Lauri A. Jemison
Alaska Department of Fish and Game
18 Papers
71 Citations
Lauri A. Jemison is an academic researcher from Alaska Department of Fish and Game. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Eumetopias jubatus. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 15 publications.
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Papers
Molting phenology of harbor seals on tugidak island, alaska
TL;DR: The progression and timing of the annual molt of harbor seals on Tugidak Island, Alaska, from 1997 to 1999 was documented, and population trend estimates, based on aerial counts conducted during a narrow window within the molting period, are likely biased toward certain age-sex classes.
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Entanglement of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in marine debris: identifying causes and finding solutions.
TL;DR: Packing bands were the most common neck entangling material (54%), followed by rubber bands (30%), net (7), rope (7%), and monofilament line (2%) in SSL haul-outs, and entanglement incidence was 0.26% (SD=0.0064, n=69 sites).
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Long‐term trends in harbor seal numbers at tugidak island and nanvak bay, alaska
TL;DR: This paper conducted land-based counts of harbor seals (Phoca vitulina richardii) and collected related environmental data at Tugidak Island (Gulf of Alaska, 1994-2000) and Nanvak Bay (Bristol Bay, 1990−2000) to estimate population trends and identify factors influencing counts.
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Population growth and colonization of Steller sea lions in the Glacier Bay region of southeastern Alaska: 1970s–2009
Elizabeth A. Mathews,Jamie N. Womble,Grey W. Pendleton,Lauri A. Jemison,John M. Maniscalco,Greg Streveler +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors estimated trends in numbers of Steller sea lions in the Glacier Bay region of the eastern population from the 1970s to 2009, and documented the colonization of several new haul-outs and the transition of one haulout (Graves Rocks) to a rookery, assessed seasonal patterns in distribution, and compared counts from different observation platforms.
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Inter-population movements of steller sea lions in Alaska with implications for population separation.
Lauri A. Jemison,Grey W. Pendleton,Lowell W. Fritz,Kelly K. Hastings,John M. Maniscalco,Andrew W. Trites,Tom Gelatt +6 more
TL;DR: This study presents strong evidence that WDPS females have permanently emigrated to the East, reproducing at two ‘mixing zone’ rookeries, and suggests that conditions in this mixing zone region have been optimal for sea lions.