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Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Commons™
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Articles 1 - 11 of 11
Full-Text Articles in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Effect Of Time Of Cutting On Yield And Botanical Composition Of Prairie Hay In Southeastern Nebraska, Elverne C. Conard, Vincent H. Arthaud
Effect Of Time Of Cutting On Yield And Botanical Composition Of Prairie Hay In Southeastern Nebraska, Elverne C. Conard, Vincent H. Arthaud
Historical Research Bulletins of the Nebraska Agricultural Experiment Station
Approximately three and one-third million acres of native prairie are harvested annually in Nebraska for hay. In the four-year period 1948-1951, the State ranked first in wild hay production with an average yield of more than two and one-quarter million tons per year. This crop is an important natural resource in Nebraska's livestock industry. Studies were initiated in 1945 to determine the effects of time of cutting on the yield and feeding value of prairie hay in southeastern Nebraska. The studies were continued through the summer of 1952 to determine the effects of different cutting treatments on the vigor and …
An Ecological Survey Of Maple Products As A Natural Resource Of Athens Township, Calhoun County, State Of Michigan, Ralph P. Gies
An Ecological Survey Of Maple Products As A Natural Resource Of Athens Township, Calhoun County, State Of Michigan, Ralph P. Gies
Masters Theses
I. The Problem
Statement of the problem. It was the purpose of this investigation to undertake a field study in Athens Township, Calhoun County, State of Michigan in order to (1) determine the ecological factors necessary for maple sap production; (2) relate the extent to which the natural resource is being used; and (3) determine economic and social values to the syrup producers. The information was compiled through the sue of interviews, questionnaires, research, and participation in a community project.
Notes For Problems Of Ecology Presentation To The Linfield Research Institute, Jane Claire Dirks-Edmunds
Notes For Problems Of Ecology Presentation To The Linfield Research Institute, Jane Claire Dirks-Edmunds
Jane Claire Dirks-Edmunds Documents
These notes were prepared by Dr. Jane Claire Dirks-Edmunds for a presentation she gave to a Linfield Research Institute (LRI) seminar at Linfield College on March 19, 1957 on the subject of ecology. LRI was established in 1955, and Dr. Dirks-Edmunds did research under its auspices, including receiving a federal grant which funded work on biotic succession.
Aspen Leaf Blight In The Intermountain Region, James L. Mielke
Aspen Leaf Blight In The Intermountain Region, James L. Mielke
Aspen Bibliography
No abstract provided.
Nebraska Deer, William Bailey Jr., George Schildman, Phillip Agee, C. G. Pritchard
Nebraska Deer, William Bailey Jr., George Schildman, Phillip Agee, C. G. Pritchard
Nebraska Game and Parks Commission: Publications
IN COMMON with the experience of most states, Nebraska's deer herds were reduced to a very low level by excessive harvests in our early history. Most American big-game animals were overharvested in the early history of this nation because of commercialization. Buffalo were killed for their hides, deer for their meat. This slaughter continued as long as the hunter (or poacher) could sell his take at a profit. Modem game management and public opinion reversed this trend. Deer are on the way back all over America, and in some states the protection-complex was so strong that deer were restored to …
Medial Pleistocene Fossil Vertebrate Localities In Nebraska, C. Bertrand Schultz, Lloyd G. Tanner
Medial Pleistocene Fossil Vertebrate Localities In Nebraska, C. Bertrand Schultz, Lloyd G. Tanner
Bulletin of the University of Nebraska State Museum
The accurate geologic dating of Pleistocene vertebrate localities which occur outside the glaciated regions has always been difficult. Several new fossil localities in Nebraska now provide data for a better understanding of the paleoecology and faunal evidence of the medial Pleistocene of the Great Plains region.
A fossil quarry, containing the remains of both vertebrates and invertebrates, has been discovered in south-central Nebraska (11/2 miles south and west of Angus in Nuckolls County). The fossils are preserved in Sappa silts in a lime concentration zone (C horizon) of a Yarmouth paleosol. The calcium carbonate appears to have been responsible for …
Nebraska Deer, William Bailey Jr., George Schildman, Phillip Agee, C. G. Pritchard
Nebraska Deer, William Bailey Jr., George Schildman, Phillip Agee, C. G. Pritchard
Nebraska Game and Parks Commission: Publications
IN COMMON with the experience of most states, Nebraska's deer herds were reduced to a very low level by excessive harvests in our early history. Most American big-game animals were overharvested in the early history of this nation because of commercialization. Buffalo were killed for their hides, deer for their meat. This slaughter continued as long as the hunter (or poacher) could sell his take at a profit. Modem game management and public opinion reversed this trend. Deer are on the way back all over America, and in some states the protection-complex was so strong that deer were restored to …
Ecological And Epidemiological Studies Of Nematopsis Ostrearum, A Sporozoan Parasite Of The Oyster Crassostrea Virginica, In Lower Chesapeake Bay And Its Tributaries, Sung Yen Feng
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
No abstract provided.
Investigations Of The Effects On Oyster Culture Of The Dredging For The Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel : An Investigation Conducted By The Virginia Fisheries Laboratory For The Virginia State Department Of Highways, Jay D. Able, Dexter S. Haven, John L. Mchugh
Investigations Of The Effects On Oyster Culture Of The Dredging For The Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel : An Investigation Conducted By The Virginia Fisheries Laboratory For The Virginia State Department Of Highways, Jay D. Able, Dexter S. Haven, John L. Mchugh
Reports
No abstract provided.
The Growth And Yield Of Aspen In Saskatchewan, C. L. Kirby, W. S. Bailey, J. G. Gilmour
The Growth And Yield Of Aspen In Saskatchewan, C. L. Kirby, W. S. Bailey, J. G. Gilmour
Aspen Bibliography
No abstract provided.
Field Guide To Aid In Recognition Of Natural Triploid Aspen, Philip N. Joranson, Dean W. Einspahr, J P. Van Buijtenen
Field Guide To Aid In Recognition Of Natural Triploid Aspen, Philip N. Joranson, Dean W. Einspahr, J P. Van Buijtenen
Aspen Bibliography
Swedish experience with the genetic improvement of the European aspen (Populus tremula L.), a species which is closely kin to our North American quaking aspen (P. tremuloides Michx.), suggests that the rate of volume increment and the length of fiber tracheids might both be increased in North American aspen by finding or producing trees which possess a triple set, rather than the usual double set, of "chromosomes". Chromosomes (Figure 1) are found within and inner region--the nucleus--of each of the millions of cells formed during the growth of a tree.