Mercury risk to avian piscivores across western United States and Canada (Q151637) (← links)
- Waterbird nest-site selection is influenced by neighboring nests and island topography (Q151663) (← links)
- Mercury in western North America: A synthesis of environmental contamination, fluxes, bioaccumulation, and risk to fish and wildlife (Q151691) (← links)
- Habitat selection by Forster's Terns (Sterna forsteri) at multiple spatial scales in an urbanized estuary: The importance of salt ponds (Q152946) (← links)
- Prediction of fish and sediment mercury in streams using landscape variables and historical mining (Q152955) (← links)
- Mercury and methylmercury in aquatic sediment across western North America (Q153254) (← links)
- Bird mercury concentrations change rapidly as chicks age: Toxicological risk is highest at hatching and fledging (Q153711) (← links)
- The effects of wetland restoration on mercury bioaccumulation in the South Bay Salt Pond Restoration Project: Using the biosentinel toolbox to monitor changes across multiple habitats and spatial scales (Q153888) (← links)
- Vocal activity as a low cost and scalable index of seabird colony size (Q154570) (← links)
- Mercury cycling in agricultural and managed wetlands: a synthesis of methylmercury production, hydrologic export, and bioaccumulation from an integrated field study (Q154682) (← links)
- Waterfowl ecology and management (Q155106) (← links)
- Mercury bioaccumulation and effects on birds in San Francisco Bay (Q155611) (← links)
- Sitting ducklings: Timing of hatch, nest departure, and predation risk for dabbling duck broods (Q156638) (← links)