<?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1"?>
<?xml-stylesheet href="cbhrpubs.xsl" type="text/xsl"?>
<XML>
	<RECORDS>
  <RECORD>
    <REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
    <REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
    <AUTHORS>
      <AUTHOR>Hawkins, Tracy S.</AUTHOR>
      <AUTHOR>Baskin, Jerry M.</AUTHOR>
      <AUTHOR>Baskin, Carol C.</AUTHOR>
    </AUTHORS>
    <YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>Life cycles and biomass allocation in seed- and ramet-derived
plants of Cryptotaenia canadensis (Apiaceae), a monocarpic species of
eastern North America</TITLE>
    <PUBLISHER>Canadian Journal of Botany
</PUBLISHER>
    <NUMBER>83</NUMBER>
    <PAGES>518-528</PAGES>
    <CUSTOM1>2006</CUSTOM1>
    <CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
    <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
    <CUSTOM4>2</CUSTOM4>
    <CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
    <KEYWORDS>
    </KEYWORDS>
    <ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
    <URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/26246</URL>
  </RECORD>

  <RECORD>
    <REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
    <REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
    <AUTHORS>
      <AUTHOR>Kennedy, Thomas B.</AUTHOR>
      <AUTHOR>Haag, Wendell R.</AUTHOR>
    </AUTHORS>
    <YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>Using morphometrics to identify glochidia from a diverse freshwater mussel community</TITLE>
    <PUBLISHER>Journal of the North American Benthological Society </PUBLISHER>
    <NUMBER></NUMBER>
    <PAGES>880-889</PAGES>
    <CUSTOM1>2006</CUSTOM1>
    <CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
    <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
    <CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
    <CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
    <KEYWORDS>
      <KEYWORD></KEYWORD>
      <KEYWORD></KEYWORD>
    </KEYWORDS>
    <ABSTRACT>We measured shell length, hinge length, and height of glochidia from 21 freshwater mussel species occurring in the Sipsey River, Alabama, to test our ability to identify species based on these glochidial morphometrics.  Glochidia size and shape differed widely among species; for all 3 dimensions, mean values for the largest species were 5 to 7x greater than for the smallest species.  Within-species variation in glochidia size was low for all species with the exception of Pleurobema decisum, which was represented by 2 glochidial morphotypes; variation within each morphotype was similar in magnitude to variation within other species.  We were able to classify 72 to 79% of total glochidia (n = 870 or 750, respectively) to the correct species with discriminant functions analysis.  Percentage of correct classification ranged from 40 to 100% for individual species.  Misclassifications were caused by overlap in shell dimensions between some species, but even species with poor classification success were confounded with an average of only 2.2 to 3.0 other species.  Unlike previous studies, we found that glochidia of closely related species were not necessarily more similar to each other than to glochidia of more distantly related species.  For example, species in the tribe Quadrulini were widely divergent in glochidium size and represented some of both the smallest and largest glochidia in our study.  These 3 shell measurements and subsequent application of discriminant functions analysis can be useful for identification of unknown glochidia or for rapidly narrowing the range of potential species identifications to smaller groups of species with similar glochidia. </ABSTRACT>
    <URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/22173</URL>  </RECORD>

  <RECORD>
    <REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
    <REFNUM>4</REFNUM>
    <AUTHORS>
      <AUTHOR>Lockhart, Brian Roy</AUTHOR>
      <AUTHOR>Weih, Robert C.</AUTHOR>
      <AUTHOR>Smith, Keith M.</AUTHOR>
    </AUTHORS>
    <YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>Crown radius and diameter at breast height relationships for six bottomland hardwood species</TITLE>
    <PUBLISHER>Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science</PUBLISHER>
    <NUMBER></NUMBER>
    <PAGES>110-115</PAGES>
    <CUSTOM1>2006</CUSTOM1>
    <CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
    <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
    <CUSTOM4>1</CUSTOM4>
    <CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
    <KEYWORDS>
    </KEYWORDS>
    <ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
	<URL></URL>
  </RECORD>
  <RECORD>
    <REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
    <REFNUM>5</REFNUM>
    <AUTHORS>
      <AUTHOR>Dimov, Luben D.</AUTHOR>
      <AUTHOR>Chambers, Jim L.</AUTHOR>
      <AUTHOR>Lockhart, Brian Roy</AUTHOR>
    </AUTHORS>
    <YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>Spatial continuity of tree attributes in bottomland hardwood forests in the southeastern United States</TITLE>
    <PUBLISHER>Forest Science</PUBLISHER>
    <NUMBER>6</NUMBER>
    <PAGES>532-540</PAGES>
    <CUSTOM1>2006</CUSTOM1>
    <CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
    <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
    <CUSTOM4>1</CUSTOM4>
    <CUSTOM5>Cooperative--Multiple RWUs</CUSTOM5>
    <KEYWORDS>
    </KEYWORDS>
    <ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
    <URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/21420</URL>
  </RECORD>
  <RECORD>
    <REFERENCE_TYPE>4</REFERENCE_TYPE>
    <REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
    <AUTHORS>
      <AUTHOR>Schiff, Nathan M.</AUTHOR>
      <AUTHOR>Wilson, A. Dan</AUTHOR>
      <AUTHOR>Haugen, D</AUTHOR>
      <AUTHOR>Hoebeke, E. R.</AUTHOR>
      <AUTHOR>Angell, E</AUTHOR>
      <AUTHOR>Wrege, P.</AUTHOR>
    </AUTHORS>
    <YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>Identification of a New York siricid larva</TITLE>
    <SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
    </SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
    <SECONDARY_TITLE>Entomological Society of America, National Meeting</SECONDARY_TITLE>
    <PLACE_PUBLISHED>Fort Lauderdale Florida</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
    <PUBLISHER></PUBLISHER>
    <PAGES></PAGES>
    <TERTIARY_TITLE></TERTIARY_TITLE>
    <SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
    <ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
    <ISBN></ISBN>
    <CUSTOM1>2006</CUSTOM1>
    <CUSTOM2>Southern Pine Ecosystems</CUSTOM2>
    <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
    <CUSTOM4>1</CUSTOM4>
    <CUSTOM5>Cooperative--Multiple RWUs</CUSTOM5>
    <AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
	<URL></URL>
  </RECORD>

  <RECORD>
    <REFERENCE_TYPE>4</REFERENCE_TYPE>
    <REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
    <AUTHORS>
      <AUTHOR>Schiff, N.M.</AUTHOR>
      <AUTHOR>Hamel, Paul B.</AUTHOR>
      <AUTHOR>Roa, C.</AUTHOR>
    </AUTHORS>
    <YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>Insect larvae as food for the Ivory-billed Woodpecker</TITLE>
    <SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
    </SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
    <SECONDARY_TITLE>Large Woodpecker Symposium</SECONDARY_TITLE>
    <PLACE_PUBLISHED>Brinkley, Arkansas</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
    <PUBLISHER></PUBLISHER>
    <PAGES></PAGES>
    <TERTIARY_TITLE></TERTIARY_TITLE>
    <SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
    <ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
    <ISBN></ISBN>
    <CUSTOM1>2006</CUSTOM1>
    <CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
    <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
    <CUSTOM4>1</CUSTOM4>
    <CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
    <AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
	<URL></URL>
  </RECORD>

    <RECORD>
    <REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
    <REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
    <AUTHORS>
      <AUTHOR>Smith, D.R.</AUTHOR>
      <AUTHOR>Schiff, N.M.</AUTHOR>
    </AUTHORS>
    <YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>A new western nearctic species of Calameuta (Hymenoptera: Cephidae).</TITLE>
    <PUBLISHER>Proceedings of the Entomological society of Washington</PUBLISHER>
    <NUMBER></NUMBER>
    <PAGES>864-868</PAGES>
    <CUSTOM1>2006</CUSTOM1>
    <CUSTOM2>Inventory and Monitoring</CUSTOM2>
    <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
    <CUSTOM4>2</CUSTOM4>
    <CUSTOM5>Cooperative--Multiple RWUs</CUSTOM5>
    <KEYWORDS>
    </KEYWORDS>
    <ABSTRACT>
</ABSTRACT>
<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/21780</URL>  </RECORD>

  <RECORD>
    <REFERENCE_TYPE>22</REFERENCE_TYPE>
    <REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
    <AUTHORS>
      <AUTHOR>Baldy, Jennifer J.</AUTHOR>
    </AUTHORS>
    <YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>Climate Preferences of the Cerulean Warbler on Summer Territory</TITLE>
    <PLACE_PUBLISHED>Memphis, Tennessee</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
    <PUBLISHER>University of Memphis, Department of Earth Sciences</PUBLISHER>
    <PAGES>76</PAGES>
    <TYPE_OF_WORK>M.S. thesis</TYPE_OF_WORK>
    <CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
    <CUSTOM2>Large-Scale Assessment and Modeling</CUSTOM2>
    <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
    <CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
    <CUSTOM5>Extramural--Primarily Non-FS</CUSTOM5>
    <KEYWORDS>
      <KEYWORD>Breeding Bird Survey</KEYWORD>
      <KEYWORD>Dendroica cerulea</KEYWORD>
      <KEYWORD>DMAP Software</KEYWORD>
      <KEYWORD>Geographical Information Systems</KEYWORD>
      <KEYWORD>Spatial Filtering</KEYWORD>
      <KEYWORD>Spatial Modeling</KEYWORD>
    </KEYWORDS>
    <ABSTRACT>The cerulean warbler, a neotropical migrant bird species, has suffered serious population declines, and a general movement of the population has been suggested on the breeding range.  The hypothesis is that the species is not evenly distributed over the range, but that areas with the greatest environmental suitability will contain clusters where the species occurs at a high rate and that the location and historic movements of these areas can be identified.  A second hypothesis is that cluster movements are related to climate variability and that ideal conditions can be identified through the identification of areas where the species occurred at a high rate.  The process of spatial filtering has been applied to Breeding Bird survey data in order to locate high rate areas and weather data from NOAA has been used to determine the climate characteristics of the cluster areas.  Results show that the species does exist in a clustered pattern and that movements are significantly correlated with temperature and precipitation, and that occurrence of the bird appears to track specific climate conditions.  The implications of this study are that climate variability and trends must be taken into account in decisions regarding the locations where focused conservation efforts would be most productive.  The purpose of this thesis was to evaluate the suggested movement of the breeding range and investigate climatic correlates of the breeding distribution.</ABSTRACT>
	<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/cbhr/pubs/J_Baldy_introductorymaterial.pdf</URL>
  </RECORD>


  <RECORD>
    <REFERENCE_TYPE>19</REFERENCE_TYPE>
    <REFNUM>3</REFNUM>
    <AUTHORS>
      <AUTHOR>Leininger, T.D.</AUTHOR>
      <AUTHOR>Gardiner, Emile</AUTHOR>
    </AUTHORS>
    <YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>Mixed-species hardwood plantings in the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley: A source for bio-products, and more than residue.</TITLE>
    <SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
    </SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
    <SECONDARY_TITLE>2005 Southern Bio-Products Conference</SECONDARY_TITLE>
    <PLACE_PUBLISHED>Jackson, MS</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
    <PUBLISHER>Mississippi Biomass Council</PUBLISHER>
    <PAGES>11-12</PAGES>
    <TERTIARY_TITLE></TERTIARY_TITLE>
    <SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
    <ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
    <ISBN></ISBN>
    <CUSTOM1>2006</CUSTOM1>
    <CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
    <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
    <CUSTOM4>2</CUSTOM4>
    <CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
    <AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
	<URL></URL>
  </RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Veit, M.L.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Robertson, R.J.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Hamel, P.B.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Friesen, V.L.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Population genetic structure and dispersal across a fragmented landscape in cerulean warblers (Dendroica cerulea)</TITLE>
		<PUBLISHER>Conservation Genetics</PUBLISHER>
		<VOLUME>6</VOLUME>
		<NUMBER></NUMBER>
		<PAGES>159-174</PAGES>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Large-Scale Assessment and Modeling</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Extramural--Primarily Non-FS</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
			  <KEYWORD>cerulean warbler</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>conservation genetics</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>dispersal</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>habitat fragmentation</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>population genetic structure</KEYWORD>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT>Cerulean warblers (Dendroica cerulea) have experienced signi.cant declines across their breeding range and
	presently exist in disjunct populations, largely because of extensive loss and fragmentation of their breeding
	and wintering habitat. Despite this overall decline, a recent north-eastern expansion of the breeding range
	has been proposed, and some researchers have suggested that the eastern Ontario population may be acting
	as a source population maintaining sink populations elsewhere. However, little is known about either the
	geographic distribution of genetic variation or dispersal in these birds. We assayed variation in .ve
	microsatellite loci and a 366 base-pair fragment of the mitochondrial control region among 154 cerulean
	warblers from .ve populations throughout the breeding range. No evidence of population genetic structure
	was found. Assignment tests suggested that six individuals were either inter-population migrants or
	descendants of recent migrants. The lack of population genetic structure is probably due to a combination
	of historical association and contemporary dispersal. Population decline does not appear to have reduced
	genetic variation yet. Overall results suggest that cerulean warblers from Ontario, Illinois, Arkansas and
	Tennessee should be considered a single genetic management unit for conservation.</ABSTRACT>
		<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/20852</URL>
	</RECORD>

		<RECORD>
			<REFERENCE_TYPE>22</REFERENCE_TYPE>
			<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
			<AUTHORS>	
			  	<AUTHOR>Bowen, Bryant R.</AUTHOR>
			</AUTHORS>
			<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
			<TITLE>Alabama shad phylogeography</TITLE>
			<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Hattiesburg, Mississippi</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
			<PUBLISHER>University of Southern Mississippi</PUBLISHER>
			<PAGES>103</PAGES>
			<TYPE_OF_WORK>M.S. thesis</TYPE_OF_WORK>
			<CUSTOM1>2006</CUSTOM1>
			<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
			<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
			<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
			<CUSTOM5>Extramural--Primarily Non-FS</CUSTOM5>
			<KEYWORDS></KEYWORDS>
			<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
			<URL></URL>
		</RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>2</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			<AUTHOR>Wilson, A.D.</AUTHOR>
			<AUTHOR>Lester, D.G.</AUTHOR>
			<AUTHOR>Oberle, C.S.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Application of conductive polymer analysis for wood and woody plant identifications</TITLE>
		<PUBLISHER>Forest Ecology and Management</PUBLISHER>
		<NUMBER></NUMBER>
		<PAGES>207-224</PAGES>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>2</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
			<KEYWORD>Artificial olfaction</KEYWORD>
			<KEYWORD>electronic nose detection</KEYWORD>
			<KEYWORD>forest ecology</KEYWORD>
			<KEYWORD>forest management</KEYWORD>
			<KEYWORD>plant chemotaxonomy</KEYWORD>
			<KEYWORD>Quercus</KEYWORD>
			<KEYWORD>woody sample identification</KEYWORD>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT>An electronic aroma detection technology known as conductive polymer analysis (CPA) was evaluated as a means of identifying and discriminating woody samples of angiosperms and gymnosperms using an analytical instrument (electronic nose) that characterizes the aroma profiles of volatiles released from excised wood into sampled headspace. The instrument measures electrical-resistance changes generated by adsorption of volatiles to the surface of electroactive, polymer-coated sensors. Unique digital electronic fingerprints of wood aromas, derived from multisensor-responses to distinct mixtures of wood volatiles, were obtained from woods of individual tree species. A reference library containing aroma signature patterns for 23 tree species was constructed for identifications of unknown samples using pattern-recognition algorithms. The 32-sensor array used with an Aromascan A32S instrument was sensitive to a wide diversity of organic compounds and produced outputs of distinct electronic aroma signature patterns in response to wood volatiles that effectively identified unknown samples from individual tree species included in the reference library. Some potential applications of CPA methods for research in ecology, forestry, plant taxonomy, and related disciplines were identified with some significant advantages and limitations. Other applications of this technology were discovered for the management of forested stands and ecosystems based on the identification of roles that wood-inhabiting organisms play in stand dynamics and long-term ecosystem functions. Results pertaining to tree systematics and phylogeny are discussed in the context of prevailing opinions of oak taxonomy.
		</ABSTRACT>
		<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/9707</URL>
	</RECORD>
	    
	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>7</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>2</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			<AUTHOR>Lockhart, B.R.</AUTHOR>
			<AUTHOR>Meadows, J.S.</AUTHOR>
			<AUTHOR>Hodges, J.D.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Assessment of stand development patterns for management and research needs in southern bottomland hardwoods</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
			<SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Fredrickson, L.H.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			<SECONDARY_AUTHOR>King, S.L.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			<SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Kaminiski, R.M.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		</SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Ecology and Management of Bottomland Hardwood Systems: The State of Our Understanding</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Columbia, MO</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>University of Missouri Printing</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>439-448</PAGES>
		<SECTION></SECTION>
		<EDITION></EDITION>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>1</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
			<KEYWORD>bottomland hardwoods</KEYWORD>
			<KEYWORD>stand development</KEYWORD>
			<KEYWORD>research</KEYWORD>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
	</RECORD>

  <RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>3</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Wilson, A.D.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Schiff, N.M.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Leininger, T.D.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Hamel, P. B.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Gardiner, E. S.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Connor, K.F.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Devall, M.S.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Black twig borer exacerbates damage caused by Botryosphaeria stem canker and dieback of pondberry in the Delta National Forest of Mississippi</TITLE>
		<PUBLISHER>Phytopathology</PUBLISHER>
		<NUMBER>6</NUMBER>
		<PAGES>S112</PAGES>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>2</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
			  <KEYWORD>black twig borer</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>Xylosandrus compactus</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>pondberry</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>Lindera melissifolia</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>Botryosphaeria stem canker</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>Delta National Forest</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>exotic insect</KEYWORD>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT>Pondberry, Lindera melissifolia, is an endangered woody shrub of wetlands in the southern United States. Botryosphaeria stem canker disease causes significant damage to pondberry including stem mortality, reduced vigor, and attenuated seed production. The black twig borer, Xylosandrus compactus, is a small, nonnative (exotic) wood-boring ambrosia beetle that chews into pondberry stems in the fall. The adults prefer to bore primarily but not exclusively into canker tissue formed in response to the stem canker fungus, tentatively identified as Botryosphaeria ribis, presumably because canker tissue is softer than healthy tissue. The borer exacerbates damage caused by the disease in several ways. It bores perpendicularly into the stem and hollows out the pith adjacent to the entry point to form a conspicuous, elongated T-shaped gallery. These galleries increase the susceptibility of the stem to mechanical breakage by wind and other physical forces. Stems are partially girdled around the entry point, contributing to dieback. Adults hibernate and overwinter in stems, emerge from canker tissue in the spring carrying fungal inoculum, then attack nearby pondberry plants or alternate hosts, producing brood chambers in stems. The behavior of this borer makes it a good candidate as a possible vector of the Botryosphaeria stem canker fungus.</ABSTRACT>
		<URL></URL>
  </RECORD>

  <RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Hamel, P.B.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Kirkconnell, A.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Composition of mixed-species flocks of migrant and resident birds in Cuba</TITLE>
		<PUBLISHER>Cotinga</PUBLISHER>
		<NUMBER>24</NUMBER>
		<PAGES>28-34</PAGES>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Large-Scale Assessment and Modeling</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research </CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
			  <KEYWORD>Cuba</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>wood warblers</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>Neotropical Migratory Birds</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD><ITALIC>Teretistris</ITALIC></KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>mixed species bird flocks</KEYWORD>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT>La Chillina Teretistris fernandinae y el Pechero T. fornsi constituyen un g&#0233;nero endg&#0233;mico de aves
	cubanas que se caracterizan por su comportamiento de bandadas. Durante el perg&#0237;odo de invierno
	ciertas especies migratorias y residentes se unen a g&#0233;stas especies para formar bandadas mixtas.
	En este trabajo documentamos el ng&#02350;mero de especies y enumeramos el total de individuos en 230
	bandadas mixtas en bosques manejados del oeste de Cuba y en matorral costero del norte de la
	isla. Documentamos un total de 30 especies residentes y 26 especies migratorias en bandadas.
	Nuestros resultados resaltan la importancia que juegan las dos especies de Teretistris en las
	bandadas mixtas en Cuba. Tambig&#0233;n documentamos que la participacig&#0243;n de especies residentes es
	menor que la de migratorias en las bandadas mixtas. El feng&#0243;meno de bandadas mixtas es un
	componente importante del ciclo anual para especies migratorias, en especial los parg&#0250;lidos.
		</ABSTRACT>
		<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/cbhr/pub/pdfs/Hamel_and_Kirkconnell_Cotinga_24.28-34_2005.pdf</URL>
  </RECORD>

 <RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>15</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Chambers, J. L.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Conner, W. H.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Day, J. W., Jr.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Faulkner, S. P.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Gardiner, E. S.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Hughes, M. S.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Keim, R. F.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>King, S. L.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>McLeod, K. W.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Miller, C. A.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Nyman, J. A.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Shaffer, G. P.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>Conservation, protection and utilization of Louisiana's coastal wetland forests</TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Baton Rouge, LA</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>Science Working Group on Coastal Wetland Forest Conservation and Use </PUBLISHER>
		<NUMBER></NUMBER>
		<PAGES>102</PAGES>
		<TYPE_OF_WORK>Final report</TYPE_OF_WORK>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>1</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5></CUSTOM5>
		<LABEL>Governor of Louisiana</LABEL>
		<KEYWORDS></KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/20841</URL>
  </RECORD>

  <RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>19</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
		  	<AUTHOR>Gardiner, E. S.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>Developing a research and demonstration project initiated by managers: the Sharkey Restoration Site</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Innes, J. L.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Edwards, I. K.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Wilford, D. J.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		</SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Forests in the balance: linking tradition and technology, XXII IUFRO World Conference</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Brisbane, Australia</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>Commonwealth Forestry Association</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>363</PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE>Forests in the balance: linking tradition and technology</TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE>International Forestry Review</SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN>7(5)</ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2004</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>1</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS>eds.</AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
  </RECORD>

  <RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>4</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
		  	<AUTHOR>Wilson, A.D.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Development of a new rapid dicofol-fumigation method for the control of mycophagous mites in fungal cultures</TITLE>
		<PUBLISHER>Phytopathology</PUBLISHER>
		<NUMBER>6</NUMBER>
		<PAGES>S112</PAGES>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>2</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
			  <KEYWORD>Mycophagous mites</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>Tyrophagus putrescentiae</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>dicofol</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>fumigation method</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>chemical control</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>fungal cultures</KEYWORD>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT>Mycophagous mites are capable of causing considerable damage to fungal cultures ranging from loss of accumulated growth, resulting from mite feeding and contamination, to total loss of culture viability. The most ubiquitous and common mite, Tyrophagus putrescentiae, is responsible for most mite damage to fungal cultures in laboratories worldwide. Such mites typically transmit and spread bacteria, yeast, and fungal contaminants across the surface of cultures that preclude acquisition of sterile transfers for various applications. Dicofol-fumigation treatments, applied at concentrations ranging from 15 to 150 ppt in a xylene carrier, were tested with xylene and untreated controls compared to dichlorvos, using fungal cultures infested with T. putrescentiae placed in friction-sealed stainless steel canisters within plastic Petri plates. Dicofol treatments caused 100% mite mortality at all concentrations, whereas significantly less control was achieved with dichlorvos. Xylene alone also caused high mortality, but allowed some mites to escape. Mite behavior and activity was affected by all pesticide treatments. This new dicofol-fumigation method proved to be safe and effective, providing complete control of all mites (including unhatched eggs) in fungal cultures within 24 hours without affecting culture viability or exposing the operator to the fumigant.</ABSTRACT>
		<URL></URL>
  </RECORD>
  
  <RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>19</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>2</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>De Steven, Diane</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Sharitz, Rebecca R.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Does planting key wetland species facilitate vegetation recovery in restored Southeastern depression wetlands?</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS></SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Final Program and Abstracts, Society of Wetland Scientists 26th Annual Meeting</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Charleston, SC</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER></PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES></PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE></TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>4</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>.</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
  </RECORD>

  <RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>4</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Wharton, Kristi L.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Walls, Susan C.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>Economical frogloggers with user defined features</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS></SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>2005 joint meeting of ichthyologists and herpetologists</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Manhattan, KS </PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>Kansas State University</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES></PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE></TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>1</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
  </RECORD>
  
  <RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>4</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Stroh, Chrissa L.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>De Steven, Diane</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Guntenspergen, Glenn R.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Effect of drought cycles on long-term vegetation dynamics in Carolina bay wetlands</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS></SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Ecological Society of American &amp; IX International Congress of Ecology Joint Meeting</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Montreal, Quebec, Canada</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER></PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES></PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE></TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>4</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
  </RECORD>

  <RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>19</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>3</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Stroh, Chrissa L.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>De Steven, Diane</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Sharitz, Rebecca R.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Effect of drought cycles on long-term vegetation dynamics in Carolina bay wetlands</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS></SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Final Program and Abstracts, Society of Wetland Scientists 26th Annual Meeting</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Charleston, SC</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER></PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES></PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE></TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>4</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
  </RECORD>

  <RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Mulhouse, John M.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>De Steven, Diane</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Lide, Robert F.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Sharitz, Rebecca R.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>Effects of dominant species on vegetation change in Carolina bay wetlands following a multi-year drought</TITLE>
		<PUBLISHER>Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society</PUBLISHER>
		<VOLUME>132</VOLUME>
		<NUMBER>3</NUMBER>
		<PAGES>411-420</PAGES>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>4</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5></CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS></KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT>ies for species recruitment in pond/meadow bays. The
	results suggest that Carolina bay vegetation dynamics may differ as a function of dominant vegetation and climatedriven
	variation in wetland hydrologic condition.</ABSTRACT>
		<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/21578</URL>
  </RECORD>

  <RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			<AUTHOR>Adams, Susan B.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>Hurricane Katrina:  Boon or Bust for Freshwater Fish Communities?</TITLE>
		<PUBLISHER>Watershed</PUBLISHER>
		<VOLUME>2</VOLUME>
		<NUMBER>2</NUMBER>
		<PAGES>19-23</PAGES>
		<CUSTOM1>2006</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS></KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/21962</URL>
  </RECORD>

  <RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>19</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>4</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Lockhart, B.R.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Gardiner, E.S.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Leininger, T.D.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Connor, K.F.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Devall, M.S.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Hamel, P.B.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Hawkins, T.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Schiff, N.M.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Wilson, A.D.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Linking stakeholder research needs and the Federal Data Quality Act: a case study of an endangered forest shrub in the southern United States</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Innes, J.L.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Edwards, I.K.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Wilford, D.J.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		</SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Forests in the Balance: Linking Tradition and Technology, XXII IUFRO World Congress</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Brisbane, Australia</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>Commonwealth Forestry Association</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>160</PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE></TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE>The International Forestry Review</SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN>7(5)</ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>1</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
  </RECORD>

 <RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>9</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Lockhart, B.R.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>DeMatteis, J.D.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Harris, L.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Ezell, A.W. (compilers)</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Mississippi hardwood notes</TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Jackson, Mississippi</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>Mississippi Forestry Commission</PUBLISHER>
		<EDITION></EDITION>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>1</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
			  <KEYWORD>bottomland hardwoods</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>ecology</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>silviculture</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>management</KEYWORD>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<URL></URL>
  </RECORD>

  <RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>19</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>3</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Lockhart, B.R.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Gardiner, E.S.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Leininger, T.D.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Stanturf, J.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Mixed-species plantation prescriptions for the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley, U.S.A.</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		</SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Improving Productivity in Mixed-Species Plantations</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Ballina, New South Wales, Australia</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>Southern Cross University</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>15</PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE></TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>1</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
  </RECORD>

  <RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>19</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>2</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Keeland, Bobby D.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>McCoy, John W.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Wharton, Kristi L.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Planted oaks and natural invasion in bottomland hardwood forests of the lower Mississippi alluvial valley</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS></SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Ninth workshop on seedling physiology and growth problems in oak plantings</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>St. Paul, MN</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, North Central Research Station</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>8</PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE></TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE>Gen. Tech. Rep</SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE>NC</ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN>262</ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>1</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
  </RECORD>

 <RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Wilson, A.D.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Recent advances in the control of oak wilt in the United States</TITLE>
		<PUBLISHER>Plant Pathology Journal</PUBLISHER>
		<NUMBER>2</NUMBER>
		<PAGES>177-191</PAGES>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2></CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>2</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
			  <KEYWORD>Ceratocystis fagacearum</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>disease suppression</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>microinjectors</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>trench inserts</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>triazole fungicides</KEYWORD>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT>Oak wilt, caused by Ceratocystis fagacearum (T.W. Bretz) J. Hunt, is probably the most destructive disease of oak trees (Quercus species) in the United States. The disease annually kills large numbers of oaks throughout the eastern half of the country, and is currently causing high mortality at epiphytotic proportions in central Texas. There is a high risk for oak wilt to continue to expand into highly susceptible red oak and live oak stands within five southern-tier states near the Gulf Coast. The serious potential for damage, resulting from this possible southward expansion into large stands of vulnerable southern interior and coastal oak forests, prompted an increase in federal funding within the past fifteen years for new oak wilt research and federally-assisted oak wilt suppression funds for eligible states. The benefits resulting from this new federal research of oak wilt have been far-reaching due to new technological developments that have greatly improved our ability to manage this devastating disease nationwide. These new research developments have included adaptive utilizations of industrial technologies such as electronic aroma detection (EAD) and aerial infrared remote sensing surveys for early disease detection and diagnosis, geotextile polymeric landscape fabrics that have improved trenching barriers, and field advances learned from suppression activities and experience gained through current state oak wilt control programs. All of these areas of increased knowledge have contributed to and provided means for improving oak wilt suppression through rapid detection, improved cultural and chemical controls, and refinements of strategies for combining these various control methods into a more effective, integrated approach for oak wilt disease management. The development of these improved methods for oak wilt control are reviewed here and discussed in relation to current state forestry pest-control programs that have begun to implement these new methods in their oak wilt suppression operations.</ABSTRACT>
		<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/21644</URL>
	</RECORD>

    <RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>7</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>2</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Gardiner, Emile S.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Oliver, James M.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Restoration of bottomland hardwood forests in the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley, U.S.A.</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Stanturf, John A.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Madsen, Palle</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		</SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Restoration of Boreal and Temperate Forests</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Boca Raton, FL</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>CRC Press</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>235 - 251</PAGES>
		<SECTION>chapter fifteen</SECTION>
		<EDITION></EDITION>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>1</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS>eds.</AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/20835</URL>
	</RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>22</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Skojac, Daniel A., Jr.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>The diameter and bole quality response of residual hardwood poletimber following thinning in sawtimber stands</TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Mississippi State, MS</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>Mississippi State University</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>147</PAGES>
		<TYPE_OF_WORK>M.S. thesis</TYPE_OF_WORK>
		<CUSTOM1>2006</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>2</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<URL></URL>
	</RECORD>	

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>3</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Devall, Margaret</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Dendroecological history of an old growth bottomland hardwood forest in southeastern Arkansas</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS></SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>The Association of American Geographers 2005 Annual Meeting Abstracts</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Washington, D.C.</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>The Association of American Geographer</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>121</PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE>The Association of American Geographers 2005 Annual Meeting Abstracts</TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<EDITION></EDITION>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>4</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
	</RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>19</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Devall, M.S. </AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Thien, L.B.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Ellgaard, E.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Flowers, G.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Lead transport into Bayou Trepagnier wetlands in Louisiana</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Innes, John L.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Edwards, John W.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Wilford, David J.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		</SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>The international forestry review: forests in the balance: linking tradition and technology: XXII IUFRO world congress, 8-13 August 2005</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Brisbane, Australia</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>Commonwealth Forestry Association</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>239</PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE>The international forestry review</TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>4</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS>eds.</AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL>http://jeq.scijournals.org/cgi/content/full/35/3/758?maxtoshow=&amp;HITS=10&amp;hits=10&amp;RESULTFORMAT=&amp;fulltext=Devall&amp;searchid=1&amp;FIRSTINDEX=0&amp;volume=35&amp;issue=3&amp;resourcetype=HWCIT</URL>
	</RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>19</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Devall, M.S. </AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Schiff, N.M.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Skojac, S.A.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Conservation of an endangered shrub in the southeastern United States</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS></SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>XVII international botanical congress - abstracts</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Vienna, Austria</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>international botanical congress</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>600</PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE>XVII international botanical congress - abstracts</TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>4</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
	</RECORD>
	
	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>19</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Devall, M.S. </AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Silviculture of rare, threatened and endangered tree species in the U.S.A.</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Innes, John L.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Edwards, Ivor K.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Wilford, David J.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		</SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>The intermational forestry review: forests in the balance: linking tradition and technology: XXII IUFRO world congress, 8-13 August 2005</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Brisbane, Australia</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>Commonwealth Forestry Association</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>286-287</PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE>The intermational forestry review</TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>4</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS>eds.</AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
	</RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>4</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Burkhead, Noel M.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Jelks, Howard L.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Walsh, Stephen J.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Contreras-Balderas, Salvador</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Diaz-Pardo, Edmundo</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Hendrickson, Dean A.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Lyons, John</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Mandrak, Nicholas E.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>McCormick, Frank</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Nelson, Joseph S.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Platania, Steven P.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Porter, Brady A.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Renaud, Claude B.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Schmitter-Soto, Juan Jacobo</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Taylor, Eric B.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Warren, Melvin L., Jr.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Revision of the American Fisheries Society list of imperiled freshwater and diadromous fishes of North America.</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS></SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Abstract CD (poster), 2005 Joint Meeting of American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Tampa, Florida</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES></PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE></TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Large-Scale Assessment and Modeling</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Cooperative--Multiple RWUs</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
	</RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>4</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>2</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Hill, B. F.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>McCormick, F. H.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Harvey, B. C.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Johnson, S. L.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Warren, M. L., Jr.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>An interregional comparison of channel structure, transient storage and riparian canopy with community metabolism in streams draining early, mid- and late successional watersheds.  (Poster)</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS></SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Annual meeting North American Benthological Society</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>New Orleans, Louisiana</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>North American Benthological Society</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES></PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE></TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Mountain and Highland Ecosystems</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Cooperative--Multiple RWUs</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/cbhr/posters/mlw_NorthAmericanBenthologicalSociety2005.pdf</URL>
	  </RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Love, Joseph W.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Taylor, Christopher M.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Warren, Melvin L., Jr.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE><styles><style face='2' start='63' ></style><style start='72'></style><style face='2' start='73' ></style><style start='85'></style></styles>Predator density and dissolved oxygen affect body condition of Stenonema tripunctatum (Ephemeroptera, Heptgeniidae) from intermittent streams</TITLE>
		<PUBLISHER>Hydrobiologia</PUBLISHER>
		<NUMBER></NUMBER>
		<PAGES>113-118</PAGES>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Mountain and Highland Ecosystems</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS></KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/20531</URL>
	</RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>2</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Warren, Melvin L., Jr.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Haag, Wendell R.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>Spatio-temporal patterns of the decline of freshwater mussels in the Little South Fork Cumberland River, USA</TITLE>
		<PUBLISHER>Biodiversity and Conservation</PUBLISHER>
		<NUMBER></NUMBER>
		<PAGES>1383-1400</PAGES>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS></KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/9776</URL>
	</RECORD>	


	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>4</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>2</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Baldy, J.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Ozdenerol, E.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Hamel, P.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Urbano, L.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Kung, H.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Determination of the Climate Preferences of the Cerulean Warbler by using GIS and Spatial Filtering Technique</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS></SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Determination of the Climate Preferences of the Cerulean Warbler by using GIS and Spatial Filtering Technique.  Tennessee Geographic Information Council, 2005 Annual Conference </SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Franklin, TN</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>Tennessee Geographic Information Council</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES></PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE></TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Large-Scale Assessment and Modeling</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Extramural--Primarily Non-FS</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
	</RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>4</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>3</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Hamel, P. B.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Smith III, C. G.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>Measurement of foliage profiles for canopy dwelling birds</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS></SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Measurement of foliage profiles for canopy dwelling birds.  Southeastern Management Working Group, Partners in Flight </SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>McAllen, Texas</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>Southeastern Management Working Group, Partners in Flight </PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES></PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE></TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
	</RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>4</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>4</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Hamel, P. B.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Twedt, D. J.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Woodrey, M. S.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Comparison of Winter Bird Population Study and Project Prairie Birds surveys of winter birds in grasslands</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		</SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Comparison of Winter Bird Population Study and Project Prairie Birds surveys of winter birds in grasslands.  Southeastern Management Working Group, Partners in Flight</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>McAllen, Texas</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>Southeastern Management Working Group, Partners in Flight</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES></PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE></TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
	</RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>4</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>5</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Wilson, R.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>P. B. Hamel</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>D. J. Twedt</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>R. J. Cooper</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>A revised bird point count protocol for the Southeast Management Working Group, Partners In Flight</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS></SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>A revised bird point count protocol for the Southeast Management Working Group, Partners In Flight.  Southeastern Management Working Group, Partners in Flight</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>McAllen, Texas</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>Southeastern Management Working Group, Partners in Flight</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES></PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE></TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Large-Scale Assessment and Modeling</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
	</RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>4</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>6</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Baldy, J.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>E. Ozdenerol</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>L. Urbano</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>H. Kung</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>P. Hamel</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Breeding climate preferences of the Cerulean Warbler determined by spatial filtering of Breeding Bird Survey data</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS></SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Breeding climate preferences of the Cerulean Warbler determined by spatial filtering of Breeding Bird Survey data.  Joint meeting of the Wilson Ornithological Society and the Association of Field Ornithologists </SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Beltsville, MD</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>Wilson Ornithological Society and the Association of Field Ornithologists</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES></PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE></TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Large-Scale Assessment and Modeling</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Extramural--Primarily Non-FS</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS></AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
	</RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Adams, Susan B.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Schmetterling, David A.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Young, Michael K.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Instream movements by boreal toads (Bufo boreas boreas)</TITLE>
		<PUBLISHER>Herpetological Review</PUBLISHER>
		<VOLUME>36</VOLUME>
		<NUMBER>1</NUMBER>
		<PAGES>27-33</PAGES>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Cooperative--Multiple RWUs</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/9429</URL>
	</RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Adams, Susan B.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Warren, Melvin L., Jr.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Recolonization by warmwater fishes and crayfishes after severe drought in upper Coastal Plain hill streams</TITLE>
		<PUBLISHER>Transactions of the American Fisheries Society</PUBLISHER>
		<VOLUME>134</VOLUME>
		<NUMBER></NUMBER>
		<PAGES>1173-1192</PAGES>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS></KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/20833</URL>
	  </RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>15</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Karr, James R.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Adams, Susan B.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Fore, Leska S.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Recommendations for data management, synthesis of knowledge, and future research under the Whirling Disease Initiative</TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Bozeman, MT</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>The Whirling Disease Initiative</PUBLISHER>
		<NUMBER></NUMBER>
		<PAGES>37</PAGES>
		<TYPE_OF_WORK>Final report</TYPE_OF_WORK>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<LABEL>The Whirling Disease Initiative, Montana Water Center</LABEL>
		<KEYWORDS></KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<URL></URL>
	  </RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>7</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Meadows, James S.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Goelz, J.C.G.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>The role of thinning in management of southern bottomland hardwood forests</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Fredrickson, L.H.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>King, S.L.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Kaminski, R.M.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		</SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Ecology and management of bottomland hardwood systems: the state of our understanding</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Puxico, MO</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>University of Missouri-Columbia, Gaylord Memorial Laboratory</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>449-457</PAGES>
		<SECTION></SECTION>
		<EDITION></EDITION>
		<SHORT_TITLE>Special Publication</SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN>10</ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>2</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Cooperative--Multiple RWUs</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS></KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS>eds.</AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
        <URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/20851</URL>
	  </RECORD>
	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Smith, Carl</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Hamel, Paul B.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Bird banding at the Great Delta Bear Affair</TITLE>
		<PUBLISHER>Mississippi Ornithological Society Newsletter</PUBLISHER>
		<NUMBER>50(1)</NUMBER>
		<PAGES>6-7</PAGES>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
			  <KEYWORD>Delta National Forest</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>Yazoo National Wildlife Refuge</KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD>winter bird community</KEYWORD>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT>The Great Delta Bear Affair is a festival that celebrates the rich natural resources and cultural heritage of the Mississippi Delta. Each October for three consecutive years, Rolling Fork, Mississippi, 
				  has hosted this celebration of Theodore Roosevelt&#8217;s historic 1902 encounter with the &#8220;Teddy Bear&#8221;. Associated activities take place at several other locations in the South Delta. One of these associated
				  activities for the public is a bird walk that leads to an active bird banding station where we record fall migrant and winter arrivals for the USDA Forest Service.</ABSTRACT>
		<URL></URL>
	  </RECORD>
	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Oliver, Chadwick Dearing</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Burkhardt, E.C.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Skojac, Daniel A.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>The increasing scarcity of red oaks in Mississippi River floodplain forests: influence of the residual overstory</TITLE>
		<PUBLISHER>Forest Ecology and Management</PUBLISHER>
		<VOLUME>210</VOLUME>
		<NUMBER></NUMBER>
		<PAGES>393-414</PAGES>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>2</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Cooperative--Multiple RWUs</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
			  <KEYWORD></KEYWORD>
			  <KEYWORD></KEYWORD>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/20849</URL>
	  </RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>19</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>2</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Connor, Kristina F.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Lindstrom, Gretchen M.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Donahoo, Jillian</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Devall, Margaret</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Gardiner, Emile</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Leininger, T.D.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Wilson, A. Dan</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Schiff, N.M.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Hamel, Paul B.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Echt, Craig</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Hawkins, Tracy</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE><styles><style face='2' start='39' ></style><style start='59'></style></styles>Maturation and chemical composition of Lindera melissifolia [Walt.] seeds</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Innes, J.L.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Edwards, I.K.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Wilford, D.J.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		</SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Forests in the balance: linking tradition and technology: XXII IUFRO World Congress</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Brisbane, Queensland, Australia</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>Commonwealth Forestry Association</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>286</PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE>Forests in the balance: linking tradition and technology</TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN>Volume 7(5)</ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>2</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS>eds.</AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
	</RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>3</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>3</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Leininger, Theodor D.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Reams, Gregory A.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Healthy forests in the South: challenges in the 21st Century</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Rauscher, H. Michael</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Johnsen, Kurt H.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		</SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Southern forest science: past, present, and future: Southern forest science - 2001</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Asheville, NC</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Southern Research Station</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>119-122</PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE>Southern forest science: past, present, and future</TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<EDITION></EDITION>
		<SHORT_TITLE>Gen. Tech. Rep</SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE>SRS</ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN>75</ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>2</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Cooperative--Multiple RWUs</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS></KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS>eds.</AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/9651</URL>
	</RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>3</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>4</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Wilson, A. Dan</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Leininger, Theodor D.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Otrosina, William J.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Dwinell, L. David</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Schiff, Nathan M.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>The impact and control of major southern forest diseases</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Rauscher, H. Michael</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Johnsen, Kurt H.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		</SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Southern forest science: past, present, and future: Southern forest science - 2001</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Asheville, NC</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Southern Research Station</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>161-178</PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE>Southern forest science: past, present, and future</TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<EDITION></EDITION>
		<SHORT_TITLE>Gen. Tech. Rep</SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE>SRS</ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN>75</ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>2</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Cooperative--Multiple RWUs</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS></KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS>eds.</AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/9678</URL>
	  </RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>3</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>5</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Leininger, Theodor D.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Delta Experimental Forest (Mississippi)</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Adams, Mary Beth</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Loughry, Linda</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Plaugher, Linda</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		</SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Experimental forests and ranges of the USDA Forest Service: Forest Service experimental forests and ranges workshop</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Newtown Square, PA</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northeastern Research Station</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>148-149</PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE>Experimental forests and ranges of the USDA Forest Service</TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<EDITION></EDITION>
		<SHORT_TITLE>Gen. Tech. Rep</SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE>NE</ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN>321</ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>2</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS>comps.</AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
	  </RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>3</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>6</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Nebeker, T. Evan</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Leininger, Theodor D.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Meadows, J. Steven</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Warriner, Michael D.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Thinning southern bottomland hardwood stands: insect and disease considerations</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Fredrickson, L.H.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>King, S.L.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
			  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Kaminski, R.M.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		</SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Ecology and management of bottomland hardwood systems: the state of our understanding</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Puxico, MO</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>University of Missouri-Columbia</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>467-477</PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE>Ecology and management of bottomland hardwood systems: the state of our understanding</TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<EDITION></EDITION>
		<SHORT_TITLE></SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE></ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN></ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>2</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS>eds.</AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/20854</URL>
	  </RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>2</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
			  <AUTHOR>Peacock, E.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Haag, Wendell R.</AUTHOR>
			  <AUTHOR>Warren, Melvin L., Jr.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR>
		<TITLE>Prehistoric decline in freshwater mussels coincident with the advent of maize agriculture.</TITLE>
		<PUBLISHER>Conservation Biology</PUBLISHER>
		<NUMBER></NUMBER>
		<PAGES>547-551</PAGES>
		<CUSTOM1>2005</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS></KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT></ABSTRACT>
		<URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/9281</URL>
	</RECORD>

	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>3</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>1</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
		  <AUTHOR>Hamel, Paul B.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>Suggestions for a silvicultural prescription for Cerulean Warblers in the lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Ralph, C.J.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Rich, T.D.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		</SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Bird Conservation Implementation and Integration in the Americas: Proceedings of the Third International Partners in Flight Conference 2002</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Albany, CA</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>U.S.Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Research Station</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>567-575</PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE>Bird Conservation Implementation and Integration in the Americas</TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<EDITION></EDITION>
		<SHORT_TITLE>Gen. Tech. Rep</SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE>PSW</ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN>191</ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2006</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
		  <KEYWORD>adaptive management</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>bottomland hardwoods</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>forest canopy</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>habitat management</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>habitat selection</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>mature forest</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>Parulidae</KEYWORD>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT>Conservation of species with high Partners in Flight
	concern scores may require active habitat management.
	Cerulean Warbler (Dendroica cerulea) occurs at low
	numbers in the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley in
	the western part of its breeding range. A study of the
	breeding ecology of the species was initiated in 1992
	on three sites there. Characteristics of individual trees
	used by the birds have been measured in detail.
	Elements of the vegetation utilized by male Cerulean
	Warblers, by female Cerulean Warblers, and as nests
	have been identified. A silvicultural prescription designed
	to produce these elements is being prepared as
	an experimental manipulation of habitats for the birds.
	The development of this suggested silvicultural prescription
	offers an example for development of similar
	prescriptions for other forest canopy dwelling bird species.
	One difficulty may be in assessing the response of
	the birds to the treatments when the available habitat
	exceeds the amount needed to support the spatial needs
	of the local small population, whether the measured
	response is one of abundance or of productivity. This is
	because the response may be smaller than can be
	detected by the experimental design used to conduct
	the experiment; available birds may not be numerous
	enough to produce a detectable response.</ABSTRACT>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS>eds.</AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
	</RECORD>
	
	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>3</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>2</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
		  <AUTHOR>Hamel, Paul B.</AUTHOR>
		  <AUTHOR>Rosenberg, Kenneth V.</AUTHOR>
		  <AUTHOR>Buehler, David A.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>Is Management for Golden-winged Warblers and Cerulean Warblers Compatible?</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Ralph, C.J.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Rich, T.D.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		</SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Bird Conservation Implementation and Integration in the Americas: Proceedings of the Third International Partners in Flight Conference 2002</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Albany, CA</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>U.S.Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Research Station</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>322-331</PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE>Bird Conservation Implementation and Integration in the Americas</TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<EDITION></EDITION>
		<SHORT_TITLE>Gen. Tech. Rep</SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE>PSW</ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN>191</ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2006</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Wetlands, Bottomlands, and Streams</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
		  <KEYWORD>adaptive management</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>deciduous forests</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>Dendroica cerulea</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>forest ecology</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>habitat management</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>management conflicts</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>Parulidae</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>rotation length</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>successional stages</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>Vermivora chrysoptera</KEYWORD>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT>Conservation of species with high Partners in Flight
	concern scores may suggest management for apparently
	conflicting habitat needs on a given property or specific
	site, such as birds requiring early-successional vs. later-successional
	broadleaved forests. Two species of concern
	with distinctly different habitat needs provide a case study
	for consideration. Declining populations of Golden-winged
	Warbler (Vermivora chrysoptera), which require
	early successional habitats, and Cerulean Warbler
	(Dendroica cerulea), a mature-forest breeder, each experience
	difficulties related to breeding habitats. Concern
	exists for Cerulean Warbler wintering habitat as well. Our
	responsibility for the conservation of both species
	includes resolving the dilemma of providing for their
	simultaneous occurrence in space or time. Approaches to
	this resolution are instructive for developing conservation
	strategies for these as well as other species. The questions
	(and their short answers) are: Are the habitat requirements
	of Cerulean and Golden-winged warblers compatible
	within the same property where their ranges overlap?
	(Yes) What role does disturbance play in the creation and
	maintenance of habitat for each species? (Its important
	role is better understood for Golden-winged Warbler.)
	Can we mimic beneficial forms of disturbance for these
	species through direct management? (Yes, and anthropogenic
	disturbance may substitute for "natural.") Is management
	of this sort compatible with commercial forestry
	and other ongoing forms of land use? (We believe it is.)
	Could events outside that region overwhelm conservation
	action within it? (Unfortunately, yes.).</ABSTRACT>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS>eds.</AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
	</RECORD>
	
	<RECORD>
		<REFERENCE_TYPE>3</REFERENCE_TYPE>
		<REFNUM>3</REFNUM>
		<AUTHORS>
		  <AUTHOR>Hamel, Paul B.</AUTHOR>
		  <AUTHOR>Riley, Cecilia M.</AUTHOR>
		  <AUTHOR>Hunter, William C.</AUTHOR>
		  <AUTHOR>Woodrey, Mark S.</AUTHOR>
		</AUTHORS>
		<YEAR>2005</YEAR><TITLE>Monitoring Bird Migration in the Caribbean Basin: Multi-national Cooperation Can Close the Loop</TITLE>
		<SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Ralph, C.J.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		  <SECONDARY_AUTHOR>Rich, T.D.</SECONDARY_AUTHOR>
		</SECONDARY_AUTHORS>
		<SECONDARY_TITLE>Bird Conservation Implementation and Integration in the Americas: Proceedings of the Third International Partners in Flight Conference 2002</SECONDARY_TITLE>
		<PLACE_PUBLISHED>Albany, CA</PLACE_PUBLISHED>
		<PUBLISHER>U.S.Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Research Station</PUBLISHER>
		<PAGES>729-733</PAGES>
		<TERTIARY_TITLE>Bird Conservation Implementation and Integration in the Americas</TERTIARY_TITLE>
		<EDITION></EDITION>
		<SHORT_TITLE>Gen. Tech. Rep</SHORT_TITLE>
		<ALTERNATE_TITLE>PSW</ALTERNATE_TITLE>
		<ISBN>191</ISBN>
		<CUSTOM1>2006</CUSTOM1>
		<CUSTOM2>Inventory and Monitoring</CUSTOM2>
		<CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
		<CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
		<CUSTOM5>Research--Single RWU</CUSTOM5>
		<KEYWORDS>
		  <KEYWORD>citizen science</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>conservation planning</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>Internet-based data management</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>monitoring migration</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>Neotropical Migratory Birds</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>stopover habitats</KEYWORD>
		  <KEYWORD>volunteer observers</KEYWORD>
		</KEYWORDS>
		<ABSTRACT>The Gulf Coast Bird Observatory (GCBO) and the
	Southeastern Working Group of Partners in Flight have
	developed a protocol to monitor landbirds with volunteer
	observers performing avian censuses in the field.
	Field observations are compiled within a powerful
	internet database, and recording and summary capability
	is maintained by the GCBO. More than 100 observers
	have supplied data from sites primarily in the
	southeastern United States. Results of three case studies
	are presented, illustrating the application of migration
	monitoring data to land conservation, community
	education, and research hypothesis generation, not only
	in southeastern United States, but across the Caribbean
	Basin as well. Such results will allow us to make
	appropriate decisions for habitat conservation of
	migratory songbirds during their passage through the
	southeastern United States. Because the protocol is
	easy to perform and widely applicable, we suggest this
	protocol be used as a means to monitor migration
	throughout the Caribbean Basin</ABSTRACT>
		<AUTHOR_ADDRESS>eds.</AUTHOR_ADDRESS>
		<URL></URL>
	</RECORD>


          <RECORD>
               <REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
               <REFNUM>1313</REFNUM>
               <AUTHORS>
                    <AUTHOR>Oliver, Chadwick Dearing</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Burkhardt, E.C.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Skojac, Daniel A.</AUTHOR>
               </AUTHORS>
               <YEAR>2005</YEAR>
               <TITLE>The increasing sacrcity of red oaks in Mississippi river floodplain forestS: Influence of the residual overstory</TITLE>
               <PUBLISHER>Forest Ecology and Management 210(2005 393-414</PUBLISHER>
               <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
               <CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
               <URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/20849</URL>
          </RECORD>
          <RECORD>
               <REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
               <REFNUM>1313</REFNUM>
               <AUTHORS>
                    <AUTHOR>Devall, Margaret S.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Thien, Leonard B.</AUTHOR>
               </AUTHORS>
               <YEAR>2005</YEAR>
               <TITLE>Inland occurrence of the strand plant <i>Ipomeoa pes-caprae</i> (Convolvulaceae) around Lake Nicaragua</TITLE>
               <PUBLISHER>Southwestern Naturalist. 50(3); 380-384</PUBLISHER>
               <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
               <CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
               <URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/21643</URL>
          </RECORD>
          <RECORD>
               <REFERENCE_TYPE>20</REFERENCE_TYPE>
               <REFNUM>1313</REFNUM>
               <AUTHORS>
                    <AUTHOR>Jacobs, Douglass F.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Gardiner, Emile S.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Salifu, K. Francis</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Overton, Ronald P.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Hernandez, George</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Corbin, M. Elizabeth</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Wightman, Kevyn E.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Selig, Marcus F.</AUTHOR>
               </AUTHORS>
               <YEAR>2005</YEAR>
               <TITLE>Seedling Quality Standards for Bottomland Hardwood Afforestation in the Lower Mississippi River Alluvial Valley: Preliminary Results</TITLE>
               <PUBLISHER>In: Dumroese, R. K.; Riley, L. E.; Landis, T. D., tech. coords. 2005. National proceedings: Forest and Conservation Nursery Associations-2004; 2004 July 12-15; Charleston, NC; and 2004 July 26-29; Medford, OR. Proc. RMRS-P-35. Fort Collins, CO: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station. p. 9-16</PUBLISHER>
               <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
               <CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
               <URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/20874</URL>
          </RECORD>
          <RECORD>
               <REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
               <REFNUM>1313</REFNUM>
               <AUTHORS>
                    <AUTHOR>Phillips, Jonathan D.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Marion, Daniel A.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Luckow, Kenneth</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Adams, Kristin R.</AUTHOR>
               </AUTHORS>
               <YEAR>2005</YEAR>
               <TITLE>Nonequilibrium regolith thickness in the Ouachita Mountains</TITLE>
               <PUBLISHER>The Journal of Geology, Vol. 113, pp. 325-340 (2005)</PUBLISHER>
               <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
               <CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
               <URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/9517</URL>
          </RECORD>
          <RECORD>
               <REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
               <REFNUM>1313</REFNUM>
               <AUTHORS>
                    <AUTHOR>Phillips, Jonathan D.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Marion, Daniel A.</AUTHOR>
               </AUTHORS>
               <YEAR>2005</YEAR>
               <TITLE>Biomechanical effects, lithological variations, and local pedodiversity in some forest soils of Arkansas</TITLE>
               <PUBLISHER>Geoderma 124 (2005) 73–89</PUBLISHER>
               <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
               <CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
               <URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/8385</URL>
          </RECORD>
          <RECORD>
               <REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
               <REFNUM>1313</REFNUM>
               <AUTHORS>
                    <AUTHOR>Phillips, Jonathan D.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Luckow, Ken</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Marion, Daniel A.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Adams, Kristin R.</AUTHOR>
               </AUTHORS>
               <YEAR>2005</YEAR>
               <TITLE>Rock fragment distributions and regolith evolution in the Ouachita Mountains, Arkansas, USA</TITLE>
               <PUBLISHER>Earth Surf. Process. Landforms 30, 429–442 (2005)</PUBLISHER>
               <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
               <CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
               <URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/9482</URL>
          </RECORD>
          <RECORD>
               <REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
               <REFNUM>1313</REFNUM>
               <AUTHORS>
                    <AUTHOR>Lockhart, Brian R.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Meadows, James S.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Hodges, John D.</AUTHOR>
               </AUTHORS>
               <YEAR>2005</YEAR>
               <TITLE>Stand development patterns in southern bottomland hardwoods: Management considerations and research needs</TITLE>
               <PUBLISHER>The state of our understanding. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri printing. 439-448</PUBLISHER>
               <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
               <CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
               <URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/20850</URL>
          </RECORD>
          <RECORD>
               <REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
               <REFNUM>1313</REFNUM>
               <AUTHORS>
                    <AUTHOR>Lockhart, Brian Roy</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Meadows, Steve</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Portwood, Jeff</AUTHOR>
               </AUTHORS>
               <YEAR>2005</YEAR>
               <TITLE>Southern hardwood forestry group going strong after 50 years</TITLE>
               <PUBLISHER>Delta Wildlife.13(Spring): 5-6.</PUBLISHER>
               <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
               <CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
               <URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/21508</URL>
          </RECORD>
          <RECORD>
               <REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
               <REFNUM>1313</REFNUM>
               <AUTHORS>
                    <AUTHOR>Kennedy, Thomas B.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Haag, Wendell R.</AUTHOR>
               </AUTHORS>
               <YEAR>2005</YEAR>
               <TITLE>Using morphometrics to identify glochidia from a diverse freshwater mussel community</TITLE>
               <PUBLISHER>Journal The North American Benthological Society 24(4): 880-889</PUBLISHER>
               <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
               <CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
               <URL>http://www.srs.fs.usda.gov/pubs/22173</URL>
          </RECORD>
          <RECORD>
               <REFERENCE_TYPE>15</REFERENCE_TYPE>
               <REFNUM>1313</REFNUM>
               <AUTHORS>
                    <AUTHOR>Burkhead, Noel M.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Jelks, Howard L.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Walsh, Stephen J.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Contreras-Balderas, Salvador</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Díaz-Pardo, Edmundo</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Hendrickson, Dean A.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Lyons, John</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Mandrak, Nicholas E.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>McCormick, Frank</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Nelson, Joseph S.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Platania, Steven P.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Porter, Brady A.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Renaud, Claude B.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Schmitter-Soto, Juan Jacobo</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Taylor, Eric B.</AUTHOR>
                    <AUTHOR>Warren, M. L., Jr.</AUTHOR>
               </AUTHORS>
               <YEAR>2005</YEAR>
               <TITLE>Update and Revision of the American Fisheries Society List of Imperiled North American Freshwater and Anadromous Fishes</TITLE>
               <PUBLISHER>Final Report, Study Plan 2003-2004, Endangered Species Committee, American Fisheries Society, Bethesda, MD</PUBLISHER>
               <CUSTOM3>SRS-4155</CUSTOM3>
               <CUSTOM4>3</CUSTOM4>
               <URL></URL>
          </RECORD>

  </RECORDS>
</XML>
