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Studies in Avian Biology
Front Matter
Studies in Avian Biology
Contents
List of Authors
Studies in Avian Biology
Introduction
John B. Dunning and John C. Kilgo
The Savannah River Site: Site Description, Land Use and Management History
David L. White and Karen F. Gaines
Early Avian Research at the Savannah River Site Historical Highlights and Possibilities for the Future
J. Michael Meyers and Eugene P. Odum
Historical Winter Status of Three Upland Ammodramus Sparrows in South Carolina
Douglas B. McNair and William Post
Integration of Research with Long-term Monitoring: Breeding Wood Ducks on the Savannah River Site
Robert A. Kennamer and Gary R. Hepp
Mitigation for the Endangered Wood Stork on Savannah River Site
A. L. Bryan, M. C. Coulter, and I. L. Brisbin Jr.
Long-term Studies of Radionuclide Contamination of Migratory Waterfowl at the Savannah River Site: Implications for Habitat Management and Nuclear Waste Site Remediation
I. Lehr Brisbin Jr. and Robert A. Kennamer
Integration of Long-term Research into a Gis-based Landscape Habitat Model for the Red-cockaded Woodpecker
Kathleen E. Franzreb and F. Thomas Lloyd
Studying Wildlife at Local and Landscape Scales: Bachman's Sparrows at the Savannah River Site
John B. Dunning, Brent J. Danielson, Bryan D. Watts, Jianguo Liu, and David G. Krementz
Effects of Long-term Forest Management on a Regional Avifauna
John C. Kilgo, Kathleen E. Franzreb, Sidney A. Gauthreaux, Karl V. Miller, and Brian R. Chapman
Fifty Years of Ornithological Coverage at Srs: what Species and Groups Have Fallen through the Cracks?
D. Archbald McCallum, Sherry Leatherman, and John J. Mayer
People and Decisions Meeting the Information Needs of Managers
John Blake and Elizabeth LeMaster
Designing and Presenting Avian Research to Facilitate Integration with Management
Christopher E. Moorman
Integrating Long-term Avian Studies with Planning and Adaptive Management: Department of Energy Lands as a Case Study
Joanna Burger
An Approach to Quantifying Long-term Habitat Change on Managed Forest Lands
Paul B. Hamel and John B. Dunning Jr.
Rising Importance of the Landscape Perspective: an Area of Collaboration Between Managers and Researchers
Brian K. Pilcher and John B. Dunning Jr.
The Mesopredator Release Hypothesis: Integrating Landbird Management with Biological Theory
Christopher M. Rogers and Stephen B. Heard
Coordinating Short-term Projects into an Effective Research Program: Effects of Site Preparation Methods on Bird Communities in Pine Plantations
John C. Kilgo, Karl V. Miller, and William F. Moore
Literature Cited
Studies in Avian Biology