REPTILES AND AMPHIBIANS
Legend
- º LGL consultant or subcontractor
- G With Greeneridge Sciences Inc. 1
- * Co-author not with LGL
- ** Publication by LGL employee, but not arising from an LGL project. Papers published by employees before they joined LGL are not listed
- † Study conducted principally by a subcontractor or affiliate of LGL.
Bevan, E.* and 8 others including B.J. Gallaway. 2016. Estimating the historic size and current status of the Kemp’s Ridley Sea Turtle (Lepidochelys kempii) population. Ecosphere 7(3):e01244. 15 p. link
Bézy, V.S.* and 7 others including N.F. Putman. 2020. Mass-nesting in Olive Ridley Sea Turtles: environmental predictors of timing and size. Anim. Behav. 163:85-94. link
Bickham, J.W., M.D. Springer and B.J. Gallaway. 1984. Distributional survey of the Yellow Mud Turtle (Kinosternon flavescens) in Iowa, Illinois, and Missouri: a proposed endangered species. Southwestern Nat. 29(1):123‑132. link
Caillouet, C.W., Jr.*, and 9 others including B.J. Gallaway. 2016. A call for evaluation of the contribution made by rescue, resuscitation, rehabilitation, and release translocations to Kemp’s Ridley Sea Turtle (Lepidochelys kempii) population recovery. Herpet. Conserv. Biol. 11(3):486‑496. link
Caillouet, C.W., Jr.*, B.J. Gallaway and N.F. Putman*. 2016. Kemp’s Ridley Sea Turtle saga and setback: novel analyses of cumulative hatchlings released and time-lagged annual nests in Tamaulipas, Mexico. Chelonian Conserv. Biol. 15(1):115‑131. link
Caillouet, C.W.* and 5 others including S.W. Raborn, N.F. Putman and B.J. Gallaway. 2018. Did declining carrying capacity for the Kemp’s Ridley Sea Turtle population within the Gulf of Mexico contribute to the nesting setback in 2010−2017? Chelonian Conserv. Biol. 17(1):123-133. link or link
Christiansen, J.L.* and B.J. Gallaway. 1984. Raccoon removal, nesting success, and hatchling emergence in Iowa turtles with special reference to Kinosternon flavescens (Kinosternidae). Southwestern Nat. 29(3):343‑348. link
Christiansen, J.L.*, J.A. Cooper*, J.W. Bickham, B.J. Gallaway and M.A. Springer. 1985. Aspects of the natural history of the Yellow Mud Turtle, Kinosternon flavescens (Kinosternidae) in Iowa: a proposed endangered species. Southwestern Nat. 30(3):413‑426. link
Christiansen, J.L.*, B.J. Gallaway and J.W. Bickham. 1990. Population estimates and geographic distribution of the Yellow Mud Turtle (Kinosternon flavescens) in Iowa. Proc. Iowa Acad. Sci. 97(3):105‑108.
deGraff, D.A., B.K. Boles and J.A. Lovisek*. 1981. Two‑lined salamander, Eurycea bislineata (Amphibia: Caudata: Plethodontidae), in Labrador. Can. Field‑Nat. 95(3):366‑367. link
Dupuis-Desormeaux, M.*, K. McDonald*, D. Moro*, T. Reid*, C. Agnew, R. Johnson* and S.E. MacDonald*. 2021. A snapshot of the distribution and demographics of freshwater turtles along Toronto’s Lake Ontario coastal wetlands. J. Great Lakes Res. 47(2):283-294. link
Finley, K.J. and M.A. Jasieniuk*. 1978. The eastern Yellow‑bellied Racer in Canada**. Blue Jay 36(2):88‑91.
Gallaway, B.J., J.W. Bickham and M.D. Springer. 1985. A controversy surrounding an endangered species listing: the case of the Illinois Mud Turtle‑‑another perspective. Smithsonian Herpetol. Inform. Serv. 64:1‑17. link
Gallaway, B.J., W.J. Gazey° and 35 others including J.G. Cole and S.W. Raborn. 2016. Development of a Kemp’s Ridley Sea Turtle stock assessment model. Gulf Mex. Sci. 33(2):138‑157. link
Gallaway, B.J., W.J. Gazey° and 4 others. 2016. Evaluation of the status of the Kemp’s Ridley Sea Turtle after the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Gulf Mex. Sci. 33(2):192‑204. link
Gregory, P.T.* and K.N. Tuttle. 2016. Effects of body size and reproductive state on cover use of five species of temperate‑zone Natricine snakes**. Herpetologica 72(1):64‑72. link
Grüss, A.* and 9 others including N.F. Putman. 2018. Improving the spatial allocation of marine mammal and sea turtle biomasses in spatially-explicit ecosystem models**. Mar. Ecol. Progr. Ser. 602:255-274. link
Hawkes, V.C. and P.T. Gregory*. 2012. Temporal changes in the relative abundance of amphibians relative to riparian buffer width in western Washington, USA. Forest Ecol. Manage. 274:67‑80. link
Houseal, T.*, J.W. Bickham and M.D. Springer. 1982. Geographic variation in the Yellow Mud Turtle, Kinosternon flavescens. Copeia 1982(3):567‑580. link
Kocmoud, R.A.*, H.-H. Wang*, W.E. Grant* and B.J. Gallaway. 2019. Population dynamics of the endangered Kemp’s Ridley Sea Turtle following the 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico: simulation of potential cause-effect relationships. Ecol. Model. 392:159-178. link
Legend
- º LGL consultant or subcontractor
- G With Greeneridge Sciences Inc.1
- * Co-author not with LGL
- ** Publication by LGL employee, but not arising from an LGL project. Papers published by employees before they joined LGL are not listed
- † Study conducted principally by a subcontractor or affiliate of LGL.
Kristensen, J. 1981. Tiger Salamanders “rooming in” with northern pocket gophers**. Alberta Nat. 11(4):171‑172.
Mansfield, K.M.* and 7 others including N.F. Putman. 2017. First satellite tracks of South Atlantic sea turtle ‘lost years’: seasonal variation in trans-equatorial movement. Proc. Royal Soc. B 284(1868):20171730. link
Minx, P. 1992. Variation in phalangeal formulae in the turtle genus Terrapene**. J. Herpetol. 26(2):234‑238. link
Nelson, K.R.* and 9 others including V.C. Hawkes. 2021. Population dynamics and methodological assessments from a 15-year period of amphibian monitoring in British Columbia’s Southern Gulf Islands. Environ. Monit. Assess. 193:216. link
Engelstoft, C.*, K. Ovaska*, L. Sopuck* and D. Robichaud. 2021. Spatial distribution and abundance of Common Sharp-tailed Snakes (Contia tenuis) on Observatory Hill, Vancouver Island, British Columbia. J. N. Amer. Herpet. 2021(2):8-15. link
Putman, N.F., B.J. Gallaway and 21 others. 2020. Predicted distributions and abundances of the sea turtle ‘lost years’ in the western North Atlantic Ocean. Ecography 43:506-517. link
Putman, N.F., J. Hawkins* and B.J. Gallaway. 2020. Managing fisheries in a world with more sea turtles. Proc. R. Soc. B 287:20200220. link
Putman, N.F. and 10 others including R.T. Beyea, W.D. Heyman and B.J. Gallaway. 2023. Modeling juvenile sea turtle bycatch risk in commercial and recreational fisheries. iScience 26(2):105977. 18 p. link
Shonfield, J., W. King and W.R. Koski. 2019. Habitat use and movement patterns of Butler’s Gartersnake (Thamnophis butleri) in southwestern Ontario, Canada. Herpetol. Conserv. Biol. 14(3):680‑690. link
Swan, K.D.*, V.C. Hawkes and P.T. Gregory*. 2015. Breeding phenology and habitat use of amphibians in the drawdown zone of a hydroelectric reservoir**. Herpetol. Conserv. Biol. 10(3):864‑873. link
Tuttle, K.N. and P.T. Gregory*. 2009. Food habits of the Plains Garter Snake (Thamnophis radix) at the northern limit of its range**. J. Herpetol. 43(1):65‑73. link
Tuttle, K.N. and P.T. Gregory*. 2012. Growth and maturity of a terrestrial ectotherm near its northern distributional limit: does latitude matter?** Can. J. Zool. 90(6):758‑765. link
Tuttle, K.N. and P.T. Gregory*. 2014. Reproduction of the Plains Garter Snake, Thamnophis radix, near its northern range limit: more evidence for a “fast” life history**. Copeia 2014(1):130‑135. link
—Revised January 2024