Thomas J. Brandeis
United States Department of Agriculture
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Featured researches published by Thomas J. Brandeis.
The Wilson Journal of Ornithology | 2009
David W. Steadman; Jensen R. Montambault; Scott K. Robinson; Sonja N. Oswalt; Thomas J. Brandeis; Agustavo Londoño; Matthew J. Reetz; Wendy M. Schelsky; Natalie A. Wright; Jeffrey P. Hoover; Jill Jankowski; Andrew W. Kratter; Arie Martínez; Jordan V. Smith
Abstract St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands, is one of the most forested islands in the West Indies and provides an opportunity to conserve both resident birds and wintering neotropical migrants. We conducted double-observer point counts of landbirds in December 2005 and 2006 in Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) plots and National Park Service (NPS) trails in Virgin Islands National Park (VINP) to assess population trends of birds in subtropical dry and moist forests. We recorded 2,270 individual birds representing 35 species at 150 point count stations in 2005, and 3,092 individuals of 32 species at 143 of these stations in 2006. The increase in birds per point from 2005 (15.1) to 2006 (21.6) was due to resident species, 17 of which were recorded more frequently in 2006. The 17 species of neotropical migrants composed 11.8% of all registrations in 2005 and 2006. Subtropical moist and dry forest habitats differed strongly in vegetation characteristics and plant species, but no species of birds exhibited a strong affiliation with either habitat type on FIA plots. Data from NPS trails showed that most migrant species were detected more often in moist, mature forest. The resident Bridled Quail-Dove (Geotrygon mystacea) also was correlated with mature forest. Plant and bird species co-occurrence with positive correlations that may carry a signal of preferred frugivory included Guettarda odorata (Rubiaceae) with Bridled Quail-Dove, and Myrciaria floribunda (Myrtaceae) with Pearly-eyed Thrasher (Margarops fuscatus). Migrant species did not exhibit strong long-term changes in relative abundance since founding of VINP in 1957, but four open-country resident species declined significantly between 1957 and 2006 as the forest matured. Forest maturation should continue on St. John, yielding a bright future for most of its landbirds barring catastrophic hurricanes, pathogens, or invasive plants.
AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2008
Thomas J. Brandeis; Christopher W. Woodall
Abstract Quantification of the downed woody materials that comprise forest fuels has gained importance in Caribbean forest ecosystems due to the increasing incidence and severity of wildfires on island ecosystems. Because large-scale assessments of forest fuels have rarely been conducted for these ecosystems, forest fuels were assessed at 121 US Department of Agriculture forest service inventory plots on Puerto Rico, Vieques, and the US Virgin Islands. Results indicated that fuel loadings averaged 24.05 Mg ha−1 in 2004–2006. Forest litter decreased from wetter to drier forest life zones. These island forests showed a paucity of coarse woody fuels (CWD) (2.91 Mg ha−1) and relatively greater quantities of smaller-sized fine woody fuels (FWD) (10.18 Mg ha−1 for FWD and 10.82 Mg ha−1 for duff/litter) when compared to continental tropical forests. Between 2001 and 2006, CWD fuel loads decreased, while fine fuels and litter increased, such that total fuel loads remained constant on a subset of plots on Puerto Rico. This trend indicates that continued decomposition of CWD deposited by the last severe hurricane is balanced by increasing inputs of FWD from recovering and maturing secondary forests. Forest disturbance cycles and successional development must be taken into account by agencies charged with fire protection and risk assessment.
Forest Ecology and Management | 2006
Thomas J. Brandeis; Matthew Delaney; Bernard R. Parresol; Larry Royer
Resour. Bull. SRS-119. Asheville, NC: U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service, Southern Research Station. 72 p. | 2007
Thomas J. Brandeis; Eileen H. Helmer; Sonja N. Oswalt
Resour. Bull. SRS–122. Asheville, NC: U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service, Southern Research Station. 61 p. | 2007
Thomas J. Brandeis; Sonja N. Oswalt
Biotropica | 2007
Sonja N. Oswalt; Thomas J. Brandeis; Christopher W. Woodall
In: McRoberts, Ronald E.; Reams, Gregory A.; Van Deusen, Paul C.; McWilliams, William H., eds. Proceedings of the eighth annual forest inventory and analysis symposium; 2006 October 16-19; Monterey, CA. Gen. Tech. Report WO-79. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service. 197-202. | 2009
Thomas J. Brandeis; Matthew Delaney; Larry Royer; Bernard R. Parresol
Caribbean Journal of Science, Vol. 42, No. 1, :53-66, | 2006
Sonja N. Oswalt; Thomas J. Brandeis; Britta P. Dimick
Res. Note SRS-19. Asheville, NC: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Southern Research Station. 36 p. | 2010
Christopher M. Oswalt; Sonja N. Oswalt; Thomas J. Brandeis
Resour. Bull. SRS–119 (Español). Asheville, NC: U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service, Southern Research Station. 72 p. | 2003
Thomas J. Brandeis; Eileen H. Helmer; Sonja N. Oswalt