226 results on '"Johnson, Joseph S."'
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2. Security Protocols and Mechanisms for Sharing Near-Real-Time Environmental Data with Multiple Audiences During Disasters
3. Preference for hibernacula microclimates varies among 3 bat species susceptible to white-nose syndrome.
4. The Winter Worries of Bats: Past and Present Perspectives on Winter Habitat and Management of Cave Hibernating Bats
5. Winter activity of boreal bats
6. Capture rates of Eptesicus fuscus increase following white‐nose syndrome across the eastern US.
7. Resistance is futile : RNA-sequencing reveals differing responses to bat fungal pathogen in Nearctic Myotis lucifugus and Palearctic Myotis myotis
8. Foraging patterns of Rafinesque’s big-eared bat in upland forests managed with prescribed fire
9. The Winter Worries of Bats: Past and Present Perspectives on Winter Habitat and Management of Cave Hibernating Bats
10. Shifts in Assemblage of Foraging Bats at Mammoth Cave National Park following Arrival of White-nose Syndrome
11. Migratory and winter activity of bats in Yellowstone National Park
12. Effective conservation of subterranean‐roosting bats.
13. Long‐term exposure to an invasive fungal pathogen decreases Eptesicus fuscus body mass with increasing latitude
14. Whole-genome Analysis Reveals Contrasting Relationships Among Nuclear and Mitochondrial Genomes Between Three Sympatric Bat Species
15. Energy conserving thermoregulatory patterns and lower disease severity in a bat resistant to the impacts of white-nose syndrome
16. Prey Size and Dietary Niche of Rafinesque’s Big-Eared Bat ( Corynorhinus rafinesquii )
17. Extralimital Occurrences of Southeastern Myotis in Alabama and Georgia
18. Seasonal roost selection and activity of a remnant population of northern myotis in Pennsylvania
19. Social networks of Rafinesque's big-eared bats (Corynorhinus rafinesquii) in bottomland hardwood forests
20. Towards evidence-based conservation of subterranean ecosystems (2022)
21. Temporal Dynamics of Roost Snags of Long-Legged Myotis in the Pacific Northwest, USA
22. Food Habits of Myotis leibii along a Forested Ridgetop in West Virginia
23. Cooling subterranean environments for climate adaptation and disease management: reply to Meierhofer et al
24. Population sizes and activity patterns of little brown myotis in Yellowstone National Park
25. Towards evidence‐based conservation of subterranean ecosystems
26. New Ectoparasite Records for Bats in West Virginia and a Review of Previous Records
27. Day-Roosts of Myotis leibii in the Appalachian Ridge and Valley of West Virginia
28. Geographic Variation in Roost-Site Selection of Long-Legged Myotis in the Pacific Northwest
29. Whole-genome Analysis Reveals Contrasting Relationships Among Nuclear and Mitochondrial Genomes Between Three Sympatric Bat Species.
30. Cooling of bat hibernacula to mitigate white‐nose syndrome
31. Summer heterothermy in Rafinesque’s big-eared bats (Corynorhinus rafinesquii) roosting in tree cavities in bottomland hardwood forests
32. Ten-year projection of white-nose syndrome disease dynamics at the southern leading-edge of infection in North America
33. Hibernaculum temperature modelling from Ten-year projection of white-nose syndrome disease dynamics at the southern leading-edge of infection in North America
34. Model description and additional analyses from Ten-year projection of white-nose syndrome disease dynamics at the southern leading-edge of infection in North America
35. Social networks based on frequency of roost cohabitation do not reflect association rates of Myotis lucifugus within their roosts
36. Foraging ecology of long-legged myotis (Myotis volans) in North-Central Idaho
37. No Sign of Infection in Free-Ranging Myotis austroriparius Hibernating in the Presence of Pseudogymnoascus destructans in Alabama
38. Cooling of bat hibernacula to mitigate white‐nose syndrome.
39. Ten-year projection of white-nose syndrome disease dynamics at the southern leading-edge of infection in North America
40. Winter activity of boreal bats
41. Roosting ecology of the southernmost bats, Myotis chiloensis and Histiotus magellanicus, in southern Tierra del Fuego, Chile
42. Summer day-roost selection by eastern red bats varies between areas with different land-use histories
43. Population Connectivity Predicts Vulnerability to White-Nose Syndrome in the Chilean Myotis (Myotis chiloensis) - A Genomics Approach
44. Population connectivity predicts vulnerability to white-nose syndrome in the Chilean myotis (Myotis chiloensis) - a genomics approach
45. Optimal hibernation theory
46. The Klingon batbugs: Morphological adaptations in the primitive bat bugs, Bucimex chilensis and Primicimex cavernis , including updated phylogeny of Cimicidae
47. Buildings provide vital habitat for little brown myotis ( Myotis lucifugus ) in a high‐elevation landscape
48. Correction: Winter habitats of bats in Texas
49. Winter habitats of bats in Texas
50. The Klingon batbugs: Morphological adaptations in the primitive bat bugs,Bucimex chilensisandPrimicimex cavernis, including updated phylogeny of Cimicidae
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