Pages that link to "Item:Q54801"
From geokb
The following pages link to Robert E Gill, Jr. (Q54801):
Displayed 50 items.
- Dunlin (<i>Calidris alpina</i>) (Q143587) (← links)
- Crossing the ultimate ecological barrier: Evidence for an 11,000-km-long non-stop flight from Alaska to New Zealand and Eastern Australia by Bar-tailed Godwits (Q144313) (← links)
- Bar-tailed Godwits <i>Limosa lapponica</i> in Alaska: A population estimate from the staging grounds (Q144733) (← links)
- Seasonal shorebird use of intertidal habitats in Cook Inlet, Alaska (Q144734) (← links)
- Montane-breeding bird distribution and abundance across national parks of southwestern Alaska (Q144978) (← links)
- Energetic solutions of Rock Sandpipers to harsh winter conditions rely on prey quality (Q145131) (← links)
- Avifaunal remains from the Utqiagvik Village Site, North Alaska (Q146643) (← links)
- Shorebirds and herring roe in Prince William Sound, Alaska (Q146644) (← links)
- The importance of subarctic intertidal habitats to shorebirds: A study of the central Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska (Q146670) (← links)
- Limited evidence of trans-hemispheric movement of avian influenza viruses among contemporary North American shorebird isolates (Q148665) (← links)
- Bristle-thighed curlews, biologists, and bird tours - A place for all (Q151049) (← links)
- Nesting ecology of Whimbrels in boreal Alaska (Q151212) (← links)
- Antipredator strategies in breeding Bristle-thighed Curlews (Q151912) (← links)
- Distribution, numbers, and habitat of Bristle-thighed Curlews (<i>Numinous tahitiensis</i>) on Rangiroa atoll (Q151966) (← links)
- Roosting behavior of premigratory Dunlins (<i>Calidris alpina</i>) (Q151981) (← links)
- Breeding distribution of the Black Turnstone (Q152016) (← links)
- Populations estimates of North American shorebirds, 2006 (Q152260) (← links)
- The conservation and population status of the world's waders at the turn of the millennium (Q152266) (← links)
- Post-breeding migration of Dutch-breeding black-tailed godwits: timing, routes, use of stopovers, and nonbreeding destinations (Q155048) (← links)
- Shorebird Research (Q226754) (← links)
- Guts don't fly: Small digestive organs in obese Bar-tailed Godwits (Q231431) (← links)
- Eskimo Curlew (Numenius borealis) (Q231628) (← links)
- Spatial genetic structure of bristle-thighed curlews (Numenius tahitiensis): Breeding area differentiation not reflected on the non-breeding grounds (Q234042) (← links)
- Breeding ecology of Wandering Tattlers Tringa incana: a study from south-central Alaska (Q234670) (← links)
- Ways to be different: Foraging adaptations that facilitate higher intake rates in a northerly wintering shorebird compared with a low-latitude conspecific (Q234874) (← links)
- Bar-tailed Godwit Limosa lapponica (Q235550) (← links)
- Mate fidelity and breeding site tenacity in a monogamous sandpiper, the black turnstone (Q235758) (← links)
- Population estimates of Nearctic shorebirds (Q236030) (← links)
- Abdominally implanted satellite transmitters affect reproduction and survival rather than migration of large shorebirds (Q236235) (← links)
- Hemispheric-scale wind selection facilitates bar-tailed godwit circum-migration of the Pacific (Q236238) (← links)
- Bristle-thighed Curlew (Numenius tahitiensis) (Q237748) (← links)
- Wandering Tattler (Tringa incana) (Q237749) (← links)
- Rock Sandpiper (Calidris ptilocnemis) (Q237751) (← links)
- Ecological correlates of variable organ sizes and fat loads in the most northerly-wintering shorebirds (Q243288) (← links)
- Identical metabolic rate and thermal conductance in Rock Sandpiper (Calidris ptilocnemis) subspecies with contrasting nonbreeding life histories (Q243618) (← links)
- Intercontinental migratory connectivity and population structuring of Dunlins from western Alaska (Q244188) (← links)
- Residency times and patterns of movement of postbreeding dunlin on a subarctic staging area in Alaska (Q244284) (← links)
- Coping with the cold: An ecological context for the abundance and distribution of rock sandpipers during winter in upper Cook Inlet, Alaska (Q245071) (← links)
- Polymorphic microsatellite loci identified through development and cross-species amplification within shorebirds (Q245318) (← links)
- Small population size of Pribilof Rock Sandpipers confirmed through distance-sampling surveys in Alaska (Q245877) (← links)
- Functional ecology of saltglands in shorebirds: Flexible responses to variable environmental conditions (Q246137) (← links)
- Wayward youth: Trans-Beringian movement and differential southward migration by juvenile sharp-tailed sandpipers (Q248214) (← links)
- A puzzling migratory detour : Are fueling conditions in Alaska driving the movement of juvenile sharp -tailed sandpipers ? (Q250729) (← links)
- Experimental challenge and pathology of highly pathogenic avian influenza virus H5N1 in dunlin (Calidris alpina), an intercontinental migrant shorebird species (Q251105) (← links)
- Coelomic implantation of satellite transmitters in the bar-tailed godwit (Limosa lapponica) and the bristle-thighed curlew (Numenius tahitiensis) using propofol, bupivacaine, and lidocaine (Q251176) (← links)
- Through thick and thin: Sexing Bristle-thighed Curlews Numenius tahitiensis using measures of bill depth (Q253521) (← links)
- First record of the common cuckoo from mainland North America (Q253751) (← links)
- Flexible timing of annual movements across consistently used sites by Marbled Godwits breeding in Alaska (Q254210) (← links)
- Alaska and its importance to Western Hemisphere shorebirds (Q255688) (← links)
- Diverse patterns of migratory timing, site use, and site fidelity by Alaska-breeding Whimbrels (Q256273) (← links)