Bibliography and Citations

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Taylor DW.  1981.  Freshwater mollusks of California: a distributional checklist.  California Fish and Game.  67(3):140-163.
Nedeau E., Smith A.K, Stonr J..  Submitted.  Freshwater Mussels of the Pacific Northwest.  Nedeau, E., A. K. Smith and J. Stone. No date. Freshwater Mussels of the Pacific Northwest. U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Vancouver, WA. 45 pp..  
Nedeau EJay, Smith AK, Stone J, Jepsen S.  2009.  Freshwater mussels of the Pacific Northwest. Edition 2nd.  Portland (OR): The Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation.    Available from http://www.xerces.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/pnw_mussel_guide_2nd_edition.pdf
Burch J.B.  1982.  Freshwater snails (Mollusca: Gastropoda) of North America.  
Taylor D.W.  1963.  Freshwater snails of the subgenus Hinkleyia (Lymnaeidae: Stagnicola) from the western United States.  Malacologia.  1:237-281.
Taylor D.W, Walter H.J, Burch J.B.  1963.  Freshwater snails of the subgenus Hinkleyia (Lymnaeidae: Stagnicola) from the western United States.  Malacologia.  1(2):237-281.  Available from http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/47314#page/259/mode/1up
Burch J.B.  1972.  Freshwater sphaeriacaean clams (Mollusca: Pelecypoda) of North America.  
Burch J.B.  1975.  Freshwater sphaeriacean clams (Mollusca: Pelecypoda) of North America.
Burch J.B.  1973.  Freshwater unionacean clams (Mollusca: Pelecypoda) of North America.  
Burch J.B.  1975.  Freshwater unionacean clams (Mollusca: Pelecypoda) of North America.
Davidson C..  1996.  Frog and toad calls of the Rocky Mountains and southwest: vanishing voices, draft booklet.  
Kaye T.N.  1999.  From flowering to dispersal: reproductive ecology of an endemic plant, Astragalus australis var. olympicus (Fabaceae).  American Journal of Botany.  86:1248-1256.
Maser C, Tarrant RF, Trappe JM, Franklin JF.  1988.  From the forest to the sea: a story of fallen trees. General Technical Report.  PNW-GTR-229.  Portland (OR): U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, and U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management.  
Wellner C.A.  1976.  Frontiers of forestry research - Priest River Experimental Forest 1911-1976.  
Chapin J.P.  1922.  The function of the oesophagus in the bittern's booming.  Auk.  39:196-202.
Suding K.N, Collins S.L, Gough L., Clark C., Cleland E.E, Gross K.L, Milchunas D.G, Pennings S..  2005.  Functional and abundance-based mechanisms explain diversity loss due to N fertilization.  
White P.J, White C.AV, Ralls K..  1996.  Functional and numerical responses of kit foxes to a short-term decline in mammalian prey.  Journal of Mammalogy.  77:370-376.
Rogers PC, Landhäusser SM, Pinno BD, Ryel RJ.  2014.  A functional framework for improved management of western North American aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.).  Forest Science.  60:345-359.  Available from http://digitalcommons.usu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2457&context=wild_facpub
Muhsin T.M, Booth T..  1987.  Fungi associated with halophytes of an inland salt marsh, Manitoba, Canada.  Canadian Journal of Botany.  65(6):1137-1151.
Fogel R..  1994.  Fungi from the Columbia Basin deposited in the University of Michigan Herbarium (MICH).  
Wiclow-Howard M.C.  1994.  Fungi from the Owyhee region of southern Idaho and eastern Oregon.  
Wicklow-Howard M.C, Kaltenecker J..  1994.  Fungi from the Owyhee region of southern Idaho and eastern Oregon.  
Trueblood E..  1972.  Fungi of Owyhee County.  
Wicklow-Howard M.C.  1993.  Fungi of the Owyhee Resource Area: class 1 survey of the fungal flora of the Owyhee Resource Area.  
National Park Service, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Game Fand Parks, Wyoming Uof.  2018.  Fungus that causes white-nose syndrome in bats detected in South Dakota for the first time [multiagency news release].    Available from https://www.whitenosesyndrome.org/news/fungus-causes-white-nose-syndrome-bats-detected-south-dakota-first-time-0