Managing Your Forests and Grasslands.....RPA
United States Department of Agriculture...Forest Service...April 1995
Concern for increased rarity among the Nation's animals and plants has grown rapidly in the past decade. Although biodiversity is an attribute of ecological systems that cannot be simply quantified, there is little disagreement that diversity diminishes as species become extinct. Consequently, much of the interest in rare species stems from the assumption that those species are the most prone to extinction, and that by understanding the processes that have contributed to their rarity, further losses of diversity may be slowed or reduced. This report examines the likely future distributional patterns of threatened and endangered species.
Flather, Curtis H; Joyce, Linda A.; Bloomgarden, Carol A. 1994. Species endangerment patterns in the United States. Gen. Tech. Rep. RM241. Fort Collins, CO: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Forest and Range Experiment Station. 42 p.
Copies may be ordered from Richard Schneider. His telephone number 303.498.1719; FAX number303.498.1660; DG address..R.Schneider:S28a, or mailing address..3825 E. Mulberry St., Fort Collins, CO, 80524
Title: Species Endangerment Patterns In The United States
Contact-addr:fswa/s=R.Schneider/ou1=S28a@mhs.attmail.com
Contact-phone:303.498.1719
Document-date:4/10/95
Expiry:4/10/98
Abstract: Species Endangerment Patterns In The United States...A supporting technical document for the 1993 Update of the 1989 RPA Assessment