1. Reed, J.M., N. Fefferman, and R.C. Averill-Murray. In press. Vital rate sensitivity analysis as a tool for assessing management actions for the Desert Tortoise. Biological Conservation.
2. Riedle, J.D., R.C. Averill-Murray, and D.D. Grandmaison. In press. Seasonal variation in survivorship and mortality of Desert Tortoises in the Sonoran Desert, Arizona. Journal of Herpetology.
3. Darst, C.R., K.A. Huffman, and J. Jarvis. 2009. Conservation Significance of America's Newest System of Protected Areas. Natural Areas Journal 29:224-254.
4. McKinney, T., D.E. Brown, and L.J. Allison. 2008. Winter precipitation and recruitment of pronghorns in Arizona. Southwestern Naturalist 53:319-325.
5. Riedle, J.D., R.C. Averill-Murray, C.L. Lutz, and D.K. Bolen. 2008. Habitat use by Desert Tortoises (Gopherus agassizii) on alluvial fans in the Sonoran Desert, Arizona. Copeia 2008:414-420.
6. Boul, K.E., W.C. Funk, C.R. Darst, D.C. Cannatella, and M.J. Ryan. 2007. Sexual selection drives speciation in an Amazonian frog. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 274:399-406.
7. Darst, C.R. 2007. National Landscape Conservation System Science Strategy. BLM WO GI-06, IM 2007-116. 12 pages.
8. Field, K.J., C.R. Tracy, P.A. Medica, R.W. Marlow, and P.S. Corn. 2007. Return to the wild: translocation as a tool in conservation of the Desert Tortoise (Gopherus agassizii). Biological Conservation 136:232-245.
9. Darst, C.R. 2006. Predator learning, experimental psychology, and novel predictions for mimicry dynamics. Animal Behaviour 71:743-748.
10. Darst, C.R. and M.E. Cummings. 2006. Predator learning favours mimicry of a less toxic model in poison frogs. Nature 440:208–211.
11. Darst, C.R., M.E. Cummings, and D.C. Cannatella. 2006. A mechanism for diversity in warning signals: conspicuousness versus toxicity in poison frogs. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 103:5852-5857.
12. Retallick, R.W.R., V. Miera, K.L. Richards, K.J. Field, J.P. Collins. 2006. A non-lethal technique for detecting the chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis on tadpoles. Diseases of Aquatic Organisms 72:77-85.
13. Averill-Murray, R.C., and A. Averill-Murray. 2005. Regional-scale estimation of density and habitat use of the Desert Tortoise (Gopherus agassizii) in Arizona. Journal of Herpetology 39:65-72.
14. Darst, C.R., P.A. Menendez, L.A. Coloma, and D.C. Cannatella. 2005. Evolution of dietary specialization and chemical defense in poison frogs: a comparative analysis. The American Naturalist 165:56-69.
15. Field, K.J., and D. Groebner. 2005. Rana chiricahuensis (Chiricahua Leopard Frog). Reproduction. Herpetological Review 36:306-307.
16. Sredl, M.J., and K.J. Field. 2005. Gastrophryne olivacea (Hallowell, 1857 "1856") Western Narrow-mouthed Toad. Pp. 503-506. In: M. Lannoo (ed). Amphibian Declines: The Conservation Status of United States Species. University of California Press, Berkeley, CA.
17. Darst, C.R., and D.C. Cannatella. 2004. Novel relationships among hyloid frogs inferred from mtDNA sequences. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 31:462-475.
18. Goldberg, C.S., K.J. Field, and M.J. Sredl. 2004. Mitochondrial DNA sequences do not support species status of the Ramsey Canyon Leopard Frog (Rana subaquavocalis). Journal of Herpetology. 38:313-319.
19. Allison, L.J., C.E. Paradzick, J.W. Rourke, and T.D. McCarthy. 2003. A characterization of vegetation in nesting and non-nesting plots for Southwestern Willow Flycatchers in Central Arizona. Studies in Avian Biology 26:81-90.
20. Davidson, R.F., and L.J. Allison. 2003. Effects of monogamy and polygyny on reproductive success in Southwestern Willow Flycatchers (Empidonax traillii extimus) in Arizona. Studies in Avian Biology 26:118-124.
21. Field, K.J., T.L. Beatty Sr., and T.L. Beatty Jr. 2003. Rana subaquavocalis (Ramsey Canyon Leopard Frog). Diet. Herpetological Review 34:235.
22. Averill-Murray, R.C. 2002. Effects on survival of Desert Tortoises (Gopherus agassizii) urinating during handling. Chelonian Conservation and Biology 4:430-435.
23. Averill-Murray, R.C. 2002. Reproduction of Gopherus agassizii in the Sonoran Desert, Arizona. Chelonian Conservation and Biology 4:295-301.
24. Averill-Murray, R.C., B.E. Martin, S.J. Bailey, and E.B. Wirt. 2002. Activity and behavior of the Sonoran Desert Tortoise in Arizona. Pages 135-158 in T.R. Van Devender (ed.), The Sonoran Desert Tortoise: Natural History, Biology, and Conservation. Univ. Arizona, Tucson.
25. Averill-Murray, R.C., A.P. Woodman, and J.M. Howland. 2002. Population ecology of the Sonoran Desert Tortoise in Arizona. Pages 109-134 in T.R. Van Devender (ed.), The Sonoran Desert Tortoise: Natural History, Biology, and Conservation. Univ. Arizona, Tucson.
26. Swann, D.E., R.C. Averill-Murray, and C.R. Schwalbe. 2002. Distance sampling for Sonoran Desert Tortoises. Journal of Wildlife Management 66:969-975.
27. Van Devender, T.R., R.C. Averill-Murray, T.C. Esque, P.A. Holm, V.M. Dickinson, C.R. Schwalbe, E.B. Wirt, and S.L. Barrett. 2002. Grasses, mallows, desert vine, and more: diet of the Desert Tortoise in Arizona and Sonora. Pages 159-193 in T.R. Van Devender (ed.), The Sonoran Desert Tortoise: Natural History, Biology, and Conservation. Univ. Arizona, Tucson.
28. Johnson, J.D., R.C. Averill-Murray, and J.L. Jarchow. 2001. Captive care of the Desert Tortoise, Gopherus agassizii. Journal of Herpetological Medicine and Surgery 11:8-15.
29. Nussear, K.E., R.E. Espinoza, C.M. Gubbins, K.J. Field, and J.P. Hayes. 1998. Diet quality does not affect resting metabolic rate or body temperatures selected by an herbivorous lizard. Journal of Comparative Physiology B 168:183-189. [see Erratum:1999.169:236]
30. Murray, R.C. 1997. Gopherus agassizii (Desert Tortoise). Diet. Herpetological Review 28:87.
31. Murray, R.C., C.R. Schwalbe, S.J. Bailey, S.P. Cuneo, and S.D. Hart. 1996. Reproduction in a population of the Desert Tortoise, Gopherus agassizii, in the Sonoran Desert. Herpetological Natural History 4:83-88.
32. Allison, L.J., P.E. Brunkow, and J.P. Collins. 1994. An exceptional life history trait in tiger salamanders: opportunistic breeding after summer rains. Great Basin Naturalist 54:376-379.
33. Whiting, M.J., J.R. Dixon, and R.C. Murray. 1993. Spatial distribution of a population of Texas Horned Lizards (Phrynosoma cornutum: Phrynosomatidae) relative to habitat and prey. Southwestern Naturalist 38:150-154.
|