Publications and Products
Science Findings: 2007
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
| 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008 |
2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 | 2002 | 2001
| 2000 | 1999
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Issue
98 (December 2007) Move over, Douglas-fir: Oregon white
oaks need room to grow, by Connie Harrington, Warren Devine, Peter
Gould, and Dave Peter
Issue
97 (October 2007) Running dry: where will the West get
its water? by Gordon Grant
Issue
96 (September 2007) Green-tree retention in harvest units:
Boon or bust for biodiversity? by Charley Peterson, and Keith
Aubry
Issue
95 (August 2007) Forest communities and the Northwest Forest
Plan: What socioeconomic monitoring can tell us, by Susan Charnley,
and Ellen Donoghue
Issue
94 (June 2007) Mountain meadows—here today, gone tomorrow?
Meadow science and restoration, by Fred Swanson
Issue
93 (May 2007) The mysterious demise of an ice-age relic:
Exposing the cause of yellow-cedar decline, by Paul Hennon, and
Dave D'Amore
Issue
92 (April 2007) Simulating the consequences of land management,
by Steven Wondzell, and Pete Bisson
Issue
91 (March 2007) Sagebrush in Western North America: habitats
and species in jeopardy, by Michael Wisdom, and Mary Rowland
Issue
90 (February 2007) The secret life of marbled murrelets:
monitoring populations and habitats, by Martin G. Raphael
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