Keiter, David A. Patterson, Brent R. Dersch, Carol Elliott, Bob Rodgers, Arthur R. Benson, John F.
Use of camera traps for non-invasive data collection is increasingly common in wildlife studies. This technique presents a valuable, but generally unexploited, opportunity to learn about carnivore diet through direct observations of predators with prey. To highlight this potential, we present a collection of photographic observations from Michipico...
Wedin, David A. Russelle, Michael P.
In most forage production systems, the nutrients needed for plant growth are provided by the microbially-mediated breakdown and release of plant-available mineral nutrients from dead plant tissues, livestock excreta, soil organic matter, and geochemically-bound mineral forms. Even in fertilized forage systems, determining appropriate fertilizer or ...
Siers, Shane Sugihara, Robert T. Leinbach, Israel Pyzyna, Brandy R. Witmer, Gary
A non-toxic liquid fertility control bait for rats has recently become commercially available (ContraPest® from SenesTech, Inc.). This product contains two chemicals, both of which impair spermatogenesis in male and reduce ovulations in female rats. We tested the efficacy of this bait in wild-caught adult black rats from the island of Hawai’i in a ...
Adams-Progar, Amber Steensma, Karen Shwiff, Stephanie A. Elser, Julie L. Kerr, Susan Caskin, Tyler P.
Wild birds cause significant damage to dairy farms through the consumption and spoilage of cattle feed. A survey of Washington State dairy farmers revealed approximately $14 million in bird damage losses for the Washington State dairy industry, annually. Furthermore, farms that reported the presence of more than 10,000 birds per day were more likel...
Hanson, Chad Rex, Kristen Kappes, Peter J. Siers, Shane R.
A 2012 attempt to remove two rat species (Rattus tanezumi and R. exulans) from Wake Atoll was partially successful. R. tanezumi was eradicated from all three islands (Wake, Wilkes, and Peale), and R. exulans was eradicated from Peale. However, R. exulans remained on Wake and Wilkes and have since recovered to very high densities. In 2013, a panel o...
Borsuah, Josephus F. Messer, Tiffany L. Snow, Daniel D. Comfort, Steve D Mittelstet, Aaron R.
Neonicotinoids have been the most commonly used insecticides since the early 1990s. Despite their efficacy in improving crop protection and management, these agrochemicals have gained recent attention for their negative impacts on non-target species such as honeybees and aquatic invertebrates. In recent years, neonicotinoids have been detected in r...
Peroni Venancio, Luan Chartuni Mantovani, Everardo do Amaral, Cibele Hummel Neale, Christopher M.U. Zution Gonçalves, Ivo Filgueiras, Roberto Coelho Eugenio, Fernando
Crop biomass (Bio) is one of the most important parameters of a crop, and knowledge of it before harvest is essential to help farmers in their decision making. Both green and dry Bio can be estimated from vegetation spectral indices (VIs) because they have a close relationship with accumulated absorbed photosynthetically active radiation (APAR), wh...
Allen, Richard Robison, Clarence W. Huntington, Justin Wright, James L. Kilic, Ayse
The FAO-56 dual crop coefficient procedure was used to determine evapotranspiration (ET) and net irrigation water requirements for all agricultural areas of the states of Idaho and Nevada and in a western U.S. study on effects of climate change on future irrigation water requirements. The products of the applications are for use by state government...
Pepin, Kim M. Smyser, Timothy J. Davis, Amy J. Miller, Ryan S McKee, Sophie Vercauteren, Kurt C. Kendall, William Slootmaker, Chris
Populations of invasive species often spread heterogeneously across a landscape, consisting of local populations that cluster in space but are connected by dispersal. A fundamental dilemma for invasive species control is how to optimally allocate limited fiscal resources across local populations. Theoretical work based on perfect knowledge of demog...
Franklin, Alan B Ramey, Andrew M. Bentler, Kevin T. Barrett, Nicole L. McCurdy, Loredana M. Ahlstrom, Christina A. Bonnedahl, Jonas Shriner, Susan A. Chandler, Jeffrey C.
In 2015, the mcr-1 gene was discovered in Escherichia coli in domestic swine in China that conferred resistance to colistin, an antibiotic of last resort used in treating multi-drug resistant bacterial infections in humans. Since then, mcr-1 was found in other human and animal populations, including wild gulls. Because gulls could disseminate the m...