159 results match your criteria: "2150 Centre Avenue[Affiliation]"
New Phytol
November 2021
INRA, AMAP, CIRAD, IRD, CNRS, University of Montpellier, Montpellier, 34000, France.
Ecol Appl
March 2021
Human-Environment Systems, Boise State University, Boise, Idaho, 83706, USA.
Postfire shifts in vegetation composition will have broad ecological impacts. However, information characterizing postfire recovery patterns and their drivers are lacking over large spatial extents. In this analysis, we used Landsat imagery collected when snow cover (SCS) was present, in combination with growing season (GS) imagery, to distinguish evergreen vegetation from deciduous vegetation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcology
January 2021
U.S. Geological Survey, Fort Collins Science Center, 2150 Centre Avenue #C, Fort Collins, Colorado, 80526, USA.
Keystone engineers are critical drivers of biodiversity throughout ecosystems worldwide. Within the North American Great Plains, the black-tailed prairie dog is an imperiled ecosystem engineer and keystone species with well-documented impacts on the flora and fauna of rangeland systems. However, because this species affects ecosystem structure and function in myriad ways (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeredity (Edinb)
January 2021
U.S. Geological Survey, Fort Collins Science Center, 2150 Centre Avenue, Bldg. C, Fort Collins, CO, 80526, USA.
The warming climate will expose alpine species adapted to a highly seasonal, harsh environment to novel environmental conditions. A species can shift their distribution, acclimate, or adapt in response to a new climate. Alpine species have little suitable habitat to shift their distribution, and the limits of acclimation will likely be tested by climate change in the long-term.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
September 2020
Colorado State University, Department of Forest and Rangeland Stewardship, Campus Delivery 1472, Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA.
Long duration tree-ring records with annual precision allow for the reconstruction of past growing conditions. Investigations limited to the most common tree-ring proxy of ring width can be difficult to interpret, however, because radial growth is affected by multiple environmental processes. Furthermore, studies of living trees may miss important effects of drought on tree survival and forest changes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Genomics
June 2020
U.S. Geological Survey, Fort Collins Science Center, 2150 Centre Avenue, Bldg. C, Fort Collins, CO, 80526, USA.
Background: Use of genomic tools to characterize wildlife populations has increased in recent years. In the past, genetic characterization has been accomplished with more traditional genetic tools (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Food Prot
October 2020
National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System, Center for Veterinary Medicine, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, 8401 Muirkirk Road, Laurel, Maryland 20708, USA.
J Food Prot
August 2020
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Food Safety and Inspection Service, Office of Public Health Science, Patriots Plaza III, 355 East Street S.W., Washington, D.C. 20250.
Abstract: Semicarbazide (SEM) is the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's official marker for nitrofurazone use in food animals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Appl
September 2020
National Wildlife Research Center, USDA-APHIS, Wildlife Services, 4101 Laporte Avenue, Fort Collins, Colorado, 80521, USA.
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 demographic connectivity suggests that targeting local populations from which migrants originate (sources) can be optimal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Wildl Dis
April 2020
US Geological Survey, National Wildlife Health Center, 6006 Schroeder Road, Madison, WI 53711, USA.
Plague is a bacterial zoonosis of mammalian hosts and flea vectors. The disease is capable of ravaging rodent populations and transforming ecosystems. Because plague mortality is likely to be predicted by flea parasitism, it is critical to understand vector dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Appl
January 2020
Department of Ecosystem Science and Sustainability, Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory, Colorado State University, in cooperation with the U.S. Geological Survey, Fort Collins Science Center, 2150 Centre Avenue, Building C, Fort Collins, Colorado, 80526, USA.
Rangelands are temporally and spatially complex socioecological systems on which the predominant land use is livestock production. In North America, rangelands also contain approximately 80% of remaining habitat for grassland birds, a guild of species that has experienced precipitous declines since the 1970s. While livestock grazing management may benefit certain grassland bird species by generating the vegetation structure and density they prefer, these outcomes are poorly understood for avian species breeding in the shortgrass steppe.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVet Clin North Am Food Anim Pract
November 2019
Department of Pathobiology and Population Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, MS 39762, USA.
Colostrum management is the single most important management factor in determining calf health and survival. Additional benefits of good colostrum management include improved rate of gain and future productivity. Successful colostrum management requires producers to provide calves with a sufficient volume of clean, high-quality colostrum within the first few hours of life.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcology
November 2019
U.S. Geological Survey, Fort Collins Science Center, 2150 Centre Avenue #C, Fort Collins, Colorado, 80526, USA.
Plants commonly employ indirect resistance to reduce herbivory by provisioning predatory arthropod populations with additional resources. Numerous predatory arthropods consume pollen that is entrapped on dense, wooly trichomes of plants. Over two seasons, we supplemented pollen on the wooly leaves of turkey mullein, Croton setiger, in natural populations to determine if pollen entrapped on leaves supplements predatory arthropods and reduces herbivore populations and damage to the plant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntegr Comp Biol
October 2019
United States Department of Agriculture, Edward T. Schafer Agricultural Research Center, Biosciences Research Laboratory, 1605 Albrecht Boulevard North, Fargo, ND 58102-2765, USA.
Insects exposed to low temperature stress can experience chill injury, but incorporating fluctuating thermoprofiles increases survival and blocks the development of sub-lethal effects. The specific parameters required for a protective thermoprofile are poorly understood, because most studies test a limited range of thermoprofiles. For example, thermoprofiles with a wave profile may perform better than a square profile, but these two profiles are rarely compared.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpidemiol Infect
January 2019
Secure Food Systems Team,College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Minnesota,1971 Commonwealth Avenue,Saint Paul,MN 55108,USA.
Better control of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) outbreaks requires deeper understanding of within-flock virus transmission dynamics. For such fatal diseases, daily mortality provides a proxy for disease incidence. We used the daily mortality data collected during the 2015 H5N2 HPAI outbreak in Minnesota turkey flocks to estimate the within-flock transmission rate parameter (β).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrev Vet Med
December 2018
Colorado State University, Department of Environmental and Radiological Health Sciences, 1681 Campus Delivery, Fort Collins, CO 80523-1681, USA. Electronic address:
Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) is a highly infectious viral disease of cloven-hoofed animals. FMD outbreaks have the potential to cause significant economic consequences, and effective control strategies are needed to minimize the damage to livestock systems and the economy. Although not the predominant route of infection, airborne transmission has been implicated in previous outbreaks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Food Prot
November 2018
1 Risk Assessment and Analytics Staff, Office of Public Health Science, Food Safety and Inspection Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, 2150 Centre Avenue, Building D, Fort Collins, Colorado 80526.
Buffered peptone water is the rinsate commonly used for chicken rinse sampling. A new formulation of buffered peptone water was developed to address concerns about the transfer of antimicrobials, used during poultry slaughter and processing, into the rinsate. This new formulation contains additives to neutralize the antimicrobials, and this neutralizing buffered peptone water replaced the original formulation for all chicken carcass and chicken part sampling programs run by the Food Safety and Inspection Service beginning in July 2016.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeliyon
September 2018
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, Wildlife Services, National Wildlife Research Center, 4101 LaPorte Avenue, Fort Collins, CO 80521, USA.
Distribution of oral rabies vaccine baits has been used as a strategy for managing rabies in the United States since the 1990s. Since that time, efforts have been made to improve baiting strategies with a focus on bait density to maximize both efficiency and cost effectiveness. An optimal rabies management strategy includes a vaccine bait preferred by the target species that is distributed at the minimal density needed to achieve population immunity to prevent rabies spread.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAvian Dis
June 2018
I Georgia Poultry Laboratory Network, 3235 Abit Massay Way, Gainesville, GA 30507.
An expert elicitation was staged to rapidly decipher plausible routes and risks of pathogen transmission in the 2017 H7N9 avian influenza (AI) outbreak in the four-state region of Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia, and Kentucky. The process included the identification of risk factors found in a preponderance of commercial broiler breeder case farms over matched controls and an opinion-based weighting of risks and mitigations perceived influential to this outbreak. Although the two highly pathogenic AI case farms had general location and company ownership in common, obvious connections were lacking for the remainder of H7N9-infected (all low pathogenicity) commercial farms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrev Vet Med
August 2018
USDA: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service: Veterinary Services, 2150 Centre Avenue, Building B, MS 2E6, Fort Collins, CO, 80526, USA. Electronic address:
The growth of aquaculture, both in terms of the volume of production and the diversity of species and production systems, has created challenges for effective animal health policies. This paper presents results of a case study of the costs to a sector of U.S.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Food Microbiol
October 2018
Risk Assessment and Analytics Staff, Office of Public Health Science, Food Safety and Inspection Service, United States Department of Agriculture, 2150 Centre Avenue, Building D, Fort Collins, CO 80526, United States.
Advances in microbiological testing methods have led to faster and less expensive assays. Given these advances, it is logical to employ these assays for use in the sampling plan of an existing microbiological criterion. A change in the performance characteristics of the assay can affect the intended effect of the microbiological criterion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Wildl Dis
October 2018
9 World Wildlife Fund, Northern Great Plains Program, 458 Saddle Ridge Road, Hamilton, Montana 59840, USA.
Sylvatic plague poses a substantial risk to black-tailed prairie dogs ( Cynomys ludovicianus) and their obligate predator, the black-footed ferret ( Mustela nigripes). The effects of plague on prairie dogs and ferrets are mitigated using a deltamethrin pulicide dust that reduces the spread of plague by killing fleas, the vector for the plague bacterium. In portions of Conata Basin, Buffalo Gap National Grassland, and Badlands National Park, South Dakota, US, 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Appl
June 2018
Department of Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, 80523, USA.
Emerging infectious diseases are an increasingly common threat to wildlife. Chytridiomycosis, caused by the fungal pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd), is an emerging infectious disease that has been linked to amphibian declines around the world. Few studies exist that explore amphibian-Bd dynamics at the landscape scale, limiting our ability to identify which factors are associated with variation in population susceptibility and to develop effective in situ disease management.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Wildl Dis
April 2018
9 Department of Biology, Occidental College, 1600 Campus Road, Los Angeles, California 90041, USA.
At Valles Caldera National Preserve in New Mexico, US, infusing Gunnison's prairie dog ( Cynomys gunnisoni) burrows with an insecticide dust containing 0.05% deltamethrin killed fleas which transmit bubonic plague. The reduction in the number of fleas per prairie dog was significant and dramatic immediately after infusions, with a suggestion that the reduction persisted for as long as 12 mo.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWater Res
December 2017
Center for Agricultural Resources Research, ARS-USDA, 2150 Centre Avenue, Fort Collins, CO 80526-8119, USA.
Understanding fecal indicator bacteria persistence in aquatic environments is important when making management decisions to improve instream water quality. Routinely, bacteria fate and transport models that rely on published kinetic decay constants are used to inform such decision making but may not adequately represent instream conditions. The objective of this work was to evaluate bacterial responses to applied nutrient amendments and provide additional information regarding bacterial response to applied changes that can be incorporated into future modeling efforts.
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