S01 Shorebird Stopover Ecology in Delaware Bay: From Catastrophe to Recovery

Presenting authors are underlined.

Session organizer(s)

Amanda Dey

Larry Niles

David Mizrahi

Date: 08-13-2009

Location: Cohen G17

Please click on the title of an abstract to view the complete abstract.

Filtering for: Oral Presentations

Oral Presentations

14:00
Niles, L J; Dey, A D; Sitters, H P; SCIENTIFIC CERTAINTY IN THE FACE OF ECOLOGICAL COLLAPSE: RECOGNIZING THE ECOLOGICAL IMPORTANCE OF THE DELAWARE BAY FOR THE RUFA SUBSPECIES OF THE RED KNOT (Abstract ID:5611)

14:30
Hernandez, D E; Dey, A; THE INCREDIBLE, EDIBLE HORSESHOE CRAB EGG: MONITORING A CRITICAL RESOURCE FOR RED KNOTS. (Abstract ID:5504)

15:00
Sitters, H P; Niles, L J; Dey, A D; WHY HAVE RED KNOTS, RUDDY TURNSTONES AND SANDERLINGS REACTED DIFFERENTLY TO THE DECLINE IN HORSESHOE CRAB AVAILABILITY IN DELAWARE BAY? (Abstract ID:5612)

16:00
Mizrahi, D S; Peters, K A; CONSERVATION OF SEMIPALMATED SANDPIPER: DELAWARE BAY AND BEYOND (Abstract ID:5370)

16:30
McGowan, C P; Smith, D R; Nichols, J D; Sweka, J; Martin, J; Lyons, J E; Niles, L J; Kalasz, K; Wong, R; Brust, J;PREDICTIVE MODELS TO EVALUATE MANAGEMENT ALTERNATIVES FOR RED KNOTS AND HORSESHOE CRABS IN THE DELAWARE BAY. (Abstract ID:5437)

17:00
Baker, A J; Gonzalez, P M; Aubry, Y; Morrison, R G; Atkinson, P; RED KNOT IN THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE: HOW IMPORTANT IS DELAWARE BAY TO POPULATION VIABILITY? (Abstract ID:5426)