scholarly journals Estimation of Band-Tailed Pigeon Band Recovery and Population Vital Rates in Colorado, 1969–1981

2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 369-376 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark E. Seamans ◽  
Clait E. Braun

AbstractData to inform population assessment of the Interior subspecies of band-tailed pigeon, Patagioenas fasciata fasciata (breeding range from Colorado and Utah south into Sierra Madre Occidental of Mexico), have been lacking despite substantial past banding efforts. We used a data set of more than 26,000 bandings from Colorado, with 3,500 live recaptures and 780 recoveries from the harvest of banded individuals to estimate annual survival, fidelity, and harvest rates. Most birds were harvested in Colorado (62%) followed by Mexico (18%); New Mexico (16%); Arizona (3%); and 1% or less each in California, Washington, and Utah. On average, each year 15% (range 0–30%) of surviving band-tailed pigeons did not return to Colorado. From 1969 to 1981 mean annual survival was 0.633 (standard error [SE] = 0.031) for hatch-year and 0.719 (SE = 0.016) for after-hatch-year birds, with a mean annual recovery rate of 0.015 (SE = 0.002) for hatch-year and 0.011 (SE = 0.001) for after-hatch-year birds. From 1970 to 1974, mean annual abundance of band-tailed pigeons in Colorado on 1 September was 59,911–88,290. These data provide a baseline for additional data collection for band-tailed pigeons in the range of the Interior subspecies.

Phytotaxa ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 162 (2) ◽  
pp. 111
Author(s):  
James L. Reveal ◽  
Robert F.C. Naczi ◽  
Peter F. Zika

With the description of Carex infirminervia Naczi (in Naczi et al. 2002: 528) and the summation of Carex sect. Deweyanae (Tuckerman ex Mackenzie 1913: 352) Mackenzie (1931: 114) by Naczi (in Naczi 2002: 321–325), a recent summary of Pacific Northwest sedges (Wilson et al. 2008: 106–107), and the new Jepson Manual (Zika et al. 2012: 1322), the circumscription of C. bolanderi Olney (1868: 393) is now firmly established. As such, C. bolanderi occurs from southern British Columbia to southern California east to Montana, Utah and New Mexico, and then south in the Sierra Madre Occidental through Chihuahua to northern Durango, Mexico. Previous usage of C. bolanderi was somewhat confused both as to its circumscription and to its distribution because of the inclusion of some specimens of C. infirminervia as in the cases of Munz (1959: 1443, 1974: 887) and Mastrogiuseppe (1993: 1122), or when it was included in C. deweyana Schweinitz (1824: 65; e.g., Cronquist 1969: 261, 1977: 158, Taylor 1983: 102).


2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 123
Author(s):  
Shan Shan Shan Shan ◽  
Marwoto Pataruka

Abstract: Kampung Godebag  is a village located in Desa Tanjungkerta, Kecamatan Pagerageung, Kabupaten Tasikmalaya, West Java - Indonesia. Godebag village is famous for its nickname as Kampung Islami, all starting from the building of a mosque that is Nurul Anshar Mosque which is the forerunner to the establishment of Pondok Pesantren Suryalaya. With the establishment of Pondok Pesantren Suryalaya make the environment around the boardingers undergo many changes, in terms of infrastructure, livelihood, habits, social and cultural community. Godebag village becomes thick with Islamic nuances and improvements in the quality of education because of the many built education fasilites by the pesantren, the livelihood of many people who turned into entrepreneurship because of the many opportunities for entrepreneurship to meet the needs of the students at boarding schools and students from out of town. By conducting field surveys to related locations and additional data collection from the internet it can be seen what changes and developments are taking place in Kampung Godebag, the results of the research indicate that many people change their homes as entrepreneurs, especially those on the main access road Kompleks Pendidikan Pondok Pesantren Suryalaya.Keyword: History, Settlement, Islamic Village.                                                                          Abstrak: Kampung Godebag adalah sebuah kampung yang berada di Desa Tanjungkerta, Kecamatan Pagerageung, Kabupaten Tasikmalaya, Jawa Barat – Indonesia. Kampung Godebag terkenal dengan julukannya sebagai Kampung Islami, semua berawal dari di bangunnya sebuah masjid yaitu Masjid Nurul Anshar yang merupakan cikal bakal terbentuknya Pondok Pesantren Suryalaya. Dengan berdirinya Pondok Pesantren Suryalaya membuat lingkungan di sekitar pesantren mengalami banyak perubahan, dari segi infrastruktur, mata pencaharian, kebiasan, sosial dan budaya masyarakat. Kampung Godebag menjadi kental dengan nuansa islami dan peningkatan dalam kualitas pendidikan karena banyaknya dibangun fasilitas pendidikan oleh pihak pesantren, mata pencaharian masyarakat banyak yang berubah menjadi berwirausaha karena banyaknya peluang berwirausaha untuk memenuhi kebutuhan para santri di pesantren dan pelajar dari luar kota. Dengan melakukan survey lapangan ke lokasi terkait dan pengumpulan data tambahan dari internet dapat diketahui perubahan dan perkembangan apa saja yang terjadi di Kampung Godebag, hasil dari penelitian menyebutkan bahwa banyak dari masyarakat yang merubah rumah tingggal mereka sebagai tempat berwirausaha terutama yang berada di pinggir jalan utama menuju Kompleks Pendidikan Pondok Pesantren Suryalaya.Kata Kunci: Sejarah , Permukiman, Kampung Islami.


Plant Disease ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 94 (3) ◽  
pp. 377-377
Author(s):  
S. Quiñonez Barraza ◽  
R. Mathiasen

Arceuthobium blumeri A. Nelson (Blumer's dwarf mistletoe, Viscaceae) is a parasite of Pinus ayacahuite Ehrenberg ex Schlechtendahl (Mexican white pine) and P. strobiformis Engelm. (southwestern white pine) in the Sierra Madre Occidental of northern Mexico (3). It is widely distributed in Chihuahua and Durango and is known from one location in Sonora (3,4). A. globosum Hawksworth & Wiens subsp. globosum (rounded dwarf mistletoe) parasitizes several pine species in the same areas of Mexico, but extends as far south as northern Jalisco (3). In July 2005, S. Quiñonez Barraza observed both of these dwarf mistletoes in Ejido San José del Barranco, Municipio de Badiraguato, Sinaloa, Mexico. A. blumeri was observed parasitizing P. ayacahuite at two locations: Paraje Faldeo Rancho del Oso (25°39′18″N, 107°01′27″W, elevation 2,600 m) and Paraje La Tableta (25°40′14″N, 107°01′33″W, elevation 2,520 m). The host at these two locations was identified by cone and needle morphology (1). Because the mistletoe plants were gray to straw in color and larger than 6 cm, they were clearly A. blumeri and not A. apachecum Hawksworth & Wiens, another dwarf mistletoe that parasitizes P. strobiformis in Arizona, New Mexico, and Coahuila, Mexico (3). A. globosum subsp. globosum was observed parasitizing P. durangensis Martínez at Paraje Puerto del Alacrán (25°39′52″N, 107°00′57″W, elevation 2,650 m). Infection of the pine hosts was severe at all three locations in Sinaloa and many trees were rated as class 5 and 6 by the 6-class dwarf mistletoe rating system (2). Large witches' brooms were formed on P. ayacahuite infected with A. blumeri, but no witches' brooms were formed on infected P. durangensis. Typically, A. globosum does not induce witches' brooms on infected pines (3). Specimens of A. blumeri and A. globosum subsp. globosum were collected and deposited at the Herbario CIIDIR, Instituto Politecnico Nacional, Durango, Dgo., 34220 Mexico. To our knowledge, this is the first report of A. blumeri and A. globosum subsp. globosum from Sinaloa, Mexico. References: (1) A. Farjon and B. T. Styles. Flora Neotrop. Monogr. 75. 1997. (2) F. G. Hawksworth. USDA For. Serv. Gen. Tech. Rep. RM-78, 1977. (3) F. G. Hawksworth and D. Wiens. USDA For. Serv. Agric. Handb. 709, 1996. (4) R. Mathiasen et al. Madroño 55:161, 2008.


Reset ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 63-68
Author(s):  
Robert Aunger

Behavior Centerd Design (BCD) follows a mnemonically assisted process of ABCDE (Assess, Build, Create, Deliver, and Evaluate) in which those seeking to change behavior are naturally led through a variety of specific logical moves involving existing data collection, additional data collection, creative development, activities to implement the planned changes, and evaluation of the effectiveness of the campaign or program. An extended example of a public health project is used to illustrate the steps throughout. This chapter introduces the problem of developing programs and an overall picture of how BCD approaches the problem, together with some of the specific tools used at particular points in the process.


1987 ◽  
Vol 18 (12) ◽  
pp. 64-71 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ritsu Kusaba ◽  
Masato Nakajima ◽  
Koichi Ogawa ◽  
Shin'Ichi Yuta ◽  
Tatsuru Morozumi

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Randy Muñoz ◽  
Christian Huggel ◽  
Fabian Drenkhan ◽  
Marc Vis ◽  
Daniel Viviroli

<p>Glacierized catchments are of great importance for water supply sustaining diverse human livelihoods, economies, and cultures. Despite their importance, both glacierized headwaters and downstream areas remain poorly monitored. Nevertheless, a considerable amount of international and local research has dealt with hydrological models including different levels of complexity, data sources, and goals. In addition, the increasing availability of free software and powerful automatic model calibration tools facilitates the use of complex models even to non-expert users. As a result, models could show a good performance despite misconceptions. That is also true for the tropical Andes where low data availability and quality combined with large uncertainties on glacio-hydrological and meteorological processes prevail.</p><p>Accordingly, this study aims to identify if simple or more complex glacio-hydrological models can perform robust simulations for tropical glacier-fed basins combined with scarce data. The study case was carried out in the Sibinacocha (4,822 m a.s.l) and Phinaya (4,678 m a.s.l.) catchments, both located in the headwater of the Vilcanota-Urubamba river basin, in the Cusco region, Peru. These outer-tropical catchments are characterized by pronounced dry and wet seasons and hold a glacier extent of about 8 and 18%, respectively. Three conceptual models were implemented, in order of increasing complexity: 1) the lumped Shaman model (developed in this study), and the semi-distributed 2) HBV-light, and 3) RS Minerve. All simulations were implemented on a monthly time step from 1981 to 2010. Hydroclimatological data series were obtained from the gridded PISCO dataset at 10 km spatial resolution and two local weather stations. Furthermore, changes in glacier surface were delineated for three years (1986, 1994 and 2004) by using a semi-automatic NDSI approach based on satellite imagery. Finally, a comprehensive evaluation was performed using common measures of model performance, the associated flow signatures, and different runoff components.</p><p>Results show that all model complexities allow for an acceptable performance (R<sup>2</sup> > 0.65, Nash-Sutcliffe > 0.65, Nash-Sutcliffe-ln > 0.73) with small differences related to the model structure. However, more complex models require a more comprehensive calibration strategy and assessment to avoid simulations with apparently high model performance driven by inadequate assumptions. Moreover, more complex models require a better understanding of the underlying hydrological processes that is often hampered by data scarcity, limited knowledge and field accessibility in the Peruvian Andes. Results suggest that a careful calibration strategy, additional data collection, and the implementation of simple models can provide more robust simulations rather than opt for increasing model complexity. For robust hydrological modeling, a comprehensive assessment of the flow signatures and runoff components is pivotal. These findings have been incorporated into a framework that aims for expert and non-expert conducted robust glacio-hydrological simulation under data scarcity. Nevertheless, high uncertainty and limited knowledge hamper a more thorough process understanding and the improvement of related model results which illustrates the limitations of their predictive character. In such a context, additional data collection with local participatory approaches combined with policy-making for climate change adaptation and water management can benefit from approaches that support decision making under high uncertainty.</p>


1976 ◽  
Vol 69 (5) ◽  
pp. 345-351
Author(s):  
Richard L. Miller

The purpose of this paper is to report the findings of an intensive review of research on individualized instruction in mathematics. It is hoped that the findings will aid classroom teachers who are considering an individualized approach. A secondary purpose is to identify questions that might be used as a focus for additional data-collection activities.


ZooKeys ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 788 ◽  
pp. 19-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Douglas Palting ◽  
Douglas C. Ferguson ◽  
Wendy Moore

A new firefly-mimicking lichen moth of the genus Hypoprepia, H.lampyroides Palting & Ferguson, sp. n., is described from the mountains of east-central Arizona and the Sierra Madre Occidental of Mexico. Hypoprepia Hübner, 1831 is a North American genus of lithosiine tiger moths, previously consisting of five species: H.fucosa Hübner, 1831 and H.miniata (Kirby, 1837), both of eastern and central North America; H.cadaverosa Strecker, 1878 from the Rocky Mountains into New Mexico and west Texas; H.inculta H. Edwards, 1882, a widespread western USA species and H.muelleri Dyar, 1907 from the vicinity of Mexico City. The latter is herein synonymized under H.inculta (= H.muellerisyn. n.), resulting in the total number of taxa in the genus unchanged at five.


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