Bibliography and Citations

Found 11964 results
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Scott R.W.  1966.  The alpine flora of northwestern Wyoming.  :219pp..
Scott V.E, Crouch G.L.  1988.  Breeding birds and small mammals in pole-sized lodgepole pine and small inclusions of aspen in central Colorado.  
J. Scott M, Davis F, Csuti B, Noss R, Butterfield B, Groves C, Anderson H, Caicco S, D'Erchia F, Edwards, Jr. TC et al..  1993.  Gap analysis: a geographic approach to protection of biological diversity.  Wildlife Monographs.  123:3-41.  Available from http://www.jstor.org/stable/3830788
Scott V.E, Ankney C.D.  1983.  The laying cycle of brown-headed cowbirds: passerine chickens? Auk.  100:583-592.
Scott J.M, Heglaund P.J, Morrison M.L, Haufler J.B, Raphael M.G, Wall W.A, Samson FB.  2002.  Predicting species occurrences: issues of accuracy and scale.
Scott V.E, Servheen G..  1985.  Caribou ecology, Idaho Job progress report.  
Scott J., Armstrong D.M, Bissel S.J, Freeman J..  1984.  The bats of Colorado: shadows in the night.  
Scott M.M.  1990.  Losses and gains to the Scottish flora.  Transactions of the Botanical Society of Edinburgh.  45:403-415.
Scott MD.  1985.  The woodland caribou. Audubon Wildlife Report 1985.  Di Silvestro RL, editor. New York: National Audubon Society.   p. 494-507.
Scott V.E, Oldemeyer J.L.  1983.  Cavity-nesting bird requirements and response to snag cutting in ponderosa pine.  
Scott V.E, Crouch G.L.  1988.  Breeding birds in uncut aspen and 6- to 10-year-old clearcuts in southwestern Colorado.  
Scott-Brown J.M, Reynolds J..  1984.  Monitoring of released swift foxes in southern Alberta. Progress Report.  
Scrivner JH, Smith H.D.  1984.  Relative abundance of small mammals in four successional stages of spruce-fir forest in Idaho.  Northwest Science.  58(3):171-176.  Available from https://research.wsulibs.wsu.edu:8443/xmlui/handle/2376/1887
Scudder?.  1897.  incomplete article; no title page; 3 pages out of a much larger work.  Proceedings of the U. S. National Museum.  20(1124):126,217,224.
Seabrook S.  2019.  Email correspondence and submissions of rare plant observation reports for BLM, Shoshone Field Office.  
Seabrook S.  2021.  Email correspondence and submissions of rare plant observation reports for BLM, Shoshone Field Office.  
Seabrook-Sturgis S.  2022.  Email correspondence and submissions of rare plant observation reports for BLM, Shoshone Field Office 2019 - 2020.  
Seabrook-Sturgis S.  2023.  Email correspondence and submissions of rare plant observation reports for BLM, Shoshone Field Office 2023.  
Seaman A, Toriello J, Crees B.  2021.  July 19th - August 22nd 2021 black swift surveys outside of Glacier National Park.  
Sebold B..  2000.  Database, digital and hardcopy. Willow Flycatcher observations 1994 through 2000.  
Secord AL, Patnode KA, Carter C, Redman E, Gefell DJ, Major AR, Sparks DW.  2015.  Contaminants of emerging concern in bats from the northeastern United States.  Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology.  69:411-421.  Available from https://www.researchgate.net/publication/280911364_Contaminants_of_Emerging_Concern_in_Bats_from_the_Northeastern_United_States
Sedgwick JA.  2000.  Willow flycatcher (Empidonax traillii). Poole A, Gill F., editors. Philadelphia: The Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia and the American Ornithologists' Union.   p. 31.  Available from http://bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/species/533/
Sedgwick J.A, Knopf F.L.  1987.  Breeding bird response to cattle grazing of a cottonwood bottomland.  Journal of Wildlife Management.  51(1):230-237.
Sedgwick J.A.  2001.  Geographic variation in the song of Willow Flycatchers: differentiation between EMPIDONAX TRAILLII ADASTUS and E. T. EXTIMUS.  Auk.  118:366-379.
Sedgwick JA.  1987.  Avian habitat relationships in pinyon-juniper woodland.  Wilson Bulletin.  99(3):413-431.  Available from https://sora.unm.edu/node/130531