Publications and Products
Science Findings: 2006
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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2006 | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 | 2002 | 2001
| 2000 | 1999
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Issue
89 (December 2006) Monitoring forests from space: quantifying
forest change by using satellite data, by Warren Cohen and Sean Healey
Issue
88 (November 2006) Society's choices: land use changes,
forest fragmentation, and conservation, by Ralph Alig
Issue
87 (October 2006) Does it work? Monitoring the effectiveness
of stream management practices in Alaska, by Richard Woodsmith
Issue
86 (September 2006) Does wood slow down "sludge dragons?" The
interaction between riparian zones and debris flows in mountain
landscapes, by Gordon Grant
Issue
85 (July 2006) Seeing the bigger picture: landscape silviculture
may offer compatible solutions to conflicting objectives, by Susan
Stevens Hummel
Issue
84 (June 2006) Knock on wood: Is wood production sustainable
in the Pacific Northwest? by Bob Deal
Issue
83 (May 2006) If a tree falls in the woods, who will measure
it? DecAID decayed wood advisor, by Bruce Marcot, and Janet Ohmann
Issue
82 (April 2006) Searing the rhizosphere: belowground impacts
of prescribed fires, by Jane Smith
Issue
81 (March 2006) Prescribed fires are not created equal:
fire season and severity effects in ponderosa pine forests
of the
southern
Blue
Mountains, by Becky Kerns, Walt Thies, and Chris Niwa
Issue
80 (February 2006) Rocky to bullwinkle: understanding flying
squirrels helps us restore dry forest ecosystems, by John F.
Lehmkuhl
Issue
79 (January 2006) Highways and habitat: managing habitat
connectivity and landscape permeability for wildlife, by Peter
Singleton
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