Bibliography and Citations

Found 12292 results
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Keane RE.  2012.  Whitebark-Limber Pine Information System (WLIS).  :1818records.
Schotzko KG.  2014.  Whitebark pine stand conditions after mountain pine beetle outbreaks in Idaho, Wyoming and Montana: Survey site locations for 2012 and 2013 field seasons.  
Barringer LE, Tomback DF, Wunder MB, McKinney ST.  2012.  Whitebark pine stand condition, tree abundance, and cone production as predictors of visitation by Clark's nutcracker.  PLoS ONE.  7(5):e37663.  Available from http://dx.doi.org/10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0037663
Hergenrider NM.  2016.  Whitebark pine, Sacajawea's bitterroot, and pika report: Upper Cape Horn Creek, Custer County, Idaho.  
Rust SK, Gurvich D.  2018.  Whitebark Pine Monitoring in Grandmother Mountain Wilderness Study Area.  
Warwell M, Ferguson DE, Dekker-Robertson D.  2014.  Whitebark Pine locations from USDA Rocky Mountain Research Station.  :237records.
Schwandt JW.  2006.  Whitebark pine in peril: a case for restoration.    Available from http://www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/stelprdb5341409.pdf
Tomback DF.  2007.  Whitebark Pine: Ecological Importance and Future Outlook.  
Smith J.P, Hoffman J.T, Partridge A.D.  1996.  Whitebark pine disease survey for the northern portion of U.S. Forest Service Region Four; Interim Report.  
Arno S.F.  1986.  Whitebark pine cone crops–a diminishing source of wildlife food? Western Journal of Applied Forestry.  1(3):92-94.
Arno S.F, Weaver T..  1990.  Whitebark pine community types and their patterns on the landscape. INT-270.  
Apperson K.A.  1992.  White sturgeon of the Kootenai: the long river to recovery.  Idaho Wildlife.  12(1):4-6.
Apperson K..  1992.  White sturgeon of the Kootenai - the long river to recovery.  Idaho Wildlife.  12(1):4-5.
Neuenschwander LF, Byler JW, Harvey AE, McDonald GI, Ortiz DS, Osborne HL, Snyder GC, Zack A.  1999.  White pine in the American West: a vanishing species—can we save it?   Available from http://www.fs.fed.us/rm/pubs/rmrs_gtr035.pdf
Findholt S, Trost CH.  1981.  White pelicans nesting in Idaho.  Murrelet.  62(1):19-20.  Available from http://www.jstor.org/stable/3534445
Steele L.F.  1991.  The White Mountains. Wild Flower Notes.  
Petrinovich L., Patterson T.L.  1983.  The white- crowned sparrow: reproductive success (1975-1980).  Auk.  100:811-825.
Hansen AJ, Phillips LB.  2015.  Which tree species and biome types are most vulnerable to climate change in the US northern Rocky Mountains? Forest Ecology and Management.  338:68–83.  Available from http://scholarworks.montana.edu/xmlui/bitstream/handle/1/8935/HansenandPhillips_FEM_%202015_POSTPRINT.pdf?sequence=1
McCracken JD.  2005.  Where the bobolinks roam: the plight of North America's grassland birds.  Biodiversity.  6(3):20-29.  Available from http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/tbid20/6/3#.VSb6Hk1OVok
Boyd D..  2000.  Where have all the herons gone? Conservation Sciences.  Fall:9-13.
Phillips K..  1990.  Where have all the frogs and toads gone? Bioscience.  40(6):422-424.
Vinkey RS, Schwartz MK, McKelvey KS, Foresman KR, Pilgrim KL, Giddings BJ, Lofroth EC.  2006.  When reintroductions are augmentations: the genetic legacy of fishers (Martes pennanti) in Montana.  Journal of Mammalogy.  87(2):265–271.  Available from http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/usdafsfacpub/78
Lesica P., Allendorf F.W.  1995.  When are peripheral populations viable for conservation? Conservation Biology.  9(4):753-760.
Sutherland S.  2004.  What makes a weed a weed: life history traits of native and exotic plants in the USA.  Oecologia.  141(1):24–39.
Whittemore AT.  2009.  What is Ranunculus gelidus (Ranunculaceae)? Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas .  3(1):6pp..