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  1. Article: Silvicultural practices, forest age, forest type, and large-scale regional factors influencing numbers of American burying beetles, Nicrophorus americanus (Coleoptera: Silphidae)

    Schnell, Gary D. / Hiott, Ana E. / Smyth, Victoria L.

    Journal of insect conservation. 2022 Aug., v. 26, no. 4

    2022  

    Abstract: The federally threatened American burying beetle, Nicrophorus americanus previously occurred throughout much of eastern North America but now is self-sustaining only on an eastern island and along the western edge of the historic range. The beetle ... ...

    Abstract The federally threatened American burying beetle, Nicrophorus americanus previously occurred throughout much of eastern North America but now is self-sustaining only on an eastern island and along the western edge of the historic range. The beetle occurred on landscapes managed by Weyerhaeuser Company for timber production, providing an opportunity to evaluate possible effects of silvicultural practices on the species. For 1997–2007, fluctuating densities were low on these lands in southeastern Oklahoma and southwestern Arkansas. We recaptured 23.0% of individuals (all within same year), 27.4% of those at different sites (1.40 km mean distance moved; longest 4.25 km). Comparable surveys at Fort Chaffee, Arkansas (185 km north) and Camp Gruber, Oklahoma (209 km north-northwest) during 1998–2004 demonstrated for Weyerhaeuser-Chaffee near-perfect correspondence in beetle densities expressed as percentage change from previous year but no relationship for Weyerhaeuser-Gruber. The species regionally may be bivoltine with Weyerhaeuser and Chaffee sampled in the second generation and Gruber in the first. The close Weyerhaeuser-Chaffee association indicates numbers were influenced substantially by non-local factors, although given the data in hand we were unable to demonstrate association of climatic factors with beetle relative densities or density changes. No clear-cutting effect on beetle densities was demonstrated. Increases occurred 2 years after a partial cut compared to the prior year. Beetles used pole (13–29 years old) and mature (30–50) sites less often than expected and sapling (5–12) and delayed-harvest (> 50) sites more frequently. For delayed-harvest sites, beetles frequented hardwood (≥ 75% hardwood) less than pine (≥ 75%) or mixed hardwood-pine sites. There were differences relative to stand age and type, but large-scale regional factors probably influenced numbers more than silvicultural practices. Low numbers in southeastern Oklahoma, coupled with substantial year-to-year fluctuations, elevated extirpation risk. Extirpation in the study area likely occurred in 2006 or shortly thereafter, possibly influenced by increases in red imported fire ants, Solenopsis invicta. IMPLICATIONS FOR INSECT CONSERVATION: Our study highlights that multiple factors influence numbers of the American burying beetle. Our findings suggest it would be fruitful for investigators to devote further attention to broader regional factors that affect year-to-year variation in such numbers. Silvicultural practices can affect beetle numbers in positive or negative ways, influences that fluctuate through the various stages involved in managing forested landscapes.
    Keywords Nicrophorus ; Solenopsis invicta ; clearcutting ; forest types ; hardwood ; risk ; stand age ; timber production ; Arkansas ; Oklahoma
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2022-08
    Size p. 593-618.
    Publishing place Springer International Publishing
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 1395198-1
    ISSN 1572-9753 ; 1366-638X
    ISSN (online) 1572-9753
    ISSN 1366-638X
    DOI 10.1007/s10841-022-00401-7
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  2. Article ; Online: Post-testicular sperm maturation in ancient holostean species.

    Dzyuba, Viktoriya / Shelton, William L / Hiott, Ana E / Cosson, Jacky / Bondarenko, Olga / Kholodnyy, Vitaliy / Dzyuba, Borys

    Scientific reports

    2023  Volume 13, Issue 1, Page(s) 19746

    Abstract: Fish speciation was accompanied by changes in the urogenital system anatomy. In evolutionarily modern Teleostei, male reproductive tracts are fully separated from the excretory system, while in evolutionarily ancient Chondrostei and Holostei, the ... ...

    Abstract Fish speciation was accompanied by changes in the urogenital system anatomy. In evolutionarily modern Teleostei, male reproductive tracts are fully separated from the excretory system, while in evolutionarily ancient Chondrostei and Holostei, the excretory and reproductive tracts are not separated. Sturgeon post-testicular sperm maturation (PTSM) occurring as a result of sperm/urine mixing is phenomenologically well described, while, in holosteans, functional intimacy of seminal ducts with kidney ducts and the existence of PTSM still need to be addressed. In Lepisosteus platostomus (Holostei), sperm samples were collected from testes (TS), efferent ducts (EDS), and Wolffian ducts (WDS). While WDS was motile, no motility was found in TS and EDS. The existence of PTSM was checked by in vitro PTSM procedure. After TS and EDS incubation in seminal fluid from WDS, no more than 5% motile spermatozoa were observed in TS, whereas in EDS the motility percentage was up to 75%. Experimental dyeing of urogenital ducts in gars and sturgeons revealed some differences in the interconnection between sperm ducts and kidneys. It is concluded that post-testicular sperm maturation occurs in gars and suggests that infraclass Holostei occupies an intermediate evolutionary position between Teleostei and Chondrostei in the anatomical arrangement of the urogenital system.
    MeSH term(s) Animals ; Male ; Testis ; Sperm Maturation ; Semen ; Spermatozoa ; Genitalia, Male ; Fishes/anatomy & histology ; Sperm Motility
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-11-13
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 2615211-3
    ISSN 2045-2322 ; 2045-2322
    ISSN (online) 2045-2322
    ISSN 2045-2322
    DOI 10.1038/s41598-023-46900-8
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article: Effects of available food resources on numbers of the endangered American burying beetle (Nicrophorus americanus)

    Schnell, Gary D / Goetzinger John C / Hiott Ana E / Estevez Brooke D. N / Brennan Sarah P

    Southwestern naturalist. 2014 June, v. 59, no. 2

    2014  

    Abstract: We evaluated several factors that potentially influence where the federally endangered American burying beetle (Nicrophorus americanus) is most abundant. We investigated associations of numbers of beetles and measures of abundance of vertebrates at Camp ... ...

    Abstract We evaluated several factors that potentially influence where the federally endangered American burying beetle (Nicrophorus americanus) is most abundant. We investigated associations of numbers of beetles and measures of abundance of vertebrates at Camp Gruber Military Reservation, Oklahoma. During summer 2003, 87 sites were surveyed for beetles (baited pitfall-traps), birds (modified point-count transects), and mammals (Museum Special snap-traps and rat traps), finding significant rank correlations of number of beetles with number of species of birds, number of individual birds, and biomass of birds but not with similar measures for mammals. Combined biomass of birds and mammals was significantly associated with number of beetles. Path analysis, considering four possible direct influences of measures for vertebrates on beetles, indicated number of beetles was directly and positively affected by biomass of birds and biomass of mammals and inversely by number of individual mammals, while number of individual birds was unrelated to numbers of beetles. Beetles tended to be at sites with fewer but larger mammals that were ≤200 g. Path analysis provided the most informative assessment in that variables potentially influencing beetle numbers were considered simultaneously. While results for Camp Gruber were not identical to those of a similar study at Fort Chaffee, Arkansas, both indicated N. americanus was more likely in places frequented by vertebrates. The association might be due to beetles being attracted to places with more vertebrates because carcasses likely were more abundant; alternatively, suitable environmental conditions may attract vertebrates and N. americanus. Also, beetles may have increased reproductive success at such sites. Lack of covariation of numbers of avian and mammalian species at sites strengthens the supposition of beetles being attracted to sites because of birds and mammals found there.
    Keywords Nicrophorus ; biomass ; birds ; environmental factors ; pitfall traps ; rats ; reproductive success ; summer ; Arkansas ; Oklahoma
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2014-06
    Size p. 173-180.
    Publishing place The Southwestern Association of Naturalists Southern Illinois University Edwardsville
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 2175917-0
    ISSN 0038-4909
    ISSN 0038-4909
    DOI 10.1894%2FF03-JC-74.1
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  4. Article: Factors affecting overwinter survival of the American burying beetle, Nicrophorus americanus (Coleoptera: Silphidae)

    Schnell, Gary D / Hiott, Ana E / Creighton, J. Curtis / Smyth, Victoria L / Komendat, April

    Journal of insect conservation. 2008 Oct., v. 12, no. 5

    2008  

    Abstract: The endangered American burying beetle (Nicrophorus americanus) is relatively abundant at Fort Chaffee Maneuver Training Center in northwestern Arkansas. There is a paucity of basic life-history information available, particularly with respect to factors ...

    Abstract The endangered American burying beetle (Nicrophorus americanus) is relatively abundant at Fort Chaffee Maneuver Training Center in northwestern Arkansas. There is a paucity of basic life-history information available, particularly with respect to factors affecting overwintering success. In a field experiment we: (1) captured beetles at Fort Chaffee; (2) bred them in captivity; (3) in the fall on Fort Chaffee placed offspring individually in well-ventilated, lidded 21.1-l buckets containing original soil plugs in grassland or woodland, either provisioned or not with a rat carcass as potential food; (4) overwintered the beetles; (5) checked in the spring to determine survival; and (6) released surviving beetles. Overall, 59.6% of 104 beetles survived the winter, with 77.1% and 44.6% survival in provisioned and nonprovisioned buckets, respectively. No differences were evident between habitats. Beetle age was an important survival predictor, with older beetles having a higher survival probability, but only if nonprovisioned. Gender and body size were not predictive of survival. Many surviving beetles were at or near the surface; depth averaged 6.0 cm, with some as deep as 20 cm. Our findings suggest that American burying beetles will have a higher probability of overwinter survival if carcasses are readily available as winter approaches.
    Keywords endangered species
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2008-10
    Size p. 483-492.
    Publisher Springer Netherlands
    Publishing place Dordrecht
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 1395198-1
    ISSN 1572-9753 ; 1366-638X
    ISSN (online) 1572-9753
    ISSN 1366-638X
    DOI 10.1007/s10841-007-9086-5
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  5. Book: Alabama aquaculture plan

    Hiott, Ana E / Jensen, John William / Masser, Michael P

    1992  

    Institution Alabama Catfish Producers
    Author's details prepared by Ana E. Hiott, John W. Jensen, and Michael P. Masser
    Keywords Aquaculture
    Language English
    Size iii, 125 p. :, ill., maps ;, 28 cm.
    Publisher s.n
    Publishing place Alabama
    Document type Book
    Note Cover title. ; "A project of: Alabama Catfish Producers, Division of Alabama Farmers Federation ... [et al.]." ; "February 1992"--Spine.
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  6. Article: Effects of available food resources on numbers of the endangered American burying beetle (Nicrophorus americanus)

    Schnell, Gary D. / Goetzinger John C. / Hiott Ana E. / Estevez Brooke D. N. / Brennan Sarah P.

    Southwestern naturalist

    Volume v. 59,, Issue no. 2

    Abstract: We evaluated several factors that potentially influence where the federally endangered American burying beetle (Nicrophorus americanus) is most abundant. We investigated associations of numbers of beetles and measures of abundance of vertebrates at Camp ... ...

    Abstract We evaluated several factors that potentially influence where the federally endangered American burying beetle (Nicrophorus americanus) is most abundant. We investigated associations of numbers of beetles and measures of abundance of vertebrates at Camp Gruber Military Reservation, Oklahoma. During summer 2003, 87 sites were surveyed for beetles (baited pitfall-traps), birds (modified point-count transects), and mammals (Museum Special snap-traps and rat traps), finding significant rank correlations of number of beetles with number of species of birds, number of individual birds, and biomass of birds but not with similar measures for mammals. Combined biomass of birds and mammals was significantly associated with number of beetles. Path analysis, considering four possible direct influences of measures for vertebrates on beetles, indicated number of beetles was directly and positively affected by biomass of birds and biomass of mammals and inversely by number of individual mammals, while number of individual birds was unrelated to numbers of beetles. Beetles tended to be at sites with fewer but larger mammals that were ≤200 g. Path analysis provided the most informative assessment in that variables potentially influencing beetle numbers were considered simultaneously. While results for Camp Gruber were not identical to those of a similar study at Fort Chaffee, Arkansas, both indicated N. americanus was more likely in places frequented by vertebrates. The association might be due to beetles being attracted to places with more vertebrates because carcasses likely were more abundant; alternatively, suitable environmental conditions may attract vertebrates and N. americanus. Also, beetles may have increased reproductive success at such sites. Lack of covariation of numbers of avian and mammalian species at sites strengthens the supposition of beetles being attracted to sites because of birds and mammals found there.
    Language English
    Document type Article
    ISSN 0038-4909
    Database AGRIS - International Information System for the Agricultural Sciences and Technology

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