Publications and Products
Science Findings: 2004
To
communicate our most significant findings to people who make and
influence decisions about land management, we select up to 12 projects
each year to highlight in a monthly publication.
This series, Science Findings, is available in PDF (To view and
print PDF documents, you need the free Adobe
Systems Inc. Acrobat Reader). Most issues also are available
in hardcopy, although a few of the earlier ones are out of stock.
If you would like copies, just contact us at pnw_pnwpubs@fs.fed.us
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2004 | 2003 | 2002 | 2001
| 2000 | 1999
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Issue
69 (January 2005) Crafting a competitive edge: white spruce
regeneration in Alaska, by Andrew Youngblood
Issue
68 (November 2004) Trees, houses, and habitat: private forests
at the wildland-urban interface, by Jeff Kline and Dave Azuma
Issue
67 (October 2004) Following a river wherever it goes: beneath
the surface of mountain streams, by Steve Wondzell
Issue
66 (September 2004) Dead wood, living legacies: habitat for
a host of fungi, by Jane Smith.
Issue
65 (July 2004) Rhapsody in avian major: a concerto of songbirds,
forest management, and the public, by Todd Wilson.
Issue
64 ( June 2004) 100,000 trees can't be wrong: permanent study
plots and the value of time, by Sarah Greene.
Issue
63 (May 2004) Ecology payoffs from red alder in southeast
Alaska, by Robert Deal, and Mark Wipfli.
Issue
62 (April 2004) Windows into the forest: extending long-term
small-watershed research, by Fred Swanson, and Don Henshaw.
Issue
61 (February 2004) Conserving hidden diversity the unprecedented
challenge of the survey and manage mandate, by Randy Molina.
Issue
60 ( January 2004) Squirrels cannot live by truffles alone:
a closer look at a northwest keystone complex, by Andrew Carey.
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