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Murray K. Clayton

Researcher at University of Wisconsin-Madison

Publications -  162
Citations -  8296

Murray K. Clayton is an academic researcher from University of Wisconsin-Madison. The author has contributed to research in topics: Species richness & Population. The author has an hindex of 45, co-authored 157 publications receiving 7393 citations. Previous affiliations of Murray K. Clayton include Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation.

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Effect of replacing alfalfa silage with high moisture corn on ruminal protein synthesis estimated from excretion of total purine derivatives

TL;DR: Twenty-four multiparous dairy cows were blocked by days in milk and assigned to six balanced 4 x 4 Latin squares with 21-d periods, suggesting that this was the optimal level for utilization of dietary NPN from alfalfa silage and other sources.
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Human influence on california fire regimes

TL;DR: Understanding wildfire as a function of the spatial arrangement of ignitions and fuels on the landscape, in addition to nonlinear relationships, will be important to fire managers and conservation planners because fire risk may be related to specific levels of housing density that can be accounted for in land use planning.
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A statistical evaluation of animal and nutritional factors influencing concentrations of milk urea nitrogen

TL;DR: Blood urea N, body weight, yield of fat-corrected milk, dietary CP content, excess N intake, dry matter intake, and days in milk were positively related to milk ureaN, and parity, milk and fat yield, dietaryCP per unit of NEL content, and NEL intake were negatively related to Milk Urea N.
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Stable Isotope Turnover and Half-Life in Animal Tissues: A Literature Synthesis

TL;DR: Previously published half-life estimates are collected, how half- life is related to body size is examined, and tissue- and taxa-varying allometric relationships are tested.
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Predicting spatial patterns of fire on a southern California landscape

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used human and biophysical explanatory variables to model and map the spatial patterns of both fire ignitions and fire frequency in the Santa Monica Mountains, a humandominated southern California landscape.