Bibliography and Citations

Found 12292 results
Filters: Filter is   [Clear All Filters]
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 
M
Gibson K..  2006.  Mountain Pine Beetle Conditions in Whitebark Pine Stands in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, 2006.  Report.  
Wheelock I.G.  1904.  Mountain partridge - Oreortyx pictus.
Packer J.G, Vitt D.H.  1974.  Mountain Park: a plant refugium in the Canadian Rocky Mountains.  Canadian Journal of Botany.  52:93-1409.
Phillips JC.  1928.  Mountain, or plumed, quail (Oreortyx pictus pictus and O. p. palmeri).  Wild birds introduced or transplanted in North America.    Available from http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/usdaarsfacpub/819/
Seidensticker J.C.  1973.  Mountain lion social organization in the Primitive Area.  :146pp..
Cronemiller F.P.  1948.  Mountain lion preys on bighorn.  Journal of Mammalogy.  29(1):68.
Lindzey F..  1987.  Mountain lion.
Habek J.R.  1967.  Mountain hemlock communities in western Montana.  Northwest Science.  41(4):169-177.
White KS, Pendleton GW, Crowley D, Griese HJ, Hundertmark KJ, McDonough T, Nichols L, Robus M, Smith CA, Schoen JW.  2011.  Mountain goat survival in coastal Alaska: effects of age, sex, and climate.  Journal of Wildlife Management.  75(8):1731–1744.
Idaho Department of Fish and Game.  2006.  Mountain goat species management plan. Draft.  
Johnson DR.  1976.  Mountain caribou: threats to survival in the Kootenay Pass region, British Columbia.  Northwest Science.  50(3):97-101.
Eldridge D.J.  2004.  Mounds of the American Badger (Taxidea taxus): Significant Features of North American Shrub-Steppe Ecosystems.  Journal of Mammalogy.  85(6):1060-1067.
Dwight, Jr. J.  1900.  The moult of the North American Tetraonidae (quails, partridges and grouse).  Auk.  17:34-51.
Powell JA, Opler PA.  1996.  Moths of western North America. 4. Distribution of "Oecophoridae" (sense of Hodges 1983) of western North America. Contributions of the C. P. Gillette Insect Biodiversity Museum.  Fort Collins (CO): Colorado State University, Department of Entomology.    Available from http://hdl.handle.net/10217/86034
Smith MJ.  1995.  Moths of western North America. 2. Distribution of Sphingidae of western North America. Edition Revised.  Contributions of the C. P. Gillette Insect Biodiversity Museum.  Fort Collins (CO): Colorado State University, Department of Entomology.    Available from https://dspace.library.colostate.edu/handle/10217/86032
Peigler RS, Opler PA.  1993.  Moths of western North America. 1. Distribution of Saturniidae of western North America. Contributions of the C. P. Gillette Insect Biodiversity Museum.  Fort Collins (CO): Colorado State University, Department of Entomology.    Available from http://digitool.library.colostate.edu/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=349351
Wade N.  2022.  Moth taxonomy records received from Pacific Northwest Moths to import into IFWIS taxonomy database.  
Flowers S..  1973.  Mosses: Utah and the West.
Hoy J.A, Elliott. J.C.  2003.  Mosses of semiarid steppes, Bitterroot Valley, Ravalli County, Montana.  Evansia.  20(2):55-58.
Freckmann S.K.  1977.  Mosses of Portage County, Wisconsin.  Bryologist.  80:193-198.
Anderson L.E.  1951.  The mosses of North Carolina VI. Encalyptaceae to Pottiaceae.  Bryologist.  54:145-161.
Crum H.A, Anderson L.E.  1981.  Mosses of eastern North America volume II.
Boardman C.M.  1977.  Mosses not previously reported from western Pennsylvania.  Bryologist.  80:351-352.
Vitt DH, Marsh JE, Bovey RB.  1988.  Mosses lichens and ferns of Northwest North America. Mosses lichens and ferns of Northwest North America.  Vancouver and Edmonton, Canada, and Auburn (Washington): Lone Pine Publishing.  
Malcolm B, Malcolm N.  2006.  Mosses and Other Bryophytes, an Illustrated Glossary, Second Edition. Edition Second.  Nelson (New Zealand): Micro-Optics Press.