Publications and Products
Science Findings: 2008
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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2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 | 2002 | 2001
| 2000 | 1999
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Issue
108 (December 2008) Conservation of biological diversity:
all things considered, by Martin Raphael, Randy Molina, Bruce
Marcot, Deanna Olson
Issue
107 (October 2008) Growing trees where trees grow best:
short-term research sheds light on long-term productivity, by Connie
Harrington, Thomas Terry, and Rob Harrison
Issue
106 (September 2008) Fuel reduction and forest restoration
treatments: once is not enough, by Andrew Youngblood
Issue
105 (August 2008) Long-term ecological reflections: writers,
philosophers, and scientists meet in the forest, by Fred Swanson
Issue
104 (July 2008) Paying our way: thinking strategically to
offset the cost of reducing fire hazard in western forests, by
Jamie Barbour, and Ken Skog
Issue
103 (May 2008) Burn and they will come! The western regional
birds and burns study examines bird responses to prescribed fire,
by John Lehmkuhl
Issue
102 (April 2008) Forests at risk: integrating risk science
into fuel management strategies, by Alan Ager
Issue
101 (March 2008) A landslide is a landslide is a landslide… Or
is it? Defining landslide potential across large landscapes,
by Kelly Burnett
Issue
100 (February 2008) Farmed Atlantic salmon: potential invader
in the Pacific Northwest? by Pete Bisson
Issue
99 ( January 2008) Saving streams at their source: managing
for amphibian diversity in headwater forests, by Deanna Olson,
Paul Anderson
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