Zobrazeno 1 - 7
of 7
pro vyhledávání: '"Steven W. Gabrey"'
Autor:
Steven W. Gabrey, Alan D. Afton
Publikováno v:
Southeastern Naturalist. 3:173-185
Marsh managers along the Gulf Coast Chenier Plain frequently use winter burns to alter marsh vegetation and improve habitat quality for wintering waterfowl. However, effects of these burns on marsh avifauna are not well documented. We recorded abunda
Autor:
Alan D. Afton, Steven W. Gabrey
Publikováno v:
Environmental Management. 27:281-293
Many marshes in the Gulf Coast Chenier Plain, USA, are managed through a combination of fall or winter burning and structural marsh management (i.e., levees and water control structures; hereafter SMM). The goals of winter burning and SMM include imp
Autor:
Steven W. Gabrey, Alan D. Afton
Publikováno v:
The Wilson Bulletin. 112:365-372
Louisiana Seaside Sparrows (Ammodramus maritimus fisheri) breed and winter exclusively in brackish and saline marshes along the northern Gulf of Mexico. Many Gulf Coast marshes, particularly in the Chenier Plain of southwestern Louisiana and southeas
Publikováno v:
Wetlands. 19:594-606
Marshes in the Gulf Coast Chenier Plain provide important winter habitats for many species of birds. Many of, these marshes are managed intensively through a combination of fall/winter burning and construction of impoundments to improve wintering wat
Autor:
Steven W. Gabrey
Publikováno v:
Landscape and Urban Planning. 37:223-233
Location of waste-management facilities in urban and suburban areas is increasingly controversial for a variety of reasons. Because traditional putrescible-waste landfills often attract large numbers of gulls (Larus spp.) and other birds, they can pr
Publikováno v:
The Southwestern Naturalist. 47:532
Wildlife managers in the Gulf Coast Chenier Plain of Louisiana and Texas frequently burn marshes during winter to improve habitat for wintering waterfowl and furbearers. Such fires dramatically alter vegetation structure and cover, although such chan
Publikováno v:
American Midland Naturalist. 134:30
^^ estimated the abundance of birds at three landfills in northern Ohio from May 1991-July 1992 recording 699,350 individuals of 42 species. Gulls (Larus spp.) comprised 94.5% of the birds recorded followed by European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris, 5.