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- Publications
- Influence
Arsenic, cadmium, chromium, lead, manganese, mercury, and selenium in feathers of Black-legged Kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla) and Black Oystercatcher (Haematopus bachmani) from Prince William Sound,…
- J. Burger, M. Gochfeld, K. Sullivan, D. Irons, Aly McKnight
- Environmental Science, Medicine
- The Science of the total environment
- 15 July 2008
Arsenic, cadmium, chromium, lead, manganese, mercury and selenium were analyzed in the feathers of Black-legged Kittiwakes (Rissa tridactyla) from Shoup Bay in Prince William Sound, Alaska to… Expand
Distribution, abundance and population trends of the Kittlitz's Murrelet Brachyramphus brevirostris in Prince William Sound, Alaska
- Katherine J. Kuletz, C. S. Nations, B. Manly, A. Allyn, D. Irons, Aly McKnight
- Geography
- 15 April 2011
Monitoring population trends of rare species can be difficult if they cannot be readily separated from closely related, abundant species . Such species identification problems affect monitoring in… Expand
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Winter dispersal and activity patterns of post-breeding black-legged kittiwakes Rissa tridactyla from Prince William Sound, Alaska
- Aly McKnight, D. Irons, A. Allyn, K. Sullivan, R. Suryan
- Biology
- 5 December 2011
As colony-specific wintering ecology of small and medium-sized seabirds is poorly understood, it has been generally assumed that winter conditions have the same effect on all indi- viduals from any… Expand
‘Stepping stone’ pattern in Pacific Arctic tern migration reveals the importance of upwelling areas
- Aly McKnight, A. Allyn, D. Duffy, D. Irons
- Geography
- 2 October 2013
Arctic terns Sterna paradisaea are noted for their extraordinary migration between Arctic and sub-Arctic breeding grounds and Antarctic wintering areas. Until recently, few data existed to document… Expand
TRANS-ANDEAN PASSAGE OF MIGRATING ARCTIC TERNS OVER PATAGONIA
- D. Duffy, Aly McKnight, D. Irons
- Geography
- 15 October 2013
Arctic Terns Sterna paradisaea have the longest known migration of any bird species, from the Arctic to the Antarctic, covering up to 80 000 km during a round trip (Egevang et al. 2010). We report… Expand
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- 1
- PDF
Experimental evidence of long‐term reproductive costs in a colonial nesting seabird
- Aly McKnight, E. Blomberg, G. Golet, D. Irons, C. S. Loftin, S. Mckinney
- Biology
- 1 August 2018
Population Ecology of Colonially Breeding Seabirds: How Intrinsic Processes, Mediating Influences, and Individual Heterogeneity Affect Population Vital Rates
- Aly McKnight
- Biology
- 2017
Reproductive success at seabird colonies is often quite variable, even within a single region. Although exhaustive investigations of reproductive success drivers are not logistically feasible, many… Expand
- 1
Relationships among Kittlitz's murrelet habitat use, temperature-depth profiles, and landscape features in Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA
- A. Allyn, Aly McKnight, K. McGarigal, C. Griffin, Katherine J. Kuletz, D. Irons
- Geology
- 15 October 2012
Although seabirds search large areas for food, their distributions often correlate with physical characteristics of the marine environment that can serve to aggregate prey. Kittlitz's murrelets… Expand
Brachyramphus murrelet trends and the Prince William Sound, Alaska, surveys: A response to Hodges and Kirchhoff
- Katherine J. Kuletz, C. S. Nations, B. Manly, A. Allyn, D. Irons, Aly McKnight
- Geography
- 15 April 2013
A recent Comment (Hodges and Kirchhoff 2012) disputes survey results and our analyses of population trend for Kittlitz’s Murrelet Brachyramphus brevirostris in Prince William Sound (PWS), Alaska… Expand
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- PDF