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AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MAMMALOGISTS 94 th ANNUAL MEETING Renaissance Oklahoma City Convention Center Hotel and Cox Convention Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma PROGRAM

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Page 1: 2014 Program Book-Final - mammalsociety.org · 4! WELCOME Welcome to the 94th annual meeting of the American Society of Mammalogists. We have a record number of symposia and special

AMERICAN  SOCIETY  OF  MAMMALOGISTS  

 94th  ANNUAL  MEETING  

 Renaissance  Oklahoma  City  Convention  Center  Hotel  and  Cox  

Convention  Center,  Oklahoma  City,  Oklahoma    

PROGRAM  

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The  2014  American  Society  of  Mammalogists  Annual  Meeting  logo  features  a  Pronghorn  (symbol  of  the  ASM)  with  an  abstracted  Oklahoma  City  skyline,  and  water  representing  the  Oklahoma  River  and  Bricktown  Canal.  The  arrangement  suggests  OKC’s  historic  Art  Deco  

architecture  and  new  architecture  like  the  Devon  Tower,  Scissortail  Bridge,  and  Oklahoma  River  boathouses.  The  logo  was  designed  by  Hadley  Jerman,  Graphic  Designer  at  the  Sam  Noble  

Museum  in  Norman,  Oklahoma.  

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AMERICAN  SOCIETY  OF  MAMMALOGISTS  

 94th  ANNUAL  MEETING  

 Renaissance  Oklahoma  City  Convention  Center  Hotel  and  Cox  

Convention  Center,  Oklahoma  City,  Oklahoma    

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AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MAMMALOGISTS (ASM)

The American Society of Mammalogists (ASM) was established in 1919 for the purpose of promoting interest in the study of mammals.

An Overview—In addition to being among the most charismatic of animals, mammals are important in many disciplines from paleontology to ecology and evolution. We, of course, are mammals and thus are in the interesting position of studying ourselves in quest of a greater understanding of the role of mammals in the natural world.

The ASM is currently composed of thousands of members, many of who are professional scientists. Members of the Society have always had a strong interest in the public good, and this is reflected in their involvement in providing information for public policy, resources management, conservation, and education.

The Society hosts annual meetings and maintains several publications. The flagship publication is the Journal of Mammalogy, a journal produced 6 times per year that accepts submissions on all aspects of mammalogy. The ASM also publishes Mammalian Species (accounts of individual species) and Special Publications (books that pertain to specific taxa or topics), and we maintain a mammal images library that contains many exceptional photographs of mammals.

We encourage you to peruse the ASM web site for information about mammals and the American Society of Mammalogists. Check out our interesting history by clicking on the Our History tab on the Archives Committee page. We hope it will stimulate your interest in mammals and further your appreciation of their importance.

ASM Leadership—The ASM is led by a group of scientists who are elected by the membership.

ASM Committees—Much of the work that the ASM does is accomplished through a large number of volunteer committees. These committees work to further the aims of the Society and the science of mammalogy as a whole.

ASM Endorses Human Diversity—The ASM is dedicated to ensuring the opportunity for active, equal participation in all ASM functions by all members, regardless of gender, race, ethnic background, age, physical disabilities, or sexual orientation.

http://www.mammalsociety.org/

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Welcome ...................................................................................................................................................... 4

Acknowledgements ...................................................................................................................................... 5

Sponsor List ................................................................................................................................................. 6

General Meeting Information ..................................................................................................................... 11

Presentation Information ............................................................................................................................ 13

Exhibitors ................................................................................................................................................... 14

Social Events ............................................................................................................................................. 17

Speakers, Symposia, Plenaries, Workshops, and Field Trips ................................................................... 19

Board of Directors, Members, and Committee Meetings ........................................................................... 22

Program At-A-Glance ................................................................................................................................. 23

Saturday, 7 June ........................................................................................................................................ 26

Sunday, 8 June .......................................................................................................................................... 28

Monday, 9 June ......................................................................................................................................... 34

Tuesday, 10 June ...................................................................................................................................... 42

Author Index ............................................................................................................................................... 47

Local Restaurants ...................................................................................................................................... 53

Advertisements .............................................................................................................. 9, 10, 15, 16, 18, 25

Renaissance Oklahoma City Convention Center Hotel and Cox Convention Center • Oklahoma City,

Oklahoma ............................................................................................................................................ 56

2015 Meeting Announcement ........................................................................................... Inside Back Cover

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WELCOME

Welcome to the 94th annual meeting of the American Society of Mammalogists. We have a record number of symposia and special sessions this year. Symposia on The Integrative Biology of Hibernation, Xenarthrans as Model Species in Mammalogy, The United States Biological Survey and North American Natural History, and Museum Resources in Undergraduate Education cover a diversity of interests. Special sessions include Recent Advances in Conservation, with presentations on gray wolves, North American pikas, and invasive rabbits in Chile, and Recent Advances in Mammalogy, featuring three outstanding early career scientists from the region where our meeting is being held. Continuing an initiative started in 2013, we include three pre-meeting workshops and two teacher workshops in our program this year. Be sure to share ideas for future workshops with officers or members of the Program Committee, and we will try to make them happen. Our first Plenary session will include presentations by recipients of honoraria, fellowships, and the Hornaday Award. These are some of the rising stars in mammalogy. This session is one of my favorite events, and a great way to open our meeting. The second Plenary will feature presentations by the 2013 recipients of the Grinnell Award (Dr. Ricardo Ojeda), Leopold Award (Dr. Joel Berger), and Merriam Award (Dr. Rudy Boonstra), and promises to be another highlight of the meeting. Our Capstone Presentation will be by Dr. Joel Brown, who never fails to be thought-provoking and engaging. And of course the meeting will include a stimulating array of contributed papers and posters on all aspects of mammalogy. There will be plenty of opportunity to network with other professionals, renew old acquaintances, and make new friends. The opening night reception, poster-session social followed by our raffle and auction to raise funds for student awards, picnic at the Myriad Botanical Gardens in downtown OKC, and the annual banquet are great places to talk science, or just relax. The Program Committee wants you to have a chance to experience OKC while you are here, so we are leaving Saturday night open following a Student Mixer to get things kicked off. Try a few craft beers, listen to some jazz or blues, or learn about cowboys (there is a museum for that!). Your conference badge also will gain you free admission to the Museum of Osteology, a must-see for any mammalogist. I also would like to add a special thank-you to our sponsors, exhibitors, and advertisers. Their support is critical to the success of many of our annual functions. Please take some time during the breaks and socials to stop by their tables and displays and be sure to let them know how much you appreciate their participation! Pick up a book, souvenir, or some mammal art. While you are here, volunteer to serve on a committee, offer to organize a symposium, or volunteer to host an upcoming meeting. Let us know how we can do things better, and get involved yourself! A great thing about the ASM is that anyone can take part, our Society is open to all and depends on the efforts of volunteers from our membership. Enjoy Oklahoma! Happy trails, Edward J Heske, President, American Society of Mammalogists

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Program Committee:

Janet Braun (Chair)

Kaycee Bell

Brad Blood

Brandi Coyner

Meredith Hamilton

Lauren Helgen

David Leslie

Susan Loeb

Karen Mabry

Daniel Odell

Marcia Revelez

Margaret Schadler

Cody Thompson

Patrick A. Zollner

Hadley Jerman — Sam Noble Museum (2014 logo design)

Tony Ballard — Kansas State University Conference Planning Services

Following the conclusion of the conference, be sure to stop by ASM’s Registration Desk to drop off your

badge and lanyard—ASM is striving to recycle as many meeting materials as possible.

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SPONSOR LIST

DIAMOND SPONSORS

University of Oklahoma

SILVER SPONSORS

BRONZE SPONSORS

Anonymous

Association Book Exhibit

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Louis Collins Rare Books

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The Johns Hopkins University Press

CONTRIBUTOR

Anonymous

LITERATURE

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The University of Oklahoma Welcomes Participants to

the Conference of the American Society of Mammalogists

Enjoy your visit to the OU campus and the Sam Noble Museum

of Natural History!The University of Oklahoma is an equal opportunity institution. www.ou.edu/eoo

- The Pride of Oklahoma

Photo by Welch Creative

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GENERAL MEETING INFORMATION

Meeting Room Information Please turn off beepers and cell phones or set them to manner mode during presentations. Auction and Raffle — Great Hall C Banquet — Sam Noble Museum Board of Directors Meeting (Friday) — Meeting Rooms 14-15 Board of Directors Meeting (Sunday) — Meeting Rooms 14-15 Capstone — Great Halls D & E Committee Meetings — Meeting Rooms 1-6 Donor Reception — Great Hall B Exhibit Area — Great Hall C Members Meetings — Great Halls D & E New Members/Attendees Reception — Great Hall B Officers and Plenary I Speakers Lunch — Grand Avenue Room Opening Reception — Great Hall B Picnic — Myriad Botanical Gardens Plenary I — Great Halls D & E Plenary II — Great Halls D & E Poster Presentations — Great Hall C Refreshment Breaks — Great Hall C Registration — Great Hall Foyer Run for Research — start from the Cox Convention Center, running to the Oklahoma City National

Memorial Poster Social — Great Hall C Pre-banquet Social — Sam Noble Museum Student Mixer — Devon Center 50th Floor Symposium I — Great Halls D & E Symposium II — Great Halls D & E Symposium III — Great Halls D & E Symposium IV — Great Halls D & E Teacher Workshops — Sam Noble Museum Technical Sessions — Great Halls D & E, Meeting Rooms 16, 17 Thematic Session I — Great Halls D & E Thematic Session II — Great Halls D & E Workshop I — Meeting Room 17 Workshop II — Meeting Room 17 Workshop III — Meeting Room 18 Internet Access Internet access is free to all ASM participants in hotel rooms, lobby and public areas of the hotel and throughout the conference area. Registration Desk The Registration Desk, located at the Ballroom Foyer of the Cox Convention Center, will be open for registration from 7:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m. Friday, 6 June, 7:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Saturday, 7 June, and 7:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday. Business Center The Ricoh Business Center, located on the first floor of the Cox Convention Center, is open 8:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. The Ricoh Business Center can assist you with all your copying, shipping, and faxing needs.

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Messages and Job Announcements Message boards are located near the Registration Desk. Participants may post messages for friends and colleagues. The registration staff will also post telephone and other messages on these boards. Urgent messages should be directed to the Renaissance Oklahoma City Convention Center Hotel (405)-228-8000. These will be relayed to meeting coordinators and posted for participants as soon as possible. Job announcements or information about employment opportunities may be posted on the message boards as well. Food and Beverage Morning and afternoon refreshment breaks will be served in Great Hall C. Host and/or cash bars will be available during:

Donor Reception, 6:00 – 6:30 p.m., Friday 6 June New Members/Attendees Reception, 6:30 – 7:00 p.m., Friday 6 June Opening Reception, 7:00 – 10:00 p.m., Friday 6 June Student Mixer, 6:00 – 7:30 p.m., Saturday 7 June Picnic, 6:00 – 9:00 p.m., Sunday 8 June Poster Session II, 7:00 – 8:00 p.m., Monday 9 June Raffle and Auction, 8:00 – 10:00 p.m., Monday 9 June Pre-banquet Social, 6:30 – 7:00 p.m., Tuesday 10 June Banquet, 7:00 – 9:30 p.m., Tuesday 10 June

Lunch is on your own each day. A number of restaurants, from casual to fine dining, are available on-site or nearby. A list of local restaurants is listed on page 53. Food trucks may also be available nearby located outside the Cox Convention Center.

Name Badge Color Scheme Award Recipient – White Board of Directors – Emerald Green Committee Chair – Royal Blue Editor – Royal Blue Honorary Member – Emerald Green Past President – Black President – Emerald Green President Elect – Emerald Green Program Committee – Red Recording Secretary – Emerald Green Secretary Treasurer – Emerald Green Sponsors – Turquois Trustee – Emerald Green Vice President – Emerald Green 16th Annual Gordon L. Kirkland Memorial Run/Walk for Research All proceeds go to the ASM Future Mammalogists Fund Date and Race Start Time: 6:00 a.m. Sunday, 8 June Start Location: Cox Convention Center Race Course: Cox Convention Center, Myriad Botanical Gardens, Oklahoma City National Memorial Length: 5K run or 2K run/walk—Maps will be provided Sign-up: Register on-line or during Registration hours at the Registration Desk Entry Fee: $20 (no t-shirt); $35 (includes t-shirt)

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PRESENTATION INFORMATION

Oral Presenters Oral presentations will be allotted 12 min for the talk and 3 min for questions. Please bring your presentation to the assigned session at least 15 min prior to the start of your session on a USB Flash “thumb” drive or a CD. Laser pointers will be available. Your presentation must be created in, or converted to, Microsoft’s PowerPoint program. The computers in the session rooms will be Windows based PCs (Windows 7) with Microsoft Office 2010. It is recommended that all image and video files be saved into a folder with your PowerPoint file on a USB Flash “thumb” drive or a CD in the event that there are problems when you review your presentation. PowerPoint files created on Macintosh computers should be previewed on a PC to ensure cross-platform compatibility. Session moderators have been designated to facilitate each session. The names of the moderators are noted in the session schedule. Moderators will be provided a packet of instructions in advance and when checking in at the Registration Desk. Poster Presenters Poster session dates and times are as follows: Poster Session I: Sunday, 8 June 3:30 – 4:30 p.m. Poster Session II: Monday, 9 June 7:00 – 8:00 p.m. At least one author must be present during the entire poster session time period. Poster Size—Poster boards (4' high and 4' long) [1.2 m high by 1.2 m wide] and pushpin attachments will be provided. Poster Board Assignments—All poster boards will be numbered. Because some posters are being evaluated, please make sure that you place your poster in the correct location. Poster Board Set-up and Take-down—Posters will be available for viewing during the entire meeting. You can place your poster on your assigned board beginning 8:00 a.m. Saturday, 7 June; all posters must be in place by the 3:30 p.m., Sunday 8 June. Your poster must be removed by the end of the conference. If your poster is not removed or claimed by 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, 10 June, it will be discarded. F1000 Posters! Consider extending the life of your presentation by depositing it in the open access repository—F1000 Posters! Go to http://f1000.com/posters/fordepositors for information. Upload your file and maximize the value of your conference presentations.

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EXHIBITORS Exhibitors are located in Ballroom C of the Cox Convention Center during following hours:

Saturday, 7 June 8:00 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. Sunday, 8 June 8:00 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. Monday, 9 June 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m., and 6:30 – 9:00 p.m. (evening optional) Tuesday, 10 June 8:00 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.

Exhibitors

Advanced Telemetry Systems provides researchers with animal tracking and monitoring products of the highest quality and reliability.

Allen Press provides the most comprehensive offering of integrated services for scholarly journal and special interest publication production.

Association Book Exhibit represents leading publishers at major academic/professional meetings nationwide.

Conference Direct and K-State Conference Services are are proud to partner with ASM to facilitate their annual conference. Stop by the table to see all that those organizations have to offer and find out how we could help make your next event successful, no matter the location.

Forestry Suppliers, Inc. is the leading supplier of Forestry, Agricultural, Environmental, and Surveying equipment for natural resource professionals.

Louis Collins Books specializes in rare books, out-of-print books, used books, secondhand books, and other hard-to-find literature.

Oklahoma City Convention & Visitors Bureau is the official Tourism Promotion Agency for Oklahoma City.

Reconyx is known worldwide as the industry leader in digital infrared game cameras.

Research and Testing Laboratory offers services in the evaluation of microbial diversity, sequencing, bioinformatics, and biostatistics.

Telenax provides telemetry, electronic, and telecommunications equipment for wildlife research and its conservation.

The Johns Hopkins University Press publishes books, journals, and online collections for students, professionals, and general readers.

Tomahawk Live Trap offers hundreds of animal and pest control products used by professionals.

Wildlife Materials, Inc. manufactures radio telemetry equipment that has benefited wildlife and fishery researchers, helped recover valuable hunting dogs and falcons, assisted 911 rescue teams, and assisted numerous professional care facilities around the world.

Skulls Unlimited is one of the world’s leading suppliers of osteological specimens.

Literature Only

Alpha Mach offers scientific instrumentation for submerged and hostile environments.

Bone Clones offers quality, affordable animal and human skulls, skeletons, hominids, all items of special interest to anthropologists, zoologists, educators, and paleontologists.

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Call 800-272-8727 | Online: www.livetrap.com8 0 0 - 2 7 2 - 8 7 2 7 • w w w. l i v e t r a p . c o m P O B o x 1 5 5 , H a z e l h u r s t , W I 5 4 5 3 1

At Tomahawk Live Trap, our collapsible traps are designed to unfold or fold then store away easily, making your job just a little more sweeter.

Tomahawk folding traps have been researchers’ primary tool for safe, reliable animal capture for over 75 years. When folded they are 1/10th the size of rigid traps allowing more traps to be carried into the field at one time. They unfold or fold in seconds with no tools or assembly required. And they are the most effective and strongest folding cage traps available.

Folded For easy storage

even easierthan pie!

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ConferencePlanningS o l u t i o n s

VISIT: conferences.k-state.edu

Let Kansas State University Conference Services experts plan your next event

The K-State conference team will ensure your event is professionally planned and delivered. Let us take care of the details while you focus on program content and engaging with colleagues.

• Site selection

• Registration services

• Logistical arrangements

• Marketing services

• Financial management

• On-site event management

• Continuing education credit

• Evaluation

Contact [email protected] or call 785-532-5569 to partner with K-State Conference Services for your next event.

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SOCIAL EVENTS

Thursday, 5 June – 6:00 p.m. Board of Directors Dinner Friday, 6 June – 6:00 – 6:30 p.m. Donor Reception – Great Hall B In appreciation and recognition of the generosity of those who donated to the ASM in 2013, the society invites all 2013 donors to a reception hosted by the Development Committee. Donor contribution(s) enhance the vitality of the society and support the careers of the next generation of mammalogists—our students and young professionals. We thank you for your generosity and hope to see you at the reception. Complimentary light hors d'oeurves, hosted keg beer, and a cash bar will be provided. Friday, 6 June – 6:30 – 7:00 p.m. New Members/Attendees Reception – Great Hall B Members who have recently joined the ASM or are attending their first meeting are invited to this New Member/Attendees Reception to meet ASM members and other new members. Even if this isn't your first time to an ASM Annual Meeting or you are not a new member, feel free to stop by and welcome new members and new meeting attendees. Enjoy a great selection of complimentary light hors d'oeurves, hosted keg beer, and a cash bar. The New Member/Attendee Reception is hosted by the Membership Committee. Friday, 6 June – 7:00 – 10:00 p.m. Opening Reception – Great Hall B Attendees will kick off the conference with an opening night reception. Enjoy the opportunity to socialize with friends, colleagues, and other conference attendees, and meet our 2014 exhibitors. Enjoy a great selection of complimentary light hors d'oeurves, hosted keg beer, and a cash bar. Saturday, 7 June – 12:30 – 2:00 p.m. ASM Officers and Plenary Session I Speakers Lunch – Grand Avenue Room The ASM officers invite the speakers from Plenary Session I to an informal lunch in honor of their awards. Saturday, 7 June – 6:00 – 7:30 p.m. Student Mixer – Devon Center 50th Floor All student members of the ASM are welcome to come and socialize with your friends and colleagues, and meet new student members. Enjoy a great selection of complimentary light hors d'oeurves and a cash bar. The Student Mixer is hosted by the Education and Graduate Students Committee. Sunday, 8 June – 6:00 – 9:00 p.m. Picnic – Myriad Botanical Gardens Join your friends and colleagues at the picnic at the Myriad Botanical Gardens— one of Oklahoma City’s most beloved public spaces, offering a 17-acre natural escape in the very heart of downtown Oklahoma City. A children’s garden, “splash fountains,” as well as paths for walking and jogging provide guests young and old with a place in which to find solitude with nature or seek community and the company of others. Monday, 9 June – 7:00-8:00 p.m. Poster Session Social – Great Hall C The Monday night poster session will include an evening social, poster awards, and raffle. What a great opportunity to discuss research with poster presenters and socialize with your colleagues. The social will offer hosted keg beer and a cash bar.

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Monday, 9 June – 8:00-10:00 p.m. Auction and Raffle – Great Hall C Continue your socializing and support the ASM's Future Mammalogists Fund through donating to and purchasing from the auction! The Auction will follow the Poster Session Social. Tuesday, 10 June – 6:00 p.m. Buses depart Renaissance Hotel for Sam Noble Museum Tuesday, 10 June – 6:30 – 7:00 p.m. Pre-Banquet Social – Sam Noble Museum This is your invitation to meet and socialize with colleagues with complimentary light hors d'oeurves and a cash bar at the Pre-Banquet Social Hour. Tuesday, 10 June – 7:00 – 9:30 p.m. Banquet – Sam Noble Museum Join us at the Annual Banquet where ASM members and friends recognize and honor a few of their own during this awards presentation. Unwind, socialize, and say good-byes at this conclusion to a great week. Dinner, complimentary wine, and a cash bar will be provided. Tuesday, 10 June – 9:30 p.m. Buses depart Sam Noble Museum for Renaissance Hotel

Mammalogy at Johns Hopkins

Primate Comparative AnatomyDaniel L. Gebo

“A very strong addition to the available books on primate anatomy.”—Timothy M. Ryan, The Pennsylvania State University$84.95 hardcover/ebook

Essential Readings in Evolutionary Biologyedited by Francisco J. Ayala and John C. Avise

“An excellent collection of classic papers.”—Science, Religion and Culture$49.95 hardcover

Squirrels of the WorldRichard W. Thorington, Jr., John L. Koprowski, Michael A. Steele, and James F. Whatton“Still think you know all you need to about the Sciuridae? What tree squirrel specializes in ant-eating, and has a distinct skull with a long snout? What bushy-tailed tree squirrel weighs only around 15 g, the size of a deer mouse (Peromyscus maniculatus)? I’m not going to tell you. Buy the book.”—Journal of Mammology$75.00 hardcover/ebook

Visit our booth at the annual meeting for a 30% discount and free domestic shipping

Mammals of Mexicoedited by Gerardo Ceballos

“Mexico is a mega-diverse country, with one of the world’s richest mammal faunas. Ceballos is an internationally recognized scientist known for his remark-able breadth and insights. This book—built on the successful foundations of Los Mamíferos Silvestres de México and enlisting the contributions of numerous specialists—showcases both to great effect.”—Bruce Patterson, The Field Museum$150.00 hardcover/ebook

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CAPSTONE Tuesday, 10 June — 2:30 – 3:30 p.m., Great Halls D & E

Dr. Joel Brown Ecology of Fear: Past, Present and Future Directions  

The capstone speaker is Dr. Joel Brown, Professor at the University of Illinois, Chicago. Dr. Brown is an evolutionary ecologist who explores how natural selection acting as an optimization process determines feeding behaviors, population characteristics, and the properties of communities. His research includes the mathematical formulation and field tests of models and hypotheses based on foraging theory, consumer-resource models of species coexistence, and evolutionary game theory using the concept of evolutionary stable strategies (ESS). At present, he is using the giving-up density approach to examine the ecology of fear in fox squirrels, the community organization of desert granivores in the Negev Desert, Israel, the effects of granivory, herbivory, and fire on prairie restorations, and applications to the ecology of black rhinoceros, leopards, and mountain lions.

PLENARY II Sunday, 8 June — 8:30 – 10:15 a.m., Great Halls D & E

Dr. Ricardo A. Ojeda, Joseph Grinnell Awardee (Cancelled) Towards a Research Training Program in Temperate Aridlands

Dr. Ojeda has directed 41 doctoral, masters, and research investigators, one of the largest mammal-training programs in Argentina. His students have conducted investigations on mammals and desert ecology and on topics from physiology to phylogenetics. His students have gone on to be researchers, teachers, and wildlife and conservation personnel at provincial and national levels. Ricardo has opened new opportunities for young scientists in the Argentine scientific establishment. He has created opportunities not only through teaching but also by helping create the Argentine Mammal Society (SAREM) and being founding editor of Mastozoologia Neotropical, the premier scientific journal on mammals in South America. His impact in training the next generation of desert mammal ecologists and his influence as a teacher will continue for decades to come. Dr. Ricardo Ojeda is Investigador Principal CONICET, Jefe del Grupo de Investigaciones de la Biodiversidad, Instituto Argentino de Investigaciones de las Zonas Aridas.

Dr. Joel Berger, Aldo Leopold Awardee Conservation’s Unwieldy Path—Big Animals in an Increasingly Peopled World

Dr. Berger has addressed questions about mammalian ecology and conservation at broad geographic scales across 5 continents including 1) social behavior and ecology of wild horses, 2) behavioral and demographic consequences of horn removal in rhinos, 3) effects of predator reintroduction on the ecology of prey species and on the structure of communities, 4) long-distance migration and conservation of migration corridors, 5) effects of climate change in the Arctic on demography and persistence of musk ox, and 6) and conservation of large mammals in Bhutan, Tibet, and Mongolia. Dr. Berger has engaged in capacity building through efforts with local conservation organizations, education and training for local scientists and students, and governmental agencies. Dr. Berger holds an endowed chair, the John J. Craighead Chair of Wildlife Conservation at the University of Montana, and he is a Senior Scientist for the Wildlife Conservation Society.

Dr. Rudy Boonstra, C. Hart Merriam Awardee Of Memory and Mammals: The Effects of Individual Experience on Population Processes in Nature

Dr. Boonstra has long been a leader in the area of mammalian ecology and physiology. He applies techniques and perspectives from animal behavior, physiology, neurobiology, endocrinology and ecology to address fundamental issues about the interactions of animals with their environment, in particular the role of stress on mammal populations and communities. He is particularly well known for his innovative research on the snowshoe hare cycle. Here, his work has been seminal, engendering many thousands of citations and much popular press and leading to the development of a research area, “the ecology of fear”. Dr. Boonstra, a professor at the University of Toronoto, is an active and internationally renowned mammalogist, whose excitement for ideas and sheer intellectual power have led to a better understanding of the role of stress in natural populations of mammals.

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SYMPOSIA The Integrative Biology of Mammalian Hibernation

Organizer: Dr. Craig Frank Saturday, 7 June — 1:30 – 3:30 p.m., Great Halls D & E

The Integrative Biology of Mammalian Hibernation Symposium aims to provide a comprehensive overview of the role of hibernation in the ecology and evolution of mammals, and develop and present testable hypothesis as to how recent climate change will affect populations of hibernating mammals.

Xenarthrans as Model Species in Mammalogy Organizer: Dr. Jim Loughry

Sunday, 8 June — 1:30 – 3:30 p.m., Great Halls D & E The Xenarthrans as Model Species in Mammalogy Symposium will focus on a unique assemblage of species (anteaters, sloths, armadillos) that are not well known to scientists that study other groups. The symposium will provide an overview of current work being done and how these studies may have relevance for research being conducted on other species of mammals.

The United States Biological Survey and North American Natural History Organizers: Drs. David J. Schmidly and Al Gardner

Monday, 9 June — 8:00 – 10:00 a.m., Great Halls D & E The United States Biological Survey (USBS) played a significant role in the natural history of the United States and Mexico, in the formation of the science of mammalogy, and in the organization and development of the American Society of Mammalogists. The ASM and USBS were for all practical purposes “sister organizations” until the issue of predator control in the 1920s and 1930s came close to fragmenting both organizations. This symposium will chronicle the history of the USBS and the many contributions of its leaders and personnel, the development of US and Mexican mammalogy, and the predator wars between the USBS and the ASM.

Museum Resources in Undergraduate Education Organizers: Drs. Kayce Bell and Joe Cook

Monday, 9 June — 1:30 – 4:00 p.m., Great Halls D & E This symposium will explore ways to expand the use of the vast physical, genetic, and bioinformatics resources of natural history museums in undergraduate education. Topics will include use of museum collections and museum databases in undergraduate education, engaging students from underrepresented groups, engaging Latin America, and teaching with “Big Data.”

TEACHER WORKSHOPS Saturday, 7 June — 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m., Sam Noble Museum

Tracking Mammals for Elementary Teachers Dr. Pamela Owen with the Texas Natural Science Center Senior Biodiversity Center and Dr. Barbara Shaw with Colorado State University Extension STEM Specialist for the Western Region will provide teachers with engaging activities for their students to use available clues (such as footprints, and scat) to piece together who has been here. This program also will provide teachers with tools to use simple, age appropriate math, to analyze results for students to interpret their findings.

Population Dynamics for Middle School/High School Teachers This workshop is led by Dr. George Feldhamer, Professor Emeritus from Southern Illinois University, author of the college text, Mammalogy: Adaptation, Diversity, Ecology; Deer: The Animal Answer Guide; and Wild Mammals of North America: Biology, Management, and Conservation. Dr. Feldhamer will guide teachers through a series of activities to examine populations of a closed and open system using taxi cabs and green pick-up trucks as proxy for mammals in the wild. Additionally, he will work with teachers on analyzing data meeting statistical analysis standards. This class will add authenticity for students by clearly demonstrating these concepts.

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WORKSHOPS Professional Interview Strategies: Crafting Your Message

Presenters: Sue Fairbanks, Melissa Merrick, John Koprowski, Karen Munroe, Brad Blood, Susan Loeb Friday, 6 June — 8:00 – 10:00 a.m., Meeting Room 17

In discussions with academic search committee members, new PhDs on the job market, and doctoral students contemplating their career options, it is evident that a major shortfall of graduate education is the lack of training or preparation for the interview process. The goal of this workshop is to provide an overview of different types of interview processes, what to expect, what search committees are looking for, and what attributes make a candidate stand out both in person and on applications and cover letters. The workshop will end with a roundtable, informal question and answer session where attendees will be able to ask about specific details of interest to them or applicable to their particular job searches.

Science Writing, Art, and Photography: Communicating with Media Presenters: Angela Botzer, Jen Tregarthen

Friday, 6 June — 10:30 – 11:30 a. m., Meeting Room 17 Communicating with the media is crucial to scientific research, but can sometimes lead to frustration, misinformation, and misrepresentation. Examining ways both journalists and scientists can prepare ahead of time can strengthen interviews immensely. Scientists knowing in advance which artwork, photography, and graphics might be needed all help improve communication, as does the journalist’s preparation in advance for interviews. Identifying what is news, using scientific language that is understandable to the journalist and the mainstream public, and helping the journalist develop a story using first person experience, humor, character, excitement, and adventure are all valuable tools that both journalists and scientists can use to their advantage. Giving quotations that you want to be quoted, answering the questions you weren’t asked but wish you were, and conveying character all put “leavening” in your story and ultimately your communication with media and the public.

Georeferencing Natural History Specimen Data Presenter: Margaret Landis

Friday, 6 June — 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m., Meeting Room 18 This workshop will focus on digitizing natural history specimen data and will cover tools and techniques used to correctly interpret textual location data into spatial descriptions that can be used in mapping and analyses. The primary goal is to prepare participants to return to their home institutions with the necessary skills and knowledge to launch or enhance a digitization program, either individually or through collaboration or partnership. Workshop topics will include an overview and introduction, standards, fundamentals of georeferencing best practices, resources, examples, and discussion.

FIELD TRIPS Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge, Meers (lunch), and Fort Sill

Thursday, 5 June — 7:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. The Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge is a 59,020-acre refuge that hosts a rare piece of the past—a remnant mixed grass prairie that provides habitat for Bison, Elk, and Prairie Dogs. Fort Sill was founded by General Sheridan during a campaign against the Southern Plains tribes in 1869 and is best known as the home and final resting place of Geronimo, the Chiricahua Apache war chief. The Meers Store and Restaurant is home of the "Best Burger in Oklahoma." Once a bustling town of miners seeking gold in the Wichita Mountains, the population has dwindled to the present residents: one family of six people, eight cats and a dog. Enjoy the famous Meersburger, a 7" diameter burger served in a tin plate. Transportation, some snacks and beverages, and guides will be provided.

Skulls Unlimited and Museum of Osteology Friday, 6 June — 1:00 – 5:00 p.m.

Enjoy this behind the scene’s tour of Skulls Unlimited, a supplier of osteological specimens to educational, medical, and research communities. The tour will also include a visit to the Museum of Osteology where you can view more than 300 skulls and skeletons of species from all corners of the world. Exhibits include adaptation, locomotion, classification and diversity of the vertebrate kingdom. Transportation, guides, and refreshments will be provided.

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BOARD OF DIRECTORS, MEMBERS, AND COMMITTEE MEETINGS All meeting rooms listed below are located in the Cox Convention Center. Friday, 6 June 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Board of Directors Meeting – Meeting Rooms 14 & 15 (refreshments and lunch provided) Saturday, 7 June 10:45 a.m. – 12:15 p.m. Members Meeting – Great Halls D & E 12:30 – 1:30 p.m. Conservation Awards Committee – Meeting Room 3 12:30 – 1:30 p.m. Informatics Committee – Meeting Room 5 12:30 – 1:30 p.m. Honoraria and Travel Awards Committee – Meeting Room 1 12:30 – 1:30 p.m. Conservation Committee – Meeting Room 4 12:30 – 2:00 p.m. Publications Committee – Meeting Room 2 1:30 – 2:30 p.m. African Graduate Student Fund – Meeting Room 3 2:30 – 3:30 p.m. Program Committee – Meeting Room 2 3:00 – 4:00 p.m. Animal Care and Use Committee – Meeting Room 1 Sunday, 8 June 11:00 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. Members Meeting – Great Halls D & E 1:30 – 3:00 p.m. Board of Directors Meeting – Meeting Rooms 14 & 15 (lunch not provided) 12:30 – 1:30 p.m. Public Education Committee – Meeting Room 1 12:30 – 1:30 p.m. Mammal Images Library Committee – Meeting Room 2 12:30 – 1:30 p.m. Nomenclature Committee – Meeting Room 3 12:30 – 1:30 p.m. Systematic Collections Committee – Meeting Room 4 3:00 – 4:00 p.m. Membership Committee – Meeting Room 2 3:30 – 4:30 p.m. Development Committee – Meeting Room 1 Monday, 9 June 10:00 – 11:00 a.m. Jackson Award Committee – Meeting Room 1 Noon – 1:00 p.m. Publications Committee – Meeting Room 1 Noon – 1:00 p.m. Education and Graduate Students Committee – 5 Noon – 1:00 p.m. Latin American Fellowship Committee – Meeting Room 4 1:00 – 2:00 p.m. International Relations Committee – Meeting Room 2 1:00 – 2:00 p.m. Grants-in-Aid Committee – Meeting Room 3 4:30 – 5:30 p.m. Human Diversity Committee – Meeting Room 1

Committees not Scheduled to Meet Archives Committee Checklist Committee Grinnell Award Committee

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PROGRAM AT-A-GLANCE

Room Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday 7 June 8 June 9 June 10 June

AM Meeting Room 16 TS6 TS12

Meeting Room 17 TS7 TS13

Great Halls D & E

Plenary I Members Meeting

Plenary II Members Meeting

Symposium III TS5

Thematic Session II TS11

PM Meeting Room 16 TS1

TS3 TS9

TS15

Meeting Room 17 TS2

TS4 TS10

TS16

Meeting Rooms 14-15

Board of Directors Meeting

Great Halls D & E

Symposium I Thematic Session I Symposium II Symposium IV

TS8 TS14

Capstone

Great Hall C Poster Session I

EVE Sam Noble Museum Pre-Banquet Social

Banquet

Myriad Gardens Picnic

Great Hall C Poster Session II

Raffle Auction

Devon

Center 50th Floor

Student Mixer

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NOTES

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SATURDAY, 7 JUNE, MORNING SESSION Plenary I – Great Halls D & E

8:00 AM Welcome and Announcements President Edward J Heske

8:10 AM Anna M. Jackson Award 1E,** Too Hot to Trot? Pika Survival in a Time of Disturbance and Global Change J Varner, M S Lambert, J J Horns, E A Beever, M D Dearing

8:30 AM Elmer C. Birney Award 2E,** Cattle-wildlife Coexistence: How Body Size and Digestion Affect the Response of Wild Grazers to Cattle Grazing J M Schieltz, D I Rubenstein

8:50 AM A. Brazier Howell Award 3** Rapid Morphological Change in the Masticatory Structures of an Important Ecosystem Service Provider J W Doudna, B J Danielson

9:10 AM BREAK – Great Hall C

9:30 AM William T. Hornaday Award 4** Range Collapse, Demography and Habitat Selection of the Critically Endangered Hirola Antelope, Beatragus hunter, in Kenya A H Ali

9:50 AM Albert R. and Alma Shadle Award 5E,** Human Macroecology: Because Humans are Mammals Too J R Burger

10:20 AM ASM Fellowship 6E,** Mammals and Trypanosome Parasites: Searching the Origins of Chagas Disease C M Pinto

10:50 AM Closing and Announcements President Edward J Heske

11:15 AM MEMBERS MEETING – Great Halls D & E

12:30 PM OFFICERS AND PLENARY I SPEAKERS LUNCH – Grand Avenue Room

12:30 PM LUNCH

1:30 PM SYMPOSIUM I – THE INTEGRATIVE BIOLOGY OF MAMMALIAN HIBERNATION – Great Halls D & E

3:30 PM BREAK – Great Hall C

4:00 PM THEMATIC SESSION I: RECENT ADVANCES IN MAMMALOGY – Great Halls D & E

6:00 PM STUDENT MIXER – Devon Center 50th Floor

EEvaluated presentation TAStudent travel award ECTEarly career travel award **Research funded by the ASM URAUndergraduate award CCancelled presentation

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SATURDAY, 7 JUNE, AFTERNOON SESSIONS Symposium I - Great Halls D & E

The Integrative Biology of Mammalian Hibernation - Moderator: C L Frank 1:30 PM Welcome and Introduction C L Frank

1:30 PM 7 Symbiotic Interactions between Gut Microbiota and Their Hibernator Hosts H V Carey

2:00 PM 8 Hibernation in the Extreme: Lessons from Arctic Ground Squirrels and Black Bears B M Barnes, O Toien

2:30 PM 9 Hibernation as a Major Determinant of Marmot Life-history Traits K B Armitage

3:00 PM 10 The Relationship Between Climate, Dietary Fatty Acid Composition and the Over-winter Survival of Golden-mantled Ground Squirrels

C L Frank, K D Howard

3:30 AM Concluding Remarks C Frank, K Armitage, B Barnes, H Carey

3:30 PM BREAK – Great Hall C

Thematic Session I - Great Halls D & E Recent Advances in Mammalogy - Moderator: Molly McDonough

4:00 PM Welcome and Introduction M McDonough

4:00 PM 11ECT How Did a Vampire Bat Evolve from a Bat that Eats Insects? C D Phillips, R J Baker

4:30 PM 12 Ecological and Population Genetic Assessments of Host-parasite Associations J E Light

5:00 PM 13 Future Prospects for a Fully Resolved Mammal Tree of Life W Murphy

6:00 – 7:30 PM STUDENT MIXER – Devon Center 50th Floor

EEvaluated presentation TAStudent travel award ECTEarly career travel award **Research funded by the ASM URAUndergraduate award CCancelled presentation

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SUNDAY, 8 JUNE, MORNING SESSION 6:00 AM RUN FOR RESEARCH – Starts from the Cox Convention Center

Plenary II - Great Halls D & E 8:30 AM Welcome and Announcements

President-Elect Eileen Lacey

Joseph Grinnell Award 14C Towards a Research Training Program in Temperate Aridlands R A Ojeda

8:40 AM Aldo Leopold Award 15 Conservation’s Unwieldy Path—Big Animals in an Increasingly Peopled World J Berger

9:25 AM C Hart Merriam Award 16 Of Memory and Mammals: The Effects of Individual Experience on Population Processes in Nature R Boonstra

10:10 AM Closing and Announcements President-Elect Eileen Lacey

10:15 AM BREAK – Great Hall C

10:45 AM MEMBERS MEETING – Great Halls D & E

12:15 PM LUNCH

1:30 PM BOARD OF DIRECTORS MEETINGS – Meeting Rooms 14 & 15

1:30 PM SYMPOSIUM II – XENARTHRANS AS MODEL SPECIES IN MAMMALOGY – Great Halls D & E

1:30 PM TECHNICAL SESSIONS 1 and 2 – Meeting Rooms 16 and 17

3:30 PM POSTER SESSION I AND BREAK – Great Hall C

4:30 PM TECHNICAL SESSIONS 3 and 4 – Meeting Rooms 16 and 17

6:00 PM PICNIC – Myriad Botanical Gardens

EEvaluated presentation TAStudent travel award ECTEarly career travel award **Research funded by the ASM URAUndergraduate award CCancelled presentation

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SUNDAY, 8 JUNE, AFTERNOON SESSIONS Symposium II – Great Halls D & E

Xenarthrans as Model Species in Mammalogy - Moderator: W J Loughry

1:30 PM Welcome and Introduction W J Loughry

1:30 PM 17 Sleep in Wild Xenarthrans B Voirin, M Wikelski, N C Rattenborg

2:00 PM 18 Ten Burning Questions About Armadillos W J Loughry, C M McDonough

2:30 PM 19 A Decade of Advances in Xenarthran Molecular Phylogenies F Delsuc

3:00 PM 20 What Can We Learn From Xenarthrans About the Conservation of Mammals? M Superina, A M Abba

3:30 PM Discussion and Concluding Remarks W J Loughry, F Delsuc, M Superina, B Voirin

1:30 PM TECHNICAL SESSIONS 1 and 2 – Meeting Rooms 16 and 17

3:30 PM POSTER SESSION I AND BREAK – Great Hall C

4:30 PM TECHNICAL SESSIONS 3 and 4 – Meeting Rooms 16 and 17

6:00 PM PICNIC – Myriad Botanical Gardens

EEvaluated presentation TAStudent travel award ECTEarly career travel award **Research funded by the ASM URAUndergraduate award CCancelled presentation

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SUNDAY, 8 JUNE, AFTERNOON SESSIONS ROOM Meeting Room 16 Meeting Room 17

SESSION/SYMPOSIUM Technical Session 1 Technical Session 2

MODERATOR Karen McBee Nate Upham

1:30 PM 21 S Sheffield, C Iudica, J Wenzel 29 B Patterson, N Upham

Gone with the Wind: Effects of a Tornado Blowdown and Subsequent Forest Management on the Small Mammal

Assemblage Inhabiting Eastern Deciduous Forest A New Family of Mammals Endemic to the Horn of Africa:

the Heterocephalidae (Rodentia: Hystricomorpha)

1:45 PM 22 P Stapp, M Fowler, C Moore 30 L Olson, K Scholten, N Woodman, E Sargis

Post-fire Recovery of Rodent Communities and Vegetation in High-elevation Mojave Desert "The" Treeshrew in Biomedical Research: An Evolutionary

Reality Check

2:00 PM 23 A Edelman 31E V Mason, W Murphy, K Helgen

Response of Small Mammals to Fire-based Restoration of Montane Longleaf Pine

Reassessing Colugo Phylogeny, Taxonomy, and Biogeography with Next Generation Sequencing Data

from Museum Specimens 2:15 PM 24E M-E Jacques, S Hallgren, D Wilson, K McBee 32 K Everson, S Jansa, S Goodman, L Olson

Low Basal Area Practices Alter Small Mammal Communities in Oak-Pine Forests of Southeast Oklahoma

Colonization, Adaptive Radiation, and Evolutionary Constraint: The Natural History of Madagascar's Small

Mammals 2:30 PM 25 E Barthelmess 33E P Galante, R Muscarella, S Goodman, R Anderson

Spatial Distribution of Road-kills and Factors Influencing Road Mortality for Mammals in Northern New York State

Comparing Optimally Complex Niche Models of a Malagasy Rodent Using Two Selection Techniques: AICc

vs. Jackknife 2:45 PM 26E M Blum, K Stewart, C Schroeder, T Wasley 34E R Boria, R Anderson

Impacts of Mining on Mule Deer Migrations in Nevada A Single-algorithm Approach to Creating an Ensemble of

Ecological Niche Models and Generating Maps of Uncertainty

3:00 PM 27 C Lowrey, K Longshore 35 J Esselstyn, A Achmadi, Maharadatunkamsi, T Giarla, K Rowe

Effects of Cumulative Human Disturbance on the Habitat

Use of Desert Bighorn Sheep in the River Mountains, Nevada

New Perspectives on Sunda Shelf Biogeography

3:15 PM 28E R Eguren, K McBee 36 N Pradhan, A Sharmo, C Woods, C Kilpatrick

Investigating Chiroptera from Tar Creek Superfund Site:

Community Structure, Metal Levels, and Behavioral Assays

Molecular Examination of the Mountain Voles of the Genus

Neodon

3:30 PM POSTER SESSION I AND BREAK – Great Hall C

4:30 PM TECHNICAL SESSIONS 3 and 4 – Meeting Rooms 16 and 17

6:00 PM PICNIC – Myriad Botanical Gardens

EEvaluated presentation TAStudent travel award ECTEarly career travel award **Research funded by the ASM URAUndergraduate award CCancelled presentation

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SUNDAY, 8 JUNE, POSTER SESSION I PRESENTER (S) TITLE

37E R Van Essen, A Capparella Using Deuterium and GIS Tools to Estimate Geographic Extents of Source Populations of Tree Bats Killed at a Central Illinois Wind Farm

38 V Bennett, A Hale, A Schildt, D Williams Evidence that Bats Utilize Wind Turbines as a Foraging Resource

39 A Debelica-Lee, B Ding, P Danley, K Wilkins Using Pyrosequencing to Determine Diet of the Tri-colored Bat, Perimyotis subflavus

40E L Hall, C Lambert, R Larsen, R Knight, B McMillan Competition Among Desert Bats at Water Sources: Influence of Surface Area and Habitat Complexity

41E K Ingram Ecosystem Services of Bats in California Agriculture: Bats as Natural Enemies of Codling Moth in Walnut Orchards

42E C Voirin, M Culver Mule Deer Diet Analyses: Comparing Past with Present Techniques

43 R Blythe, N Lichti, T Smyser, R Swihart Selection, Caching, and Consumption of Hardwood Seeds by Forest Rodents: Implications for Restoration of American Chestnut

44E K Preston, N Dochtermann How are Density Dependence, Population Variability, and Extinction Risk Related in Mammals?

45 D Kaufman, G Kaufman, D Kaufman What Have We Learned About Small Mammals in Tallgrass Prairie After 32 Years of Sampling? Dynamics and Drivers of Community Patterns

46E S Hale, J Koprowski Re-establishment of a Potential Keystone Species: Initial Impacts of Black-Tailed Prairie Dogs on Woody Species and Small Mammal Species Assemblages

47E,TA A-M Hodge, J Goheen The Effect of Invasive Prickly Pear Cactus (Opuntia stricta) on Mammalian Diversity in Central Kenya

48 M Gantchoff, J Belant Anthropogenic and Environmental Effects on Invasive Mammal Distribution in Northern Patagonia, Argentina

49 A Weyers, J Scheibe, B Pendley The Distribution and Abundance of Feral Hogs (Sus scrofa) at Mingo National Wildlife Refuge

50 A Trujano-Alvarez, M Briones-Salas, M Lavariega-Nolasco

Effects of Anthropogenic Activities on Liomys pictus Populations in the Tropical Forest of the Oaxaca Coastal Plain

51E R Dolman, D Leslie Jr. Small Mammal Response to Habitat Loss and Fragmentation in the Lower Rio Grande Valley

52 T Jung Short-term Effect of Fire on Habitat Use by Little Brown Bats (Myotis lucifugus) in Northwestern Canada

53 T Jung Dominance and Diversity in Shrew Assemblages in Logged Boreal Forest of Northwestern Canada

54 L Andresen-Everatt, K Everatt, T Jung Monitoring Collared Pikas (Ochotona collaris) as an Indicator Species for Climate Change: Modeling Patch Occupancy in Northwestern Canada

55 K Ernest, J Hooghkirk, B Sawada, A Tompkins Pikas in a Human-altered Landscape: Temporal and Spatial Patterns of Patch Occupancy in the Central Washington Cascades

EEvaluated presentation TAStudent travel award ECTEarly career travel award **Research funded by the ASM URAUndergraduate award CCancelled presentation

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SUNDAY, 8 JUNE, POSTER SESSION I PRESENTER (S) TITLE

56 J Pynne, A Edelman, A Hernandez Influence of Pine Forest Fragmentation on Southeastern Fox Squirrel Occupancy Patterns

57 D Kaufman, G Kaufman, D Kaufman Expansion of the Semi-arboreal White-footed Mouse in Tallgrass Prairie: Three Decades of Fire, Woody Invasion, and Land-Cover Change

58 D Corral, S Trewhitt A Comparison of Small Mammal Community Structure in Burned and Unburned Aspen Stands, Warner Mountains, California

59E T Sprayberry, A Edelman, S Lewis, M Rouse Influence of Prescribed Fire Management on Mesocarnivore Occupancy in Montane Longleaf Pine Forests

60 B Mixon, C McDonough Can Fecal Pellet Size Indicate Population Structure In Nine-banded Armadillos?

61E A Cheeseman, J Cohen Survival and Home Range of New England Cottontail (Sylvilagus transitionalis) in Response to Hunting, Competition, and Habitat Composition

62 R Eckerlin, W Bulmer, A Gardner, S Peurach West Virginia Rock Voles

63 C Chevalier, T Boyd, T Lee, C Phillips, J Powell, J Rowland, E Stith, M Wiley Summer Den Site Selection by Male Raccoons (Procyon lotor) in an Urban Habitat in Northwest Missouri

64E M Mills, R Denkhaus, M Slattery, V Bennett, J Young Monitoring Urban Bobcats (Lynx rufus) in Fort Worth/Dallas Area, Texas

65 V Jackson, W Fairbanks, S Lyda A Comparison of Black Bear Home Ranges in Two Distinct Populations in Oklahoma

66E A Bush, K Stewart, V Bleich, N Darby Effects of Perennially Available Water on Home Range Size of Mule Deer in Mojave National Preserve, California

67E,TA B Jesmer, J Goheen, M Kauffman, K Monteith Linking Climate and Habitat With Nutritional Condition and Recruitment in Moose

68E M Sackrider, S Clark, I Ortega Exurban Residents’ Perceptions of Naturally Returning Predators: Connecticut Case Study

69E G Sanchez, C Milling, J Rachlow Evaluating a Method for Sensing Ambient Temperature and its Effect on Behavior of Mountain Cottontails

70E,** H Ryu Natal Dispersal of the Golden Mantled Ground Squirrel

71E,** A Kilanowski, J Koprowski Do Behavioral Phenotypes Affect the Exploration Stage of Juvenile Dispersal in a Fossorial Rodent (Tamias dorsalis)?

4:30 PM TECHNICAL SESSIONS 3 and 4 – Meeting Rooms 16 and 17

6:00 PM PICNIC – Myriad Botanical Gardens

EEvaluated presentation TAStudent travel award ECTEarly career travel award **Research funded by the ASM URAUndergraduate award CCancelled presentation

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SUNDAY, 8 JUNE, AFTERNOON SESSIONS ROOM Meeting Room 16 Meeting Room 17

SESSION/SYMPOSIUM Technical Session 3 Technical Session 4

MODERATOR Diane Post Jacob Esselstyn

4:30 PM 72E,TA S Hirt, C Rosa, W Hood, T Best 78E C Sotero-Caio, F Yang, M Volleth, R Baker

Analyses of Stable Isotopes, Hormones, and Minerals of Baleen from Bowhead Whales (Balaena mysticetus)

Karyotypic Megaevolution on Phyllostominae Revisited: Chromosomal Rearrangements in the Bat Tonatia

saurophila

4:45 PM 73 G Michener 79E J Parlos, R Baker

Lifetime Reproductive Success in Richardson’s Ground Squirrels Phylogenetic Reconstructions of Dermanura:

Incongruence of Multiple Markers

5:00 PM 74E,**,TA R Green, K Purcell, C Thompson, D Kelt, H Wittmer 80 K Speer, Z Quicksall, D Reed

A Comparison of Fisher (Pekania [Martes] pennanti)

Reproductive Parameters in the Southern Sierra Nevada Relative to the Broader Geographic Range

Estimating Genetic Diversity, Dispersal, and Population Structure across Island Populations of Brazilian Free-

tailed Bats

5:15 PM 75 D Post, K Callicoatte, J Eldridge 81 C Miller-Butterworth, M Vonhof, J Rosenstern, G Turner, A Russell

The Effects of Access to Anthropogenic Resources on Reproductive Schedules in Neotoma micropus

Genetic Structure of Little Brown Bats (Myotis lucifugus) Corresponds with Spread of White-nose Syndrome among

Hibernacula 5:30 PM 76 T Holsomback 82E M Jones, L Olson

Rare, Morphometric Data for Texas Oryzomys palustris (Marsh Rice Rat) Dams, Embryos, and Fetuses Northern Range Extension of Keen’s Myotis and Other

Bats in Alaska

5:45 PM 77 K Edmonds, J Mueller 223E P Manlick, J Pauli

Effects of Photoperiod, Melatonin, and Environmental

Enrichment on Reproductive Function in the Female Marsh Rice Rat (Oryzomys palustris)

Moved from TS 16

Proximate Mechanisms of Delayed Recovery in Reintroduced American Martens

6:00 PM PICNIC – Myriad Botanical Gardens

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American Society of Mammalogists 94th Annual Meeting—Oklahoma City, Oklahoma  

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MONDAY, 9 JUNE, MORNING SESSIONS 7:00 – 7:45 a.m., Meeting Room 16

Putting Together a Quality ASM Meeting Tony Ballard, Program Coordinator, Kansas State University

With changes in the way that ASM meetings have been held the last few years, organizing a meeting that includes a university component has become more challenging. But, it doesn’t have to be that way! This session will focus on aspects of organizing a meeting that includes universities and colleges, local facilities, hotels and conference centers. Come gather some great ideas to get you thinking about future ASM meetings.

Symposium III – Great Halls D & E The United States Biological Survey and North American Natural History - Moderators: D J Schmidly and A

L Gardner

8:00 AM Welcome and Introduction D J Schmidly, A L Gardner

8:00 AM 83 History of the Bureau of Biological Survey, U.S. Department of Agriculture A L Gardner

8:20 AM 84 C Hart Merriam, Pioneering Mammalogist K B Sterling

8:40 AM 85 Vernon Bailey and the U.S. Biological Survey Federal Agents D J Schmidly

9:00 AM 86 Two Lives and Their Influence: Nelson, Goldman and a Universe of Mammals R A Medellín, X López-Medellín

9:20 AM 87 The Predator Wars Between the Biological Survey and the American Society of Mammalogists M J Robinson

9:40 AM Discussion and Concluding Remarks D J Schmidly, A L Gardner, R A Medellín, M J Robinson, K B Sterling

10:00 AM BREAK – Great Hall C

10:30 AM TECHNICAL SESSIONS 5, 6, 7 – Great Halls D & E, Meeting Rooms 16, 17

12:30 PM LUNCH

1:30 PM SYMPOSIUM III – MUSEUM RESOURCES IN UNDERGRADUATE EDUCATION – Great Halls D & E

3:30 PM BREAK – Great Hall C

4:00 PM TECHNICAL SESSIONS 8, 9, 10 – Great Halls D & E, Meeting Rooms 16, 17

7:00 PM POSTER SESSION II – Great Hall C

8:00 PM AUCTION AND RAFFLE – Great Hall C

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MONDAY, 9 JUNE, MORNING SESSIONS ROOM Great Halls D & E Meeting Room 16

SESSION/SYMPOSIUM Technical Session 5 Technical Session 6

MODERATOR Jason Malaney Ana Davidson

10:30 AM 88 J Hanson, E Rees 96 A Davidson, K Shoemaker, B Weinstein, G Costa, V Radeloff, C Rondinini, G Ceballos, C Graham

Evaluation of NexGen Sequencing Technology for Mammalian Genomes, Part 2

Geography of Global Mammal Extinction Risk

10:45 AM 89E J Wilkinson, E Rees, M Haynie, J Hanson 97 M Robinson

Comparison of Two Approaches for Microsatellite Library Development Using the Illumina MiSeq Platform Will Science or Politics Determine the Mexican Gray Wolf's

Future?

11:00 AM 90E,**,TA E Roberts, D Hardy, R Bradley 98 M Robinson

Is Zonadhesin a Useful Molecular Marker for Determining Ordinal Relationships among Mammalian Orders? Inadequate Recovery Planning for Northern Jaguars

11:15 AM 91 R Baker, C Phillips, J Wickliffe, F Khan, S Gaschak, K Makova, B Dickens 99ECT D Thornton, K Zeller, C Rondinini, L Boitani, K Crooks,

C Burdett, H Quigley

Multigenerational Exposure to the Chernobyl Environment in Bank Voles Alters the Mitochondrial Genome Evaluating the Umbrella Value of a Range-wide

Conservation Network

11:30 AM 92E R Platt, M Vandewege, C Kern, C Schmidt, F Hoffmann, D Ray 100ECT M Sagot, G Chaverrri

Large Numbers of Putative miRNAs Originate from DNA Transposons and Are Coincident with a Large Species

Radiation in Bats Roost Specialization Increases Extinction Risk in Bats

11:45 AM 93ECT J Malaney, C Feldman, M Cox, P Wolff, M Matocq 101E,** K Phelps, T Kingston

Translocated to the Fringe: Genetic and Niche Variation in

Bighorn Sheep of the Great Basin and Northern Mojave Deserts

Anthropogenic and Environmental Factors Influencing Cave Bat Diversity in the Philippines: Implications for

Conservation Agendas

12:00 PM 94ECT M Buchalski, W Boyce, M Penedo, T Vickers, D Gille, H Ernest 102 E,**,TA E Gomez-Ruiz, T Lacher

Genetic Diversity and Gene Flow among Recovery

Regions of the Federally Endangered Peninsular Bighorn Sheep (Ovis canadensis nelsoni)

Modeling the Nectar Corridor Followed by the Endangered Bat Leptonycteris nivalis in Mexico and USA

12:15 PM 95E M Leslie, F Archer, W Perrin, P Morin 103E,TA H Chen, J Koprowski

Using Next Generation Genetic Tools to Define Stock Boundaries for the Recovery of Significantly Depleted

Pelagic Dolphins in the Eastern Pacific

Barrier Effects of Roads for an Endangered Forest Obligate: Gap, Edge, and Traffic Avoidance

12:30 PM LUNCH

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MONDAY, 9 JUNE, MORNING SESSIONS ROOM Meeting Room 17

SESSION/SYMPOSIUM Technical Session 7

MODERATOR Paul Stapp

10:30 AM 104E,TA H Li, K Wilkins

Responses of Urban Bats to Various Levels of Nighttime Illumination

10:45 AM 105 J Menezes, G Mourão, B Kotler

Predation Risk and Cover from Bushes: Agoutis, Like

Small Rodents, Use Bushes as Protection, While Other Medium-sized Rodents See Bushes as Dangerous

11:00 AM 106E,TA M Crowell, M Camp, L Shipley, J Rachlow, J Forbey

Perceived Risk of Predation by a Specialist and Generalist

Herbivore: Behavioral Responses to Concealment and Distance from a Refuge

11:15 AM 107E,** S Smiley, T Farrell, H Gibbs

Perceived Risk in a Dangerous Environment: Response of Foraging Cotton Mice (Peromyscus gossypinus) to Pygmy

Rattlesnakes (Sistrurus miliarius)

11:30 AM 108E P Perrig, E Donadio, A Middleton, J Pauli

Puma-camelid Predator-prey Relationship as a Mechanism of Food Provisioning to Andean Condors

11:45 AM 109E,TA N Smith, S Newsome, B Cypher, K Ralls, T Coonan, A Guglielmino

Habitat Specific Dietary Preferences of San Miguel Island Foxes

12:00 PM 110E,**,TA R Kirby, D MacFarland, J Pauli

Black Bear Use of Human-derived Foods in Northern Wisconsin

12:15 PM 111E W Moss, M Alldredge, J Pauli

Dietary Shifts of Mountain Lions (Puma concolor) in Response to Urbanization

12:30 PM LUNCH

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MONDAY, 9 JUNE, AFTERNOON SESSIONS Symposium IV – Great Halls D & E

Museum Resources in Undergraduate Education - Moderator: Kayce Bell

1:30 PM Welcome and Introduction K Bell

1:30 PM 112 AIMING UP: Museum Resources in Undergraduate Education E A Lacey

1:40 PM 113 Advancing the Integration of Museums into Undergraduate Education J A Cook

2:00 PM 114 Engaging Biology Students Through Digital Data K C Bell

2:20 PM 115 AIM-UP! Educational Modules in Undergraduate Classrooms L F Alexander

2:40 PM 116 Learning About Phylogenetics Using Collections and Public Databases E P Lessa

3:00 PM 117 Using Museum Specimens for Engaging Students From Underrepresented Groups C Welch

3:20 PM Discussion and Concluding Remarks K Bell, L Alexander, J Cook, E Lacey, E Lessa, C Welch

3:30 PM BREAK – Great Hall C

4:00 PM TECHNICAL SESSIONS 8, 9, 10 – Great Halls D & E, Meeting Rooms 16, 17

7:00 PM POSTER SESSION II – Great Hall C

8:00 PM AUCTION AND RAFFLE – Great Hall C

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MONDAY, 9 JUNE, AFTERNOON SESSIONS ROOM Great Halls D & E Meeting Room 16

SESSION/SYMPOSIUM Technical Session 8 Technical Session 9

MODERATOR Cody Thompson Sean Maher

4:00 PM 118E,**,TA A Ferguson, R Strauss, A Peterson, R Dowler 126 F Smith, S Lyons, S Ernest, IMPSS RCN

Skunks at the Crossroads: Assessing the Interplay

between Environmental, Morphological, and Genetic Variation in the American Hog-nosed Skunk

Mammal Community Structure over the Cenozoic

4:15 PM 119E A Loveless, M Papes 127E,TA M Tucker, T Ord, T Rogers

Bobcats across their Geographic Range: Combining

Ecological Niche Modeling and Morphology to Assess the Population Genetic Structure of Lynx rufus

Re-examining Predator-prey Relationships across Mammals

4:30 PM 120 M Matocq, P Murphy, L Richards, C Jeffrey 128 C McCain

Diet Specialization across a Woodrat Hybrid Zone North American Mammals: Who is Most at Risk from Anthropogenic Climate Change?

4:45 PM 121E,URA A Kulikowski, J Storz, H Lanier 129ECT S Maher, S Beissinger

Using Species Distribution Modeling to Elucidate the

Origin of High Altitude Hemoglobin-oxygen Affinity in Deer Mice

Community Models of Small Mammals Yield Site Level Patterns of Response to Climate Change in the Sierra

Nevada

5:00 PM 122E,TA M Holmes, G Boykins, M Zelditch 130 R Rowe, K Jenks, R Terry, E Rickart

Morphological Impacts of Environmental Change:

Elevational and Temporal Variation in Cranial Structure and Body Size in Peromyscus maniculatus

Small Mammal Community Similarity over Space and Time in the Great Basin

5:15 PM 123E H Huynh, J Norman, D McAlpine, K Vanderwolf, R Baker, R Bradley 131 R Anderson

On the Identity of Peromyscus on Grand Manan Island, New Brunswick, Canada

Expanding Hutchinson’s Concept of Scenopoetic Variables: When Can Biotic Interactions be Included in

Grinnellian Niche Models?

5:30 PM 124E,TA E Shubin, C McCain 132TA A Hornsby, M Matocq

Robust Discrimination of Microtus longicaudus and Microtus montanus

Using Approximate Bayesian Computation to Compare Demographic Estimates from Ecological Niche Models and

Subfossil Abundances 5:45 PM 125E C Dunn, M Mauldin, R Bradley 219 M Gantchoff, N Libal, J Belant

Phylogeography and the Origin of Free-ranging Elk (Cervus canadensis) in Texas

Moved from TS 16

Small Carnivore Introductions: Ecological and Biological Correlates of Success

7:00 PM POSTER SESSION II – Great Hall C

8:00 PM AUCTION AND RAFFLE – Great Hall C

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MONDAY, 9 JUNE, AFTERNOON SESSIONS ROOM Meeting Room 17

SESSION/SYMPOSIUM Technical Session 10

MODERATOR Melissa Merrick

4:00 PM 133E R Bland, K Morris, S Castleberry

Roosting Habitat Selection of the Northern Yellow Bat (Lasiurus intermedius) on Two Georgia Barrier Islands

4:15 PM 134**,TA M Merrick, J Koprowski

Factors Influencing Expanded Sex-biased Natal Dispersal in an Isolated, Peripheral Mammal

4:30 PM 135 C Johnson, L Bailey, A O'Connell, W Smith

Ecological Correlates of Occupancy by West Virginia Northern Flying Squirrel (Glaucomys sabrinus fuscus)

4:45 PM 136 S Windels

Hydrologically-connected Systems Facilitate Long Distance Dispersal in Beavers

5:00 PM 137E S Summers, F Bled, J Belant, D Martell, D Beyer

Spatial and Temporal Variations in Habitat Selection by Bobcats (Lynx rufus)

5:15 PM 138C C Taylor, S Corey-Rivas, J Rivas

Does a Bear Live in the Woods? An Analysis of Urban Black Bear Populations in Northern New Mexico

5:30 PM 139C R Forney

The Effects of Diurnal Patterns on the Spatial Distribution

of Female Desert Bighorn Sheep (Ovis canadensis mexicana)

5:45 PM 140 F Weckerly

Population Irruption by Roosevelt Elk

7:00 PM POSTER SESSION II – Great Hall C

8:00 PM AUCTION AND RAFFLE – Great Hall C

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MONDAY, 9 JUNE, POSTER SESSION II PRESENTER (S) TITLE

141E J Colella Molecular Analysis of Species Limits and Hybridization of Ermine (Mustela erminea) in Southeast Alaska

142 J Pigage, J Bono, P Wettstein, S Herlick, H Pigage Preliminary Investigation of Evolutionary Genetics of Abert's Squirrels (Sciurus aberti) Using Restriction-site Associated DNA Sequencing (RAD-Seq)

143 D Follett, J Pigage, H Pigage Seasonal Habitat Selection by Non-migratory Female Mule Deer (Odocoileus hemionus) in a Semi-arid Environment

144E,**,TA N Pradhan, C Kilpatrick, P Joshi, A Sharma, S Chhetri Phylogeny and Biogeography of Apodemus

145 A Kiesow, H Britten Phylogeography of Glaucomys sabrinus and Tamiasciurus hudsonicus Populations: A New Perspective in the Insular United States

146 A Hope, E Waltari, J Malaney, D Payer, J Cook, S Talbot

Small Mammal Comparative Phylogeography in the Arctic: Evolutionary, Ecological and Human Land-use Implications

147 B Ford, E Barthelmess The Effects of Roads on the Genetic Structure of North American Porcupine Populations

148E K Flores, P Stapp Landscape Genetics of Northern Grasshopper Mice in Relation to Prairie Dog Colonies in Shortgrass Steppe

149E V Villanova, P Hughes, E Hoffman Population Genetics of the Endangered Key Deer Using Noninvasive Sampling

150E W Brashear, G Li, W Murphy Testis Transcriptome Divergence in Felidae: Implications for Hybrid Sterility and Reproductive Isolation

151E,** N Fletcher, J Searle Genomic Differentiation During Refugial Isolation and its Relevance to Speciation in the Field Vole (Microtus agrestis)

152 C Belew, B McDonald UV-reflective Morphology in the Rodent Families Heteromyidae, Geomyidae, and Dipodidae: Results from UV-photography

153E C Cavalieri, D Druskins, L Phillips, K Holekamp, B Lundrigan What’s in a Bite: Skull Ontogeny and Dietary Challenge

154E J Scrivner, C Johnson, C Sego Use of Cementum Annuli and Eye-lens Weight for Aging Coyotes

155 J Berens, N Dochtermann Morphological Differences Within and Among Peromyscus spp.

156E A Rutter, J Maldonado, K Helgen, E Gutiérrez Neotropical Deer: Morphometrics and Taxonomy of the Mazama americana Species Complex (Mammalia: Cervidae)

157 V Naples How Did the Mandible in Hippopotamus amphibius Get Its Hook?

158 S Shaw Does Size Matter? Isometric vs. Allometric Scaling in Armadillos, Pampatheres, and Glyptodonts (Order

Cingulata)

159 L González-Ruiz, S Ladevèze, R MacPhee Dental Anomalies in Euphractus sexcinctus Wagler (Mammalia, Xenarthra, Dasypodidae)

160E,TA K Tuttle Form Following Function? Shared Linear and Shape Dimensions of the Humerus and Femur in Two

Disparate Locomotor Guilds

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MONDAY, 9 JUNE, POSTER SESSION II PRESENTER (S) TITLE

161E M Sutton Assessment of Sexual Dimorphism in Cranial Morphology in Western Gray Squirrels

162 D Hale Elevational Record for Deer Mice

163E Y-S Jo, J Koprowski, B-J Choi, J Baccus Mammals of Korea: A Guide to the Korean Mammals

164E A Jones, J Cook Mammals of the Gila

165 S Loeb, T Rodhouse, L Ellison, C Lausen, T Ingersoll,

J Reichard, K Irvine, W Thogmartin, J Coleman, J Sauer

NABat: The North American Bat Monitoring Program

166 S Gardner, P Royster Zea E-Books: Digital Imprint of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries

167 K Smith, N Czaplewski, R Cifelli Barstovian (Middle Miocene) Carnivorans from the Monarch Mill Formation, Churchill County, Nevada

168 R Rose, A Bellows Population Responses to Stomach Worms (Order Spirurida) in Hispid Cotton Rats in Southeastern Virginia

169E,TA A Ahlers, M Mitchell, J Dubey, R Schooley, E Heske Human-modified Watersheds Concentrate Toxoplasma gondii in a Freshwater Ecosystem

170E C Pauling, A Oller, S Lankford, V Jackson Surveying Internal Parasites and Fecal Glucocorticoid Metabolites in Captive Scimitar-horned Oryx, Oryx dammah, in Different Environments

171E,URA K Conway, P Stapp Determinants of BotFly Infestation of Thirteen-lined Ground Squirrels in Colorado Shortgrass Steppe

172E D Dority, Z Roehrs, R Seville A new Eimeria (Apicomplexa: Eimeriidae) in Perognathus fasciatus (Rodentia: Heteromyidae) from Wyoming

173 H Martin, P Campbell The Chemistry of Speciation: Candidate Genes for Premating Isolation in Mice

174 C Milling, J Rachlow, L Shipley, D Paul A Comparative Assessment of Thermoneutral Zones of Two Sagebrush Steppe Lagomorphs

175 F Knight, M Power, K Murtough Got Armadillo Milk

176 E Actis, S Mosconi, J Jahn, M Superina Reproductive Strategy of Armadillos (Xenarthra: Cingulata): Is the Carapace a Source of Minerals During Lactation?

177E B Boan, K Stewart, T Lohuis, C Downs Consequences of Motherhood: Relationships Between Reproduction, Cortisol, and Immune Function

178 T Jung, T Hegel, S Stotyn, S Czetwertynski Co-occurrence of Reintroduced and Resident Ungulates on a Shared Winter Range in Northwestern Canada

179 T Jung, S Stotyn, S Czetwertynski Dietary Overlap and Potential Competition in a Dynamic Ungulate Community in Northwestern Canada

7:00 PM POSTER SESSION II – Great Hall C

8:00 PM AUCTION AND RAFFLE – Great Hall C

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TUESDAY, 10 JUNE, MORNING SESSIONS Thematic Session II – Great Halls D & E

Recent Advances in Conservation – Moderator: Moderator: B J Bergstrom 8:00 AM 180 History, Ecology, and Impacts of the European Rabbit Invasion in Southern South America F Jaksic

8:30 AM 181 "The last word in ignorance is the man who says of an animal or plant: 'What good is it?'” - Aldo Leopold P Paquet

9:00 AM 182 Pika Density, Distribution, and Extirpations Over 80 Years: Conservation Lessons on Climate, Mammals' Behavioral Plasticity, and Ever-changing Rules

E Beever, S Crimmins, J Varner, S Clark, C Abbruzzese, S Dobrowski

9:30 AM Discussion and Concluding Remarks B Bergstrom, E Beever, F Jaksic, P Paquet

9:30 AM BREAK – Great Hall C

10:00 AM TECHNICAL SESSIONS 11, 12, 13 – Great Halls D & E, Meeting Rooms 16, 17

12:00 PM LUNCH

1:00 PM TECHNICAL SESSIONS 14, 15, 16 – Great Halls D & E, Meeting Rooms 16, 17

2:30 PM CAPSTONE – Great Halls D & E

6:00 PM BUSES LEAVE RENAISSANCE HOTEL

6:30 PM PRE-BANQUET SOCIAL AND BANQUET – Sam Noble Museum

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TUESDAY, 10 JUNE, MORNING SESSIONS

ROOM Great Halls D & E Meeting Room 16

SESSION/SYMPOSIUM Technical Session 11 Technical Session 12

MODERATOR Janet Rachlow Caleb Phillips

10:00 AM 183 J Ryan, P Myers, T Dewey, R Espinosa, G Hammond, T Jones 191E,TA J Diaz-Nieto, S Jansa, R Voss

Using Quaardvark to Enhance Critical Thinking in Mammalogy

The Onset of the Amazon River and the Early Diversification of the American Marsupial of the Genus

Marmosops

10:15 AM 184 J Rachlow, J Forbey, L Shipley, M Burgess, P Olstoy, C Milling, J Nobler 192** N Ordóñez-Garza, C Thompson, M Unkefer, C

Edwards, J Owen, R Bradley

Evaluating Habitat Characteristics for Mammals in the Sagebrush-steppe using Unmanned Aircraft Systems

(UAS) Technology

Biogeographic Patterns and Taxonomic Implications of Small Mammals across the Tehuantepec Isthmus: Neotoma ferruginea Tomes 1861 as an Example

10:30 AM 185E D Greene, L Wagner, R McCleery 193 M Ruiz-Vega, L León-Paniagua

A Comparison of Four Methods for Detecting Fox Squirrels in the Southeastern USA Phylogeography of the Osgood’s Mouse (Osgoodomys

banderanus; Rodentia: Cricetidae) Endemic to Mexico

10:45 AM 186E C Tye, D Greene, R McCleery 194 D Chávez, S Burneo

A Method to Identify Individual Fox Squirrels (Sciurus niger) in the Southeastern USA Genetic, Morphological, and Ecological Variation of the

Genus Reithrodontomys in Ecuador

11:00 AM 187E J Harris, T O'Connell 195 T Daughtry, J Hanson, J Brokaw, T Lee

Modeling Habitat Suitability for Mesocarnivores:

Understanding Risk for Nesting Northern Bobwhite (Colinus virginianus)

Phylogenetic Relationships in Thomasomys (Rodentia: Cricetidae)

11:15 AM 188TA S Olson, D Harrison 196E,**,TA N Upham, B Patterson

Seasonal Influence of Vegetation on Snowshoe Hare

Pellet Densities across Forest Management Types in an Eastern Acadian Forest

Testing for Adaptive Radiation and Ecological Constraint in

a Major Lineage of Rodents (Hystricomorpha, Caviomorpha)

11:30 AM 189 N Moncrief, R Dueser, J Porter 197 S Gardner, J Salazar-Bravo, J Cook

Least-cost Path Analysis of Movement Pathways of Raccoons (Procyon lotor) in a Naturally Fragmented

Landscape Phylogenetic Diversification of Ctenomys in South America

with Focus on Bolivian Species

11:45 AM 190 J Baccus 198** R Leite, F Werneck, M da Silva, D Rogers

Melanism in White-tailed and Mule Deer in North America Evolutionary History of the Southeastern Amazon Basin as

Revealed by the Phylogeography of a Spiny Rat, Proechimys roberti (Hystricognathi: Echimyidae)

12:00 PM LUNCH

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TUESDAY, 10 JUNE, MORNING SESSIONS ROOM Meeting Room 17

SESSION/SYMPOSIUM Technical Session 13

MODERATOR Adam Ford

10:00 AM 199 E Beever, K Laney

Free-roaming Horses in the American West: Interactions with Native Mammals and the Environment

10:15 AM 200E P Eyheralde, W Fairbanks

Seed Rain and Bison-mediated Seed Dispersal in a Tallgrass Prairie Reconstruction

10:30 AM 201** A Ford, J Goheen, D Augustine, T O’Brien, T Palmer, R Pringle, R Woodroffe

Trophic Repatriation of a Savanna Ecosystem

10:45 AM 202 M Floyd, S Williams, I Ortega

Trophic Cascade Effects of Deer Overabundance on Connecticut Native Vegetation and Small Mammal

Populations

11:00 AM 203 M Willig, K Burgio, L Cisneros, L Dreiss, B Patterson, S Presley, B Klingbeil

Gradients of Phylogenetic Relatedness and Size Similarity:

Bats and Rodents in a Hotspot of Tropical Biodiversity (Manu, Peru)

11:15 AM 204E M Peralta, V Pacheco

Diversity and Small Mammal Assemblages of Montane Forests from Central Peru

11:30 AM 205 A Reed, M Bani-Yaghoub, N Slade

Temporal Variation in Competition among Grassland Rodents Estimated from a Long-term Dataset

11:45 AM 206E K Rogers

Spatial and Temporal Patterns of an Old-field Small Mammal Community

12:00 PM LUNCH

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TUESDAY, 10 JUNE, AFTERNOON SESSIONS

ROOM Great Halls D & E Meeting Room 16

SESSION/SYMPOSIUM Technical Session 14 Technical Session 15

MODERATOR Karen Munroe Brandon McDonald

1:00 PM 207E J Nations, L Olson 213 T Linscott, E Roche, R Bonett

Is Climbing Behavior Reflected in the Morphology of Scansorial Voles? The Effects of Ecology, Physiology, and Diet on the

Evolution of Endotherm Gastrointestinal Tract Lengths

1:15 PM 208 M Paul, S Majumder, A Bhadra 214 S Vrla, B McDonald, B Geiger, J Macedonia, K Ellis

Selfish Mothers and Altruistic Grandmothers: The Case of the Dog

Potential UV-vision in the Kangaroo Rat (Dipodomys ordii), Evidence from Photoreceptor Proteins (Opsins) in the

Retina

1:30 PM 209 W Bogdanowicz, K Rajan, A Arasamuthu, G Marimuthu, M Dabrowski 215 A Wells, B McDonald, J Macedonia

Babysitting and Aspects of Nonmaternal Infant Support in the Carnivorous Bat Megaderma lyra Modeling of the Vision System of the Kangaroo Rat

(Dipodomys ordii) and Implications for UV-communication

1:45 PM 210E,TA C Wells, D Van Vuren 216E,**,TA J Wilkening, C Ray

Ground Squirrels Manipulate Offspring Sex in Response to Local Population Density

Characterizing Relationships between Microclimate, Metrics of Physiological Stress, and Survival in a Climate-

sensitive Mammal 2:00 PM 211E,TA M Wallen, E Patterson, E Krzyszczyk, J Mann 217 C Downs, K Stewart, S Morano, P Wolff

Ecological and Fitness Consequences of Coercive Males on Female Bottlenose Dolphins (Tursiops cf. aduncus) Small-scale Environmental Gradients Affect Trace Mineral

Levels But Not Immune Function in Mule Deer

2:15 PM 212C M Camp, M Crowell, L Shipley, J Forbey, T Johnson, J Rachlow 218 E Wilson, S Gehrt

Evaluating Tradeoffs in Risks by Specialist and Generalist

Herbivores Seroprevalence of Infectious Disease among Sympatric

Carnivores in the Chicago Metropolitan Area

Capstone – Great Halls D & E 2:30 PM

225 Ecology of Fear: Past, Present and Future Directions Presenter: Joel Brown Moderator: R S Sikes

6:00 PM BUSES LEAVE RENAISSANCE HOTEL

6:30 PM PRE-BANQUET SOCIAL AND BANQUET – Sam Noble Museum

EEvaluated presentation TAStudent travel award ECTEarly career travel award **Research funded by the ASM URAUndergraduate award CCancelled presentation

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American Society of Mammalogists 94th Annual Meeting—Oklahoma City, Oklahoma  

46  

TUESDAY, 10 JUNE, AFTERNOON SESSIONS ROOM Meeting Room 17

SESSION/SYMPOSIUM Technical Session 16

MODERATOR Floyd Weckerly

1:00 PM 219 M Gantchoff, N Libal, J Belant

Moved to TS 9

Small Carnivore Introductions: Ecological and Biological Correlates of Success

1:15 PM 220E,** J Derbridge, J Koprowski

Consequences of Syntopy between an Endangered Tree Squirrel and an Ecologically Similar Invader

1:30 PM 221 S Neiswenter, A Calvert

Implications of Population Demographics on the Management of Sigmodon arizonae plenus

1:45 PM 222C R McCleery, C Faller

Understanding the Distribution of a Rare Rodent in the Wetlands of Florida

2:00 PM 223E P Manlick, J Pauli

Moved to TS 4

Proximate Mechanisms of Delayed Recovery in Reintroduced American Martens

2:15 PM 224E T Eaton, R Martinez, E Terdal

Status of the Jaguar (Panthera onca) in the Mountain Pine

Ridge Forest, Belize: Evidence of Family Lineage and Residency Status

Capstone – Great Halls D & E 2:30 PM

225 Ecology of Fear: Past, Present and Future Directions Presenter: Joel Brown Moderator: R S Sikes

6:00 PM BUSES LEAVE RENAISSANCE HOTEL

6:30 PM PRE-BANQUET SOCIAL AND BANQUET – Sam Noble Museum

EEvaluated presentation TAStudent travel award ECTEarly career travel award **Research funded by the ASM URAUndergraduate award CCancelled presentation

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AUTHOR INDEX A

Abba, Agustín M. ..................................................... 20 Abbruzzese, Carlo ................................................. 182 Achmadi, Anang S. .................................................. 35 Actis, Esteban A. ................................................... 176 Ahlers, Adam A. ..................................................... 169 Alexander, Lois F. .................................................. 115 Ali, Abdullahi H. ......................................................... 4 Alldredge, Mathew ................................................. 111 Anderson, Robert P. .................................. 33, 34, 131 Andresen-Everatt, Leah M. ...................................... 54 Arasamuthu, Arul Sundari ...................................... 209 Archer, Frederick I. .................................................. 95 Armitage, Kenneth B. ................................................. 9 Augustine, David J. ................................................ 201

B Baccus, John T. ............................................. 163, 190 Bailey, Larissa L. ................................................... 135 Baker, Robert J. ............................. 11, 78, 79, 91, 123 Bani-Yaghoub, Majid ............................................. 205 Barnes, Brian M. ........................................................ 8 Barthelmess, Erika L. ....................................... 25, 147 Beever, Erik A. ........................................... 1, 182, 199 Beissinger, Steven R. ............................................ 129 Belant, Jerrold L. ...................................... 48, 137, 219 Belew, Charlene .................................................... 152 Bell, Kayce C. ........................................................ 114 Bellows, A. Scott .................................................... 168 Bennett, Victoria J. ............................................. 38, 64 Berens, Jeffrey ....................................................... 155 Berger, Joel ............................................................. 15 Best, Troy ................................................................. 72 Beyer, Dean ........................................................... 137 Bhadra, Anindita .................................................... 208 Bland, R. Craig ...................................................... 133 Bled, Florent .......................................................... 137 Bleich, Vernon C. ..................................................... 66 Blum, Marcus E........................................................ 26 Blythe, Rita M. ......................................................... 43 Boan, Brianne V. .................................................... 177 Bogdanowicz, Wieslaw .......................................... 209 Boitani, Luigi ............................................................ 99 Bonett, Ronald M. .................................................. 213 Bono, Jeremy M. .................................................... 142 Boonstra, Rudy ........................................................ 16 Boria, Robert A. ....................................................... 34 Boyce, Walter M. ..................................................... 94 Boyd, Trevor ............................................................ 63 Boyer, A. G. ........................................................... 126 Boykins, Genevieve K. R. ...................................... 122 Bradley, Robert D. ........................... 90, 123, 125, 192

Brashear, Wesley ................................................... 150 Briones-Salas, Miguel A. .......................................... 50 Britten, Hugh B. ...................................................... 145 Brokaw, Joshua M. ................................................. 195 Brown, J. H. ............................................................ 126 Brown, Joel ............................................................ 225 Buchalski, Michael R. ............................................... 94 Bulmer, Walter ......................................................... 62 Burdett, Chris ........................................................... 99 Burger, Joseph R. ...................................................... 5 Burgess, Matthew A. .............................................. 184 Burgio, Kevin R. ..................................................... 203 Burneo, Santiago F. ............................................... 194 Bush, Anthony P. ..................................................... 66

C Callicoatte, Kathleen ................................................ 75 Calvert, Allen .......................................................... 221 Camp, Meghan J. ........................................... 106, 212 Campbell, Polly ...................................................... 173 Capparella, Angelo ................................................... 37 Carey, Hannah V. ....................................................... 7 Castleberry, Steven B. ........................................... 133 Cavalieri, Cybil Nicole ............................................ 153 Ceballos, Gerardo .................................................... 96 Chaverrri, Gloriana ................................................. 100 Chávez, Daniel E. .................................................. 194 Cheeseman, Amanda E. .......................................... 61 Chen, Hsiang Ling .................................................. 103 Chevalier, Cary D. .................................................... 63 Chhetri, Saurav ...................................................... 144 Choi, Byung-Jin ...................................................... 163 Cifelli, Richard L. .................................................... 167 Cisneros, Laura M. ................................................. 203 Clark, Steven L. ...................................................... 182 Clark, Susan G. ........................................................ 68 Cohen, Jonathan ...................................................... 61 Colella, Jocelyn P. .................................................. 141 Coleman, Jeremy T. H. .......................................... 165 Conway, Kimberly .................................................. 171 Cook, Joseph A. ............................. 113, 146, 164, 197 Coonan, Timothy J. ................................................ 109 Corey-Rivas, Sarah J. ............................................ 138 Corral, Daniel C. ....................................................... 58 Costa, D. P. ............................................................ 126 Costa, Gabriel C. ...................................................... 96 Cox, Mike ................................................................. 93 Crimmins, Shawn .................................................. 182 Crooks, Kevin ........................................................... 99 Crowell, M. M. ................................................ 106, 212 Culver, Melanie ........................................................ 42 Cypher, Brian L. ..................................................... 109

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Czaplewski, Nicholas J. ......................................... 167 Czetwertynski, Sophie M. .............................. 178, 179

D da Silva, Maria Nazareth F. ................................... 198 Dabrowski, Michal .................................................. 209 Danielson, Brent J. .................................................... 3 Danley, Patrick ......................................................... 39 Darby, Neal .............................................................. 66 Daughtry, Tanya K. ................................................ 195 Davidson, Ana D. ..................................................... 96 Dearing, M. Denise .................................................... 1 Debelica-Lee, Anica ................................................. 39 Delsuc, Frédéric ....................................................... 19 Denkhaus, Robert .................................................... 64 Derbridge, Jonathan J. .......................................... 220 Dewey, Tanya ........................................................ 183 Diaz-Nieto, Juan F. ................................................ 191 Dickens, Ben ............................................................ 91 Ding, Baoqing .......................................................... 39 Dobrowski, Solomon .............................................. 182 Dochtermann, Ned A. ...................................... 44, 155 Dolman, Richard W. ................................................. 51 Donadio, Emiliano .................................................. 108 Dority, Delina E. ..................................................... 172 Doudna, John W. ....................................................... 3 Dowler, Robert C. .................................................. 118 Downs, Cynthia J. .......................................... 177, 217 Dreiss, Lindsay M. ................................................. 203 Druskins, David C. ................................................. 153 Dubey, Jitender P. ................................................. 169 Dueser, Raymond D. ............................................. 189 Dunn, Christopher D. ............................................. 125

E Eaton Jr., T. Scott .................................................. 224 Eckerlin, Ralph P. .................................................... 62 Edelman, Andrew J. ..................................... 23, 56, 59 Edmonds, Kent E. .................................................... 77 Edwards, Cody W. ................................................. 192 Eguren, Rachel E. .................................................... 28 Eldridge, James A. ................................................... 75 Ellis, Kelsey............................................................ 214 Ellison, Laura E. ..................................................... 165 Ernest, Holly B. ........................................................ 94 Ernest, Kristina......................................................... 55 Ernest, S. K. Morgan ............................................. 126 Espinosa, Roger .................................................... 183 Esselstyn, Jacob A. ................................................. 35 Evans, A. R. ........................................................... 126 Everatt, Kristoffer T. ................................................. 54 Everson, Kathryn M. ................................................ 32 Eyheralde, Peter .................................................... 200

F Fairbanks, W. Sue ............................................ 65, 200 Faller, Chelsey ....................................................... 222 Farrell, Terence M. ................................................. 107 Feldman, Chris R. .................................................... 93 Ferguson, Adam W. ............................................... 118 Fletcher, Nicholas K. .............................................. 151 Flores, Karla L. ....................................................... 148 Floyd, Megan A. ..................................................... 202 Follett, Danny ......................................................... 143 Forbey, Jennifer S. ................................. 106, 184, 212 Ford, Adam T. ........................................................ 201 Ford, Brett .............................................................. 147 Forney, Ronny ........................................................ 139 Fortelius, M. .......................................................... 126 Fowler, Melissa ........................................................ 22 Frank, Craig L. ......................................................... 10

G Galante, Peter J. ...................................................... 33 Gantchoff, Mariela G. ....................................... 48, 219 Gardner, Alfred L. ............................................... 62, 83 Gardner, Scott L. .................................................... 197 Gardner, Sue Ann .................................................. 166 Gaschak, Sergey ...................................................... 91 Gehrt, Stanley D. .................................................... 218 Geiger, Bryce ......................................................... 214 Giarla, Thomas C. .................................................... 35 Gibbs, H. Lisle ........................................................ 107 Gille, Daphne A. ....................................................... 94 Gittleman, J. L. ...................................................... 126 Goheen, Jacob R. ...................................... 47, 67, 201 Gomez-Ruiz, Emma P. .......................................... 102 González-Ruiz, Laureano R. .................................. 159 Goodman, Steven M. ......................................... 32, 33 Graham, Catherine H. .............................................. 96 Green, Rebecca E. ................................................... 74 Greene, Daniel U. .......................................... 185, 186 Guglielmino, Angela ............................................... 109 Gutiérrez, Eliécer E. ............................................... 156

H Hale, Amanda M. ..................................................... 38 Hale, David W. ....................................................... 162 Hale, Sarah L. .......................................................... 46 Hall, Lucas K. ........................................................... 40 Hallgren, Stephen W. ............................................... 24 Hamilton, M. J. ....................................................... 126 Hammond III, George ............................................ 183 Hanson, J. Delton ....................................... 88, 89, 195 Harding, L. E. ........................................................ 126 Hardy, Daniel M. ...................................................... 90 Harris, Jonathan P. ................................................ 187 Harrison, Daniel J. .................................................. 188

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Haynie, Michelle L. .................................................. 89 Hegel, Troy M. ....................................................... 178 Helgen, Kristofer M. ......................................... 31, 156 Herlik, Stephanie A. ............................................... 142 Hernandez, Amalia .................................................. 56 Heske, Edward J. ................................................... 169 Hirt, Samuel H. ......................................................... 72 Hodge, Anne-Marie C. ............................................. 47 Hoffman, Eric A. ..................................................... 149 Hoffmann, Federico G. ............................................ 92 Holekamp, Kay E. .................................................. 153 Holmes, Michael W. ............................................... 122 Holsomback, Tyla S. ................................................ 76 Hood, Wendy ........................................................... 72 Hooghkirk, Jill ........................................................... 55 Hope, Andrew G. ................................................... 146 Horns, Joshua J. ........................................................ 1 Hornsby, Angela D. ................................................ 132 Howard, Kelsey D. ................................................... 10 Hughes, Phillip T. ................................................... 149 Huynh, Howard M. ................................................. 123

I Ingersoll, Thomas .................................................. 165 Ingram, Kate P. ........................................................ 41 Irvine, Kathryn ........................................................ 165 Iudica, Carlos A. ...................................................... 21

J Jackson, Victoria L. .......................................... 65, 170 Jacques, Marie-Eve ................................................. 24 Jahn, Graciela A. ................................................... 176 Jaksic, Fabian M. ................................................... 180 Jansa, Sharon A. ............................................. 32, 191 Jeffrey, Christopher S. ........................................... 120 Jenks, Kate E. ........................................................ 130 Jesmer, Brett R. ....................................................... 67 Jo, Yeong-Seok ..................................................... 163 Johnson, Catherine M. ........................................... 135 Johnson, Craig A. .................................................. 154 Johnson, T. R. ....................................................... 212 Jones, Amanda K. ................................................. 164 Jones, Mallory E. ..................................................... 82 Jones, Tricia ........................................................... 183 Joshi, Priya ............................................................ 144 Jung, Thomas S. .......................... 52, 53, 54, 178, 179

K Kauffman, Matthew J. .............................................. 67 Kaufman, Dawn M. ............................................ 45, 57 Kaufman, Donald W. .......................................... 45, 57 Kaufman, Glennis A. .......................................... 45, 57 Kelt, Douglas A. ....................................................... 74 Kern, Colin ............................................................... 92 Khan, Faisal Anwarali .............................................. 91

Kiesow, Alyssa M. .................................................. 145 Kilanowski, Allyssa L. ............................................... 71 Kilpatrick, C. William ........................................ 36, 144 Kingston, Tigga ...................................................... 101 Kirby, Rebecca ....................................................... 110 Klingbeil, Brian T. ................................................... 203 Knight, Frank .......................................................... 175 Knight, Robert N. ...................................................... 40 Koprowski, John L. ............. 46, 71, 103, 134, 163, 220 Kotler, Burt ............................................................. 105 Krzyszczyk, Ewa .................................................... 211 Kulikowski II, Andy ................................................. 121

L Lacey, Eileen A. ..................................................... 112 Lacher Jr., Thomas E. ............................................ 102 Ladevèze, Sandrine ............................................... 159 Lambert, Connor T. .................................................. 40 Lambert, Mallory S. .................................................... 1 Laney, Kara N. ....................................................... 199 Lanier, Hayley ........................................................ 121 Lankford, Scott ....................................................... 170 Larsen, Randy T. ...................................................... 40 Lausen, Cori L. ....................................................... 165 Lavariega-Nolasco, Mario C. .................................... 50 Lee Jr., Thomas E. ................................................. 195 Lee, Tyler ................................................................. 63 Leite, Rafael N. ...................................................... 198 León-Paniagua, Livia ............................................. 193 Leslie Jr., David M. ................................................... 51 Leslie, Matthew S. .................................................... 95 Lessa, Enrique P. ................................................... 116 Lewis, Shelby ........................................................... 59 Li, Gang .................................................................. 150 Li, Han .................................................................... 104 Libal, Nathan S. ...................................................... 219 Lichti, Nathanael I. ................................................... 43 Light, Jessica E. ....................................................... 12 Linscott, T. M. ......................................................... 213 Lintulaakso, K. ....................................................... 126 Loeb, Susan C. ...................................................... 165 Lohuis, Thomas D. ................................................. 177 Longshore, Kathleen ................................................ 27 López-Medellín, Xavier ............................................ 86 Loughry, W. J. .......................................................... 18 Loveless, Allison Marcella ...................................... 119 Lowrey, Chris ........................................................... 27 Lundrigan, Barbara L. ............................................ 153 Lyda, Sara B. ........................................................... 65 Lyons, S. Kathleen ................................................. 126

M Macedonia, Joe .............................................. 214, 215 MacFarland, David M. ............................................ 110

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MacPhee, Ross D. ................................................. 159 Maharadatunkamsi .................................................. 35 Maher, Sean P. ...................................................... 129 Majumder, Sreejani Sen ........................................ 208 Makova, Kateryna .................................................... 91 Malaney, Jason L. ............................................ 93, 146 Maldonado, Jesus .................................................. 156 Manlick, Philip J. .................................................... 223 Mann, Janet ........................................................... 211 Marimuthu, Ganapathy .......................................... 209 Martell, Deb............................................................ 137 Martin, Heather ...................................................... 173 Martinez, Roni ........................................................ 224 Mason, Victor C. ...................................................... 31 Matocq, Marjorie D................................... 93, 120, 132 Mauldin, Matthew R. .............................................. 125 McAlpine, Donald F. .............................................. 123 McBee, Karen .................................................... 24, 28 McCain, Christy M. ......................................... 124, 128 McCleery, Robert A. .............................. 185, 186, 222 McDonald, Brandon K. ........................... 152, 214, 215 McDonough, Colleen M. .................................... 18, 60 McMillan, Brock R. ................................................... 40 Medellín, Rodrigo A. ................................................ 86 Menezes, Jorge F. S. ............................................. 105 Merrick, Melissa J. ................................................. 134 Michener, Gail R. ..................................................... 73 Middleton, Arthur D. ............................................... 108 Miller-Butterworth, Cassandra M. ............................ 81 Milling, Charlotte R. ................................. 69, 174, 184 Mills, Melissa A. ....................................................... 64 Mitchell, Mark A. .................................................... 169 Mixon, Brittany A. ..................................................... 60 Moncrief, Nancy D. ................................................ 189 Monteith, Kevin L. .................................................... 67 Moore, Christopher .................................................. 22 Morano, Sabrina .................................................... 217 Morin, Phillip A. ........................................................ 95 Morris, Katrina M. ................................................... 133 Mosconi, Sergio ..................................................... 176 Moss, Wynne E. ..................................................... 111 Mourão, Guilherme M. ........................................... 105 Mueller, Jalina .......................................................... 77 Murphy, Peter J. .................................................... 120 Murphy, William J....................................... 13, 31, 150 Murtough, Katie ..................................................... 175 Muscarella, Robert ................................................... 33 Myers, Phil ............................................................. 183

N Naples, Virginia L. .................................................. 157 Nations, Jonathan A. ............................................. 207 Neiswenter, Sean A. .............................................. 221

Newsome, Seth D. ................................................. 109 Nobler, Jordan ........................................................ 184 Norman, Jessie ...................................................... 123

O O’Brien, Tim ........................................................... 201 O’Connell Jr., Allan F. ............................................ 135 O’Connell, Timothy J. ............................................. 187 Ojeda, Ricardo A. ..................................................... 14 Okie, J. G. ............................................................. 126 Oller, Anna ............................................................. 170 Olson, Link E. ....................................... 30, 32, 82, 207 Olson, Sheryn J. ..................................................... 188 Olstoy, Peter J. ....................................................... 184 Ord, Terry ............................................................... 127 Ordóñez-Garza, Nicté ............................................ 192 Ortega, Isaac M. ............................................... 68, 202 Owen, James G. .................................................... 192

P Pacheco, Víctor ...................................................... 204 Palmer, Todd M. ..................................................... 201 Papes, Monica ....................................................... 119 Paquet, Paul C. ...................................................... 181 Parlos, Julie A. ......................................................... 79 Patterson, Bruce D. .................................. 29, 196, 203 Patterson, Eric M. ................................................... 211 Paul, David ............................................................. 174 Paul, Manabi .......................................................... 208 Pauli, Jonathan N. .......................... 108, 110, 111, 223 Pauling, Cassandra D. ........................................... 170 Payer, David C. ...................................................... 146 Pendley, Brad ........................................................... 49 Penedo, Maria Cecilia T. .......................................... 94 Peralta, María ......................................................... 204 Perrig, Paula L. ...................................................... 108 Perrin, William F. ...................................................... 95 Peterson, A. Townsend .......................................... 118 Peurach, Suzanne C. ............................................... 62 Phelps, Kendra L. ................................................... 101 Phillips, Caleb D. ................................................ 11, 91 Phillips, Cody ........................................................... 63 Phillips, Lauren T. .................................................. 153 Pigage, Helen K. ............................................ 142, 143 Pigage, Jon C. ................................................ 142, 143 Pinto, C. Miguel .......................................................... 6 Platt II, Roy N. .......................................................... 92 Porter, John H. ....................................................... 189 Post, Diane M. .......................................................... 75 Powell, John ............................................................. 63 Power, Michael ....................................................... 175 Pradhan, Nelish ................................................ 36, 144 Presley, Steven J. .................................................. 203 Preston, Kathryn A. .................................................. 44

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Pringle, Rob M. ...................................................... 201 Purcell, Kathryn L. ................................................... 74 Pynne, Justin T. ....................................................... 56

Q Quicksall, Zachary ................................................... 80 Quigley, Howard ...................................................... 99

R Rachlow, Janet L. .................... 69, 106, 174, 184, 212 Radeloff, Volker C. ................................................... 96 Rajan, K. Emmanuvel ............................................ 209 Ralls, Katherine ..................................................... 109 Rattenborg, Niels C. ................................................ 17 Ray, Chris .............................................................. 216 Ray, David A. ........................................................... 92 Reed, Aaron W. ..................................................... 205 Reed, David L. ......................................................... 80 Rees, Eric J. ....................................................... 88, 89 Reichard, Jonathan ................................................ 165 Richards, Lora A. ................................................... 120 Rickart, Eric A. ....................................................... 130 Rivas, Jesús A. ...................................................... 138 Roberts, Emma K. ................................................... 90 Robinson, Michael J. ................................... 87, 97, 98 Roche, Erin A. ........................................................ 213 Rodhouse, Thomas J. ............................................ 165 Roehrs, Zachary P. ................................................ 172 Rogers, Duke S. .................................................... 198 Rogers, Kathryn R. ................................................ 206 Rogers, Tracey ...................................................... 127 Rondinini, Carlo ................................................. 96, 99 Rosa, Cheryl ............................................................ 72 Rose, Robert K. ..................................................... 168 Rosenstern, Joel ...................................................... 81 Rouse, Matthew ....................................................... 59 Rowe, Kevin C. ........................................................ 35 Rowe, Rebecca J. .................................................. 130 Rowland, Jarrett ....................................................... 63 Royster, Paul ......................................................... 166 Rubenstein, Daniel I. ................................................. 2 Ruiz-Vega, M. Laura .............................................. 193 Russell, Amy L. ........................................................ 81 Rutter, Amy R. ....................................................... 156 Ryan, James .......................................................... 183 Ryu, Hae Yeong ...................................................... 70

S Saarinen, J. J. ....................................................... 126 Sackrider, Margaret E. ............................................. 68 Sagot, Maria .......................................................... 100 Salazar-Bravo, Jorge ............................................. 197 Sanchez, Gael A. ..................................................... 69 Sargis, Eric J. ........................................................... 30 Sauer, John R. ....................................................... 165

Sawada, Bryant ........................................................ 55 Scheibe, John S. ...................................................... 49 Schieltz, Jennifer M. ................................................... 2 Schildt, Ali J. ............................................................. 38 Schmidly, David J. .................................................... 85 Schmidt, Carl J. ........................................................ 92 Scholten, Kristen M. ................................................. 30 Schooley, Robert L. ................................................ 169 Schroeder, Cody ...................................................... 26 Scrivner, Jerry H. ................................................... 154 Searle, Jeremy B. ................................................... 151 Sego, Camron A. .................................................... 154 Seville, R. Scott ...................................................... 172 Sharma, Ajay N. ............................................... 36, 144 Shaw, Barbara J. .................................................... 158 Sheffield, Steven R. ................................................. 21 Shipley, Lisa A. .............................. 106, 174, 184, 212 Shoemaker, Kevin T. ................................................ 96 Shubin, Emma ........................................................ 124 Sibly, R. M. ............................................................ 126 Slade, Norman A. ................................................... 205 Slattery, Michael C. .................................................. 64 Smiley, Sarah A. .................................................... 107 Smith, Felisa A. ...................................................... 126 Smith, Kent ............................................................. 167 Smith, Nicholas L. .................................................. 109 Smith, Winston P. ................................................... 135 Smyser, Timothy J. .................................................. 43 Sotero-Caio, Cibele G. ............................................. 78 Speer, Kelly A. ......................................................... 80 Sprayberry, Ty .......................................................... 59 Stapp, Paul ............................................... 22, 148, 171 Stephens, P. R. ..................................................... 126 Sterling, Keir B. ........................................................ 84 Stewart, Kelley M. .............................. 26, 66, 177, 217 Stith, Erin .................................................................. 63 Storz, Jay ............................................................... 121 Stotyn, Shannon A. ........................................ 178, 179 Strauss, Richard E. ................................................ 118 Summers, Savanna M. ........................................... 137 Superina, Mariella ............................................ 20, 176 Sutton, Melissa ....................................................... 161 Swihart, Robert K. .................................................... 43

T Talbot, Sandra L. .................................................... 146 Taylor, Casey R. .................................................... 138 Terdal, Erik ............................................................. 224 Terry, Rebecca C. .................................................. 130 Theodor, J. ............................................................ 126 Thogmartin, Wayne E. ........................................... 165 Thompson, Cody W. .............................................. 192 Thompson, Craig M. ................................................. 74

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Thornton, Daniel ...................................................... 99 Toien, Oivind .............................................................. 8 Tompkins, Amanda .................................................. 55 Trewhitt, Stephanie A. ............................................. 58 Trujano-Alvarez, Ana L. ........................................... 50 Tucker, Marlee ....................................................... 127 Turner, Greg G. ........................................................ 81 Tuttle, Kristy L. ....................................................... 160 Tye, Courtney A. .................................................... 186

U Uhen, M. D. ........................................................... 126 Unkefer, Margaret K. ............................................. 192 Upham, Nathan S. ........................................... 29, 196

V Van Essen, Rachael A. ............................................ 37 Van Vuren, Dirk H. ................................................. 210 Vanderwolf, Karen J. ............................................. 123 Vandewege, Michael W. .......................................... 92 Varner, Johanna ................................................ 1, 182 Vickers, T. Winston .................................................. 94 Villanova, Vicki L. ................................................... 149 Voirin, Bryson .......................................................... 17 Voirin, Chase ........................................................... 42 Volleth, Marianne ..................................................... 78 Vonhof, Maarten J. .................................................. 81 Voss, Robert S. ...................................................... 191 Vrla, Sarah ............................................................. 214

W Wagner, Lindsay M. ............................................... 185 Wallen, Megan M. .................................................. 211 Waltari, Eric ............................................................ 146 Wasley, Tony ........................................................... 26 Weckerly, Floyd W. ................................................ 140 Weinstein, Ben ......................................................... 96 Welch, Corey ......................................................... 117 Wells, Adrienne ...................................................... 215 Wells, Caitlin P. ...................................................... 210 Wenzel, John W. ...................................................... 21 Werneck, Fernanda P. ........................................... 198 Wettstein, Peter J. ................................................. 142 Weyers, Anna .......................................................... 49 Wickliffe, Jeffery ....................................................... 91 Wikelski, Martin ........................................................ 17 Wiley, Mary Kate ...................................................... 63 Wilkening, Jennifer ................................................ 216 Wilkins, Kenneth T. .......................................... 39, 104 Wilkinson, Jeremy E. ............................................... 89 Williams, Dean A...................................................... 38 Williams, Scott C. ................................................... 202 Willig, Michael R. ................................................... 203 Wilson, Duncan S. ................................................... 24 Wilson, Evan C. ..................................................... 218

Windels, Steve K. ................................................... 136 Wittmer, Heiko U. ..................................................... 74 Wolff, Peregrine L. ........................................... 93, 217 Woodman, Neal ....................................................... 30 Woodroffe, Rosie ................................................... 201 Woods, Charles A. ................................................... 36

Y Yang, Fengtang ........................................................ 78 Young, Julie K. ......................................................... 64

Z Zelditch, Miriam L. .................................................. 122 Zeller, Kathy ............................................................. 99

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LOCAL RESTAURANTS

The following is a list of a diverse array of restaurants that are within a short walking radius of the Renaissance Oklahoma City Convention Center Hotel and Cox Convention Center. While there are many restaurants covering all types of ethnicities beyond this area, if you choose to stay within the area of the hotel, feel free to utilize this list. Check out other great restaurants in the Asian District, Deep Deuce, Automobile Alley, Paseo Arts District, and Stockyards City. Steak Mickey Mantle’s Steakhouse #7 Mickey Mantle Drive Red Prime Steak 504 N. Broadway Avenue Toby Keith’s I Love This Bar and Grill 310 Johnny Bench Drive Italian Spaghetti Warehouse 101 E. Sheridan Avenue Zio’s Italian Kitchen 12 E. California Avenue Joey’s Pizzeria 700 W. Sheridan Avenue Pizza Town 430 W. Main Street The Wedge Pizzeria 230 NE 1st Street Mediterranean/Greek Dimitris Peacock Greek Restaurant 517 W. Reno Avenue Suzi’s Greek and Seafood 119 N. Robinson Avenue Let’s Do Greek 120 N. Robinson Avenue Barbecue Earl’s Rib Palace 216 Johnney Bench Drive Spanish/Latin/Mexican Abuelo’s 17 E. Sheridan Bolero Spanish Grill and Tapas Bar 200 S. Oklahoma Avenue, Suite 140

Chelino’s Mexican Restaurant 15 E. California Avenue Fuzzy’s Taco Shop 208 Johnny Bench Drive Yucatan Taco Stand Tequila Bar and Grill 100 E. California # 110 La Luna Mexican Café 409 W. Reno Avenue Asian/Japanese/Chinese Thai Kitchen 327 Dean A. McGee Avenue In the Raw Sushi 200 S. Oklahoma Avenue Paul Harvey Sushi Restaurant and Sports Lounge 200 N. Harvey Avenue European Nonna’ Euro-American Ristorante and Bar 1 Mickey Mantle Drive The Melting Pot 4 E. Sheridan Avenue Museum Café 415 Couch Drive Seafood Pearl’s Crabtown 303 E. Sheridan American nebu 333 West Sheridan, Suite 110 Kitchen No. 324 324 N. Robinson Native Roots Market NW 2nd and Walnut Avenue

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Packard’s New American Kitchen 201 NW 10th Street Deep Deuce Grill 307 NE 2nd Street Shartel Underground Café 201 Robert S. Kerr Avenue, Suite LL140 Flint 15 N. Robinson Avenue Sweets and Eats 100 N. Robinson Avenue Bricktown Burgers 300 E. Main Street The Basement Modern Diner 200 S. Oklahoma Avenue Southern KD’s Southern Cuisine 224 Johnny Bench Drive Urban Roots 322 NE 2nd Street Deli Café 7 120 N. Robinson Avenue, Suite 175W Café Coolgreens 204 N. Robinson Avenue Crave 211 N. Robinson Avenue Heathnut Café 333 NW 5th Street, Suite 100 Hobby’s Hoagies 325 N. Walker Avenue Nonna’s Streetside Café 124 E. Sheridan Avenue Petro Deli 100 N. Broadway Avenue Coffee House Starbucks 200 S. Oklahoma Avenue

The Paramount 701 W. Sheridan Avenue The Buzz-Coffee and Café 120 N. Robinson Avenue Treats Bricktown Candy Company 100 E. California Avenue CocoFlow 100 E. Main Street Pinkitzel 150 N. E.K. Gaylord Avenue Sara Sara Cupcakes 7 NW 9th Street Marble Slab Creamery 216 Johnny Bench Drive, Suite A Peachwave-Self Serve Frozen Yogurt 101 E. California Avenue Restaurants and Bars/Club Bricktown Bike Bar 405.633.2546; bricktownbikebar.com The Bricktown Brewery 1 N. Oklahoma Avenue Brix Restaurant and Sports Lounge 27 E. Sheridan Avenue Drinkz Bar 115 E. Reno Avenue Hooters 111 E. California Avenue Jazmo’s Bourbon Street Café 100 E. California Avenue Red Pin Restaurant and Bowling Lounge 200 S. Oklahoma, Suite X Tapwerks Ale House and Café 121 E. Sheridan Avenue Purple Bar at Nonna’s 1 Mickey Mantle Drive Michael Murphy’s Dueling Piano Bar 25 S. Oklahoma Avenue

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Captain Norm’s Dockside Bar 105 E. California Avenue JJ’s Alley Bricktown Pub 212 E. Sheridan Avenue The Mantel Wine Bar and Bistro 201 E. Sheridan Avenue Mojo’s aka The Biting Sow Blues Club 1 E. California Avenue City Walk 108 E. Main Street Club Albee 319 E. Sheridan Avenue Club One 15 115 E. Sheridan Avenue Coyote Ugly 121 E. California Avenue Put a Cork in it Winery 115 E. California Avenue Skky Bar Ultra Lounge 7 Mickey Mantle Drive, 4th Floor Voodoo Lounge 530 S. Broadway Avenue Whiskey Chicks Parlor 115 E. Reno Avenue, Suite B Wormy Dog Saloon 311 E. Sheridan Avenue Purple Martini 315 E. Sheridan Avenue Sandwiches/Fast Food Texadelphia 200 S. Oklahoma Avenue McDonald’s 501 E. Reno Avenue Quiznos 110 N. Robinson Avenue Sonic 208 Johnny Bench Drive

Subway 601 E. Reno Avenue 119 W. Main Street 216 N. Harvey Avenue 625 W. Reno Avenue Taco Bell 936 W. Sheridan Avenue IHOP 401 E. California Avenue City Bites 211 N. Robinson Avenue, Suite 120

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RENAISSANCE OKLAHOMA CITY COX CONVENTION CENTER HOTEL

FLOOR PLANS AND LAYOUTS

 

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2015  Meeting  Announcement    

95th  Annual  Meeting  of  the  American  Society  of  Mammalogists  

12-­‐16  June,  2015    

Hyatt  Regency  Jacksonville  Riverfront  Jacksonville,  Florida  

     

   

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