Bibliography and Citations

Found 12292 results
Journal Article
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Howe F.P, Knight R.L, McEwen L.C, George. T.L.  1996.  Direct and indirect effect of insecticide applications on growth and survival of nestling passerines.  Ecological Applications.  6:1314-1324.
Blaustein AR, Walls SC, Bancroft BA, Lawler JJ, Searle CL, Gervasi SS.  2010.  Direct and indirect effects of climate change on amphibian populations.  Diversity.  2(2):281-313.
Brust GE.  1990.  Direct and indirect effects of four herbicides on the activity of carabid beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae).  Pesticide Science.  30(3):309-320.
Quinn J.L, Kokorev Y..  2000.  Direct and indirect estimates of Peregrine Falcon population size in northern Eurasia.  Auk.  117:455-464.
Caughley G..  1994.  Directions in conservation biology.  Conservation Biology.  63:215-244.
Hedrick P.W, Lacey R.C, Allendorf F.W, Soule M.E.  1996.  Directions in conservation biology: comments on Caughley.  Conservation Biology.  10(5):1312-1320.
Cherfas J..  1991.  Disappearing mushrooms: another mass extinction? Science.  254:1458.
Zloty J, Sinclair BJ, Pritchard G.  2005.  Discovered in our backyard: a new genus and species of a new family from the Rocky Mountains of North America (Diptera, Tabanomorpha).  Systematic Entomology.  30(2):248–266.  Available from http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-3113.2005.00270.x/abstract
Vrooman A.G.  1901.  Discovery of the egg of the black swift (CYPSELOIDES NIGER BOREALIS).  Auk.  18:394-395.
Redlin S.C.  1991.  Discula destructiva sp. nov., cause of dogwood anthracnose.  Mycologia.  83(5):633-642.
Salogga D.S, Ammirati J.F.  1983.  Discula species associated with anthracnose of dogwood in the Pacific Northwest.  Plant Disease.  67(11):1290.
Fürst M.A, McMahon D.P, Osborne J.L, Paxton R.J, Brown M.JF.  2014.  Disease associations between honeybees and bumblebees as a threat to wild pollinators.  Nature.  506(7488):364-366+supplementalonline.  Available from http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v506/n7488/full/nature12977.html
Bunderson E.D, Weber D.J, Nelson D.L.  1986.  Diseases associated with Juniperus osteosperma and a model for predicting their occurrence with environmental site factors.  Great Basin Naturalist.  46:427-440.
Schofield W.B, Crum H.A.  1972.  Disjunction in bryophytes.  Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden.  59:174-202.
Marino P.C.  1991.  Dispersal and coexistence of mosses (Splachnaceae) in patchy habitats.  Journal of Ecology.  79:1047-1060.
Steenhof K, Kochert MK, Moritsch MQ.  1984.  Dispersal and migration of southwestern Idaho raptors.  Journal of Field Ornithology.  55(3):357-368.  Available from https://sora.unm.edu/node/51120
Haas C.A.  1995.  Dispersal and use of corridors by birds in wooded patches on an agricultural landscape.  Conservation Biology.  9:845-854.
Stewart P.A.  1952.  Dispersal, breeding behavior, and longevity of banded barn owls in North America.  Auk.  69:227-245.
[Anonymous].  Submitted.  Dispersal by juvenile American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos) influences population dynamics across a gradient of urbanization.  Auk.  122:205-221.
Woodruff RA, Keller BL.  1982.  Dispersal, daily activity, and home range of coyotes in southeastern Idaho.  Northwest Science.  56(3):199-207.
Estes-Zumpf WA, Rachlow JL, Waits LP, Warheit KI.  2010.  Dispersal, gene flow, and population genetic structure in the pygmy rabbit (Brachylagus idahoensis).  Journal of Mammalogy.  91(1):208–219.
Bull EL.  2009.  Dispersal of newly metamorphosed and juvenile western toads (Anaxyrus boreas) in northeastern Oregon, USA.  Herpetological Conservation and Biology.  4(2):236-247.  Available from http://www.herpconbio.org/Volume_4/Issue_2/Bull_2009.pdf
Hodgson J.M, Rees. N.E.  1976.  Dispersal of Rhinocyllus conicus for biocontrol of musk thistle.  Weed Science.  24(1):59-62.
Sonerud G.A, Solheim R., Prestrud K..  1988.  Dispersal of Tengmalm's owl Aegolius funereus in relation to prey availability and nesting success.  Ornis Scandinavica.  19:175-181.