List of references related to research in ANF

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Bibliography for Research in Apalachicola National Forest

31 October 2022

  1. Alford, J.D. and L. C. Anderson. 2002. The taxonomy and morphology of Macranthera flammea (Orobanchaceae). Sida 20:189-204.

  2. Althoff, D. M., K. A. Segraves, C. I. Smith, J. Leebens-Mack, and O. Pellmyr. 2012. Geographic isolation trumps coevolution as a driver of yucca and yucca moth diversification. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 62:898-906.

  3. Ampoorter, E., R. Goris, W. M. Cornelis, and K. Verheyen. 2007. Impact of mechanized logging on compaction status of sandy forest soils. Forest Ecology and Management 241:162-174.

  4. Anderson, C. J., and B. G. Lockaby. 2011. Forested wetland communities as indicators of tidal influence along the Apalachicola River, Florida, USA. Wetlands 31:895-906.

  5. Anderson, C. T., S. L. Dietz, S. M. Pokswinski, A. M. Jenkins, M. J. Kaeser, J. K. Hiers, and B. D. Pelc. 2021. Traditional field metrics and terrestrial LiDAR predict plant richness in southern pine forests. Forest Ecology and Management 491.

  6. Anderson, L. C. 1984. Noteworthy plants from north Florida. Sida 10: 295-297.

  7. Anderson, L. C. 1986. Noteworthy plants from north Florida.II. Sida 11:379-384.

  8. Anderson, L. C. 1987. Boltonia apalachicolensis (Asteraceae): a new species from Florida. Systematic Bot. 12:133-138.

  9. Anderson, L. C. 1988. Noteworthy plants from north Florida.III. Sida 13:93-100.

  10. Anderson, L. C. 1989. Noteworthy plants from north Florida.IV. Sida 13:497-504.

  11. Anderson, L. C. 1993. "Botanical richness of the western panhandle of Florida." A.S.B. Bull. 40(2):119-120.

  12. Anderson, L. C. 1995. Noteworthy plants from north Florida. VI. Sida 16:581-587.

  13. Anderson, L. C. 1996. New geographical and morphological data for Sideroxylon thornei (Cronq.) T. D. Pennington (Sapotaceae). Sida 17:343--348.

  14. Anderson, L. C. 1997. Unique stomatal patterns among Sideroxylon taxa of the United States. A.S.B. Bull. 44(2):96.

  15. Anderson, L. C. 2000. Stalking the pygmy bladderwort (Utricularia olivacea, Lentibulariaceae). Carnivorous Plant Newsletter 29:73-74.

  16. Anderson, L. C. 2000. Noteworthy plants from north Florida. VII. Sida 19:211-216.

  17. Anderson, L.C. 2000. Plant inventory and community analysis in support of Tate's Hell Swamp restoration. Northwest Florida Water Management District, 24 pp. [included plant surveys in compartment 110 of ANF].

  18. Anderson, L. C. 2006. The genus Arnoglossum (Asteraceae). In Flora of North America 20:622-625.

  19. Anderson, L. C. 2007. Noteworthy plants from north Florida. VIII. J. Bot. Res. Inst. Texas 1: 741 – 751.

  20. Anderson, L. C., and G. Smith. 1994. "Carpels and chromosomes of the endangered Harper's Beauty (Harperocallis flava, Liliaceae)." A.S.B. Bull. 41(2):103.

  21. Aresco, M. J. 2009. Environmental Correlates of the Abundances of Three Species of Freshwater Turtles in Lakes of Northern Florida. Copeia:545-555.

  22. Baiser, B., N. J. Gotelli, H. L. Buckley, T. E. Miller, and A. M. Ellison. 2011. Network structure in a cosmopolitan food web. Global Ecology and Biogeography. DOI: 10.1111/j.1466-8238.2011.00705.x

  23. Beyer, D. E., R. Costa, R. G. Hooper, and C. A. Hess. 1996. Habitat quality and reproduction of red-cockaded woodpecker groups in Florida. Journal of Wildlife Management 60:826-835.

  24. Bishop, D.C. and C.A. Haas. 2005. Burning trends and potential negative effects of suppressing wetland fires on flatwoods salamander. Natural Areas Journal 25:290-294.

  25. Bishop, D.C., J. G. Palis, K. M. Enge, D. J. Printiss, and D. J. Stevenson. 2006. Capture rate, body size, and survey recommendations for larval Ambystoma cingulatum (Flatwoods salamanders). Southeastern Naturalist 5:9-16.

  26. Bragg, D. C., and J. M. Guldin. 2015. The Silvicultural Implications of Age Patterns in Two Southern Pine Stands after 72 Years of Uneven-Aged Management. Forest Science 61:176-182.

  27. Brockway, D. G., and C. E. Lewis. 1997. Long-term effects of dormant-season prescribed fire on plant community diversity, structure and productivity in a longleaf pine wiregrass ecosystem. Forest Ecology and Management 96:167-183.

  28. _____. 2003. Influence of deer, cattle grazing and timber harvest on plant species diversity in a longleaf pine bluestem ecosystem. Forest Ecology and Management 175:49-69.

  29. Brockway, D. G., and K. W. Outcalt. 1998. Gap-phase regeneration in longleaf pine wiregrass ecosystems. Forest Ecology and Management 106:125-139.

  30. Brockway, D. G., K. W. Outcalt, and R. N. Wilkins. 1998. Restoring longleaf pine wiregrass ecosystems: plant cover, diversity and biomass following low-rate hexazinone application on Florida sandhills. Forest Ecology and Management 103:159-175.

  31. Buckley, H.L., J.H. Burns, J. M. Kneitel, E.L. Walters, P. Munguia, and T.E. Miller. 2004. Small-scale patterns in community structure of Sarracenia purpurea inquiline communities. Community Ecology 5:181-188.

  32. Buckley, H. L., T. E. Miller, A. M. Ellison, and N. J. Gotelli.  2003.  Reverse latitudinal trends in species richness of pitcher-plant food webs.  Ecology Letters 6:825-829.

  33. Buckley, H., T. E. Miller, A. M. Ellison, and N. J. Gotelli. 2010. Local to continental-scale variation in the richness and composition of an aquatic food web. Journal of Global Ecology and Biogeography 19:711-723. 

  34. Carr, S.C., K.M. Robertson, and R.K. Peet. 2010. A vegetation classification of fire-dependent pinelands of Florida. Castanea 75(2):153-189.

  35. Carr, S.C., K.M. Robertson, W.J. Platt, and R.K. Peet. 2009. A model of geographical, environmental, and regional variation in vegetation composition of pyrogenic grasslands of Florida. Journal of Biogeography 36:1600-1612.

  36. Callaham, M. A., and P. E. Hendrix. 1998. Impact of earthworms (Diplocardia : Megascolecidae) on cycling and uptake of nitrogen in coastal plain forest soils from northwest Florida, USA. Applied Soil Ecology 9:233-239.

  37. Catania, K. C. 2008. Worm grunting, fiddling, and charming-humans unknowingly mimic a predator to harvest bait. Plos One 3.

  38. Cerquera, L.M. and W.R. Tschinkel. 2009. The nest architecture of Odontomachus brunneus. J. Insect Sci. 10:64. online at www.insectscience.org/10.64/

  39. Clewell, A.F. 1971. The vegetation of the Apalachicola National Forest: an ecological perspective. Prepared under Contract Number 38-2249, U.S.D.A. Forest Service, Atlanta, Georgia, and submitted to the Office of the Forest Supervisor, Tallahassee, Florida.

  40. Clewell, A.F. 1986. Natural Setting and Vegetation of the Florida Panhandle. COESAM/PDEI-86/001, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Mobile (AL) District. 773 pp.

  41. Coultas, C. L. 1977. Soils of Apalachicola National Forest wetlands. 1. Titi swamps and savannahs. Soil and Crop Science Society of Florida Proceedings 36:72-77.

  42. _____. 1978. Soils of Apalachicola National Forest wetlands. 2. Cypress and gum swamps. Soil and Crop Science Society of Florida Proceedings 37:154-159.

  43. Cronan, J. B., C. S. Wright, and M. Petrova. 2015. Effects of dormant and growing season burning on surface fuels and potential fire behavior in northern Florida longleaf pine (Pinus palustris) flatwoods. Forest Ecology and Management 354:318-333.

  44. _____, A.F. Clewell, and E.M. Taylor, Jr. 1979. An aberrant toposequence of soils through a titi swamp. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 43:377-383.

  45. Deyrup, M., and S. Cover. 2004. A new species of the ant genus Leptothorax from Florida, with a key to the Leptothorax of the southeast (Hymenoptera : Formicidae). Florida Entomologist 87:51-59.

  46. Deyrup, M., and D. Lubertazzi. 2001. New species of ant (Hymenoptera : Formicidae) from North Florida. Entomological News 112:15-21.

  47. Ellison, A. M., H. L. Buckley, T. E. Miller, and N. J. Gotelli.  2004.  Morphological variation in Sarracenia purpurea (Sarraceniaceae):  geographic, environmental, and taxonomic correlates. American Journal of Botany 91:1930-1935.

  48. Engstrom, R.T., and G. Mikusinski. 1998. Neighborhood size in populations of the Red-cockaded Woodpecker. Auk 115:473-478.

  49. Engstrom, R.T., L.A. Brennan, W.L. Neel, R.M. Farrar, S.T. Lindeman, W.K. Moser, and S.M. Hermann. 1996. Silvicultural practices and Red-cockaded Woodpecker management: a reply to Rudolph and Conner. Wildlife Soc. Bull. 24(2):334-338.

  50. Engstrom, R. T. M., D.B.; Brennan, L.A.; Hardy, C.L.; Burger, L.W. 1996. Influence of dormant versus lightning season prescribed fire on birds in longleaf pine forests: experimental design and preliminary results. Transactions 61st North American Wildlife and Natural Resources Conference (1996):200-207.

  51. Farrell, T. M., S. A. Smiley-Walters, and D. E. McColl. 2018. Prey Species Influences Foraging Behaviors: Rattlesnake (Sistrurus miliarius) Predation on Little Brown Skinks (Scincella lateralis) and Giant Centipedes (Scolopendra viridis). Journal of Herpetology 52:156-161.

  52. Foster, G. W., J. M. Kinsella, E. L. Walters, M. S. Schrader, and D. J. Forrester. 2002. Parasitic helminths of red-bellied woodpeckers (Melanerpes carolinus) from the Apalachicola National Forest in Florida. Journal of Parasitology 88:1140-1142.

  53. Frakes, R. A., and M. L. Knight. 2021. Location and extent of unoccupied panther (Puma concolor coryi) habitat in Florida: Opportunities for recovery. Global Ecology and Conservation 26.

  54. Franklin, Y. J. 2014. Bop: 40 Acres & a Mule on Apalachicola National Forest. African American Review 47:187-187.

  55. Gagnon, J. L., E. J. Jokela, W. K. Moser, and D. A. Huber. 2004. Characteristics of gaps and natural regeneration in mature longleaf pine flatwoods ecosystems. Forest Ecology and Management 187:373-380.

  56. Gorman, T. A., C. A. Haas, and D. C. Bishop. 2009. Factors related to occupancy of breeding wetlands by flatwoods salamander larvae. Wetlands 29:323-329.

  57. Gorman, T. A., C. A. Haas, and J. G. Himes. 2013. Evaluating methods to restore amphibian habitat in fire-suppressed pine flatwoods wetlands. Fire Ecology 9:96-109.

  58. Gray, S., T. E. Miller, N. Mouquet, and T. Daufresne.  2006.  Nutrient limitation in detritus-based microcosms. Hydrobiologia 573:173-181.

  59. Grigal, D. F. 2000. Effects of extensive forest management on soil productivity. Forest Ecology and Management 138:167-185.

  60. Hahn, D. A., and W. R. Tschinkel. 1997. Settlement and distribution of colony-founding queens of the arboreal ant, Crematogaster ashmeadi, in a longleaf pine forest. Insectes Sociaux 44:323-336.

  61. Harvey, B., and S. Fitzgerald. 2004. Is Florida’s prescribed fire program something to get choked up about? Fire Management Today. 64(4):16–18.

  62. Harvey, E.  and T. E. Miller.  1996.  Variance in composition in inquiline communities in leaves of Sarracenia purpurea L. on multiple spatial scales. Oecologia 108:562-566.

  63. Hendrix, P. F., M. A. Callaham, S. L. Lachnicht, J. M. Blair, S. W. James, and X. Zou. 1999. Stable isotopic studies of resource utilization by nearctic earthworms (Diplocardia, Oligochaeta) in subtropical savanna and forest ecosystems. Pedobiologia 43:818-823.

  64. Hess, C.A. 1997. Stomach-flushing: sampling the diet of red-cockaded woodpeckers. Wilson Bulletin 109:535.

  65. Hess, C. A., and F. C. James. 1998. Diet of the red-cockaded woodpecker in the Apalachicola National Forest. Journal of Wildlife Management 62:509-517.

  66. Hess, C.A., and W.R. Tschinkel. 2017. Effect of thinning and clear-cuts on the transmission of fire in slash pine plantations during restoration to longleaf pine. Ecological Restoration 35:33-40.

  67. Hess, C.A., P.P. Kelly, R. Costa, and J.H. Carter, III. 2001. Reconsideration of Richardson et al.'s Red-Cockaded Woodpecker nestling removal technique. Wildlife Society Bulletin 29:372-374.

  68. Hoekman, D., A. Bauer, S. Braun, P. Gignac, R. Hopkins, S. Joshi, K. Laskis, N. Sanscrainte, C. terHorst, J. Travis, and T. E. Miller. 2007. Oviposition decreased in response to enriched water: a field study of the pitcher-plant mosquito, Wyeomyia smithii. Ecological Entomology 32:92-96.

  69. Hood, W. G., and W. R. Tschinkel. 1990. Desiccation resistance in arboreal and terrestral ants. Physiol. Entomol. 15:23-35.

  70. Hovis, J.A., and R.F. Labisky. 1985. Vegetative associations of Red-cockaded Woodpecker colonies in Florida. Wildlife Society Bulletin 13:307-314.

  71. Humm, J. M., J. W. McCown, B. K. Scheick, and J. D. Clark. 2017. Spatially explicit population estimates for black bears based on cluster sampling. Journal of Wildlife Management 81:1187-1201.

  72. Jain, A., A. K. Rasmussen, K. A. Mina, B. A. Richard, and M. L. Pescador. 2020. Water Chemistry and Aquatic Insect Assemblages of Ephemeral Ponds in the Munson Sand Hills Region of the Apalachicola National Forest, Florida. Southeastern Naturalist 19:205-232.

  73. James, F. C. 1991. Signs of trouble in the largest remaining population of Red-cockaded Woodpeckers. Auk 108:419-423.

  74. James, F. C. 1995. Status of the red-cockaded woodpecker and its habitat. Pp. 437-438 in D. Kulhavy, R. G. Cooper, and R. Costa (eds.) Red-cockaded woodpecker: recovery, ecology, and management, Stephen F. Austin State University, Nacogdoches, Texas.

  75. James, F. C. 1995. Status of the Red-cockaded Woodpecker in 1990 and prospect for recovery. Pages 439-451 in D. Kulhavy, R. G. Hooper, and R. Costa (eds.), Red cockaded Woodpecker: Recovery, Ecology, and Management. Stephen F. Austin State University, Nacogdoches, Texas.

  76. James, F. C., C. A. Hess, B. C. Kicklighter, and R. A. Thum. 2001. Ecosystem management and the niche gestalt of the Red-cockaded Woodpecker in longleaf pine forests. Ecological Applications 11:854-870.

  77. James, F. C., C. A. Hess, and D. Kufrin. 1997. Species-centered environmental analysis: Indirect effects of fire history on red-cockaded woodpeckers. Ecological Applications 7:118-129.

  78. James, F. C., C. E. McCulloch, and D. A. Wiedenfeld. 1996. New approaches to the analysis of population trends in land birds. Ecology 77:13-27.

  79. James, F. C., C. Hess, G. Hagan, and M. B. Kotrla. 1995. Population structure and annual turnover rates of cavities of the Red cockaded Woodpecker in the Apalachicola National Forest. Pages 353-360 in D. Kulhavy, R. G. Hooper, and R. Costa (eds.), Red cockaded Woodpecker: Recovery, Ecology, and Management. Stephen F. Austin State University, Nacogdoches, Texas.

  80. James, F.C., P.M. Richards, C.A. Hess, K.E. McCluney, E.L. Walters, and M.S. Schrader. 2004. Sustainable forestry for the red-cockaded woodpecker's ecosystem. Pp 60-69 in R. Costa and S.J. Daniels (editors) Red-cockaded woodpecker; road to recovery. Hancock House Publishers Ltd., Blaine, Washington, USA 


  81. Johnson, C. Y., J. M. Bowker, D. B. K. English, and D. Worthen. 1998. Wildland recreation in the rural south: An examination of marginality and ethnicity theory. Journal of Leisure Research 30:101-120.

  82. Jones, KC, P Hill, TA Gorman, and CA Haas. 2012. Climbing behavior of flatwoods salamanders (Ambystoma bishopi/A. cingulatum). Southeastern Naturalist 11:537-542.

  83. Jose, S., R. Williams, and D. Zamora. 2006. Belowground ecological interactions in mixed-species forest plantations. Forest Ecology and Management 233:231-239.

  84. Jue, D. K., A. C. Merwin, S. S. Jue, D. McElveen, and B. D. Inouye. 2022. Effects of frequency and season of fire on a metapopulation of an imperiled butterfly in a longleaf pine forest. Conservation Science and Practice 4.

  85. Karmacharya, B., J. A. Hostetler, L. M. Conner, G. Morris, and M. K. Oli. 2012. Longleaf pine management practices and their impact on small mammal populations. Forest Ecology and Management 271:140-146.

  86. Keppner, L. A., and L. C. Anderson. 2008. Notes on Harper's beauty Harperocallis flava (Tofieldiaceae), in Bay County, Florida. Southeastern Naturalist 7:180-184.

  87. Kesler, H. C., J. L. Trusty, S. M. Hermann, and C. Guyer. 2008. Demographic responses of Pinguicula ionantha to prescribed fire: a regression-design LTRE approach. Oecologia 156:545-557.

  88. King, J.R. and W.R. Tschinkel. 2006. Experimental evidence that the introduced fire ant, Solenopsis invicta, does not competitively suppress co-occurring ants in a disturbed habitat. J. Animal Ecol. 75:1370–1378.

  89. King, J.R. and W. R. Tschinkel. 2008. Experimental evidence that human impacts drive fire ant invasions and ecological change. PNAS 105:20339-20343.

  90. King, J.R., W. R. Tschinkel and K.G. Ross. 2009. A case study of human exacerbation of the invasive species problem: transport and establishment of polygyne fire ants in Tallahassee, Florida, USA. Biol. Invasions 11:373-377.

  91. Kneitel, J. M. and T. E. Miller. 2002. The effects of resource and top-predator addition to the inquiline community of the pitcher plant Sarracenia purpurea. Ecology 83:680-688.

  92. Kneitel, J. M. and T. E. Miller.  2003.  Dispersal rates affect species composition in metacommunities of Sarracenia purpurea inquilines. American Naturalist 162:165-171.

  93. Lachnicht, S. L., and P. F. Hendrix. 2001. Interaction of the earthworm Diplocardia mississippiensis (Megascolecidae) with microbial and nutrient dynamics in a subtropical Spodosol. Soil Biology and Biochemistry 33:1411-1417.

  94. Laskis, K.O. and W. R. Tschinkel. 2009. The Seasonal Natural History of the Ant, Dolichoderus mariae (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) In Northern Florida, J. Insect Sci. Online at http://www.insectscience.org/9.02/

  95. Leonard, S.W., and W.W. Baker. 1983. Additional populations of Harperocallis flava McDaniel (Liliaceae). Castanea 48(2):151-152.

  96. Lubertazzi, D. and W.R. Tschinkel. 2003. Ant community change across a ground vegetation gradient in north Florida's longleaf pine flatwoods. J. Insect Science 3:21.

  97. Luzius, C., F. Guillemette, D. C. Podgorski, A. M. Kellerman, and R. G. M. Spencer. 2018. Drivers of Dissolved Organic Matter in the Vent and Major Conduits of the World's Largest Freshwater Spring. Journal of Geophysical Research-Biogeosciences 123:2775-2790.

  98. Mason, C. M., C. D. A. Ishibashi, A. M. Rea, J. R. Mandel, J. M. Burke, and L. A. Donovan. 2015. Environmental requirements trump genetic factors in explaining narrow endemism in two imperiled Florida sunflowers. Conservation Genetics 16:1277-1293.

  99. McComb, B. C. 2016. Desired Future Conditions.

  100. McConnell, W. V. 1999. Red-cockaded woodpecker cavity excavation in seedtree-shelterwood stands in the Wakulla (Apalachicola National Forest, Florida) sub-population. Wildlife Society Bulletin 27:509-513.

  101. McConnell, W. V. 2002. Initiating uneven-aged management in longleaf pine stands: impacts on red-cockaded woodpecker habitat. Wildlife Society Bulletin 30:1276-1280.

  102. McDaniel, S. 1968. Harperocallis, a new genus of the Liliaceae from Florida. Journal of the Arnold Arboretum 49(1):35-40.

  103. McInnes, D. A., and W. R. Tschinkel. 1996. Mermithid nematode parasitism of Solenopsis ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) of Northern Florida. Annals of the Entomological Society of America 89:231-237.

  104. McNair, D.B. 1998. Henslow’s Sparrow and Sedge Wren response to a dormant-season prescribed burn in a pine savanna. Florida Field Naturalist 26(2):46-47.

  105. Means, D. B., J. G. Palis, and M. Baggett. 1996. Effects of slash pine silviculture on a Florida population of flatwoods salamander. Conservation Biology 10:426-437.

  106. Meyer, R. T., and D. McElveen. 2021. An experimental translocation of the imperiled frosted elfin (Callophrys irus). Journal of Insect Conservation 25:479-484.

  107. _____. 2022. Use of a camera trap tomonitor male mating territories of the imperiled Callophyrs irus (Lycaenidae). Journal of the Lepidopterists Society 76:56-59.

  108. Mikheyev, A. and W. R. Tschinkel. 2004. Nest architecture of the ant Formica pallidefulva: structure, costs and rules of excavation. Insectes Sociaux 51:30-36.

  109. Miller, T. E., and J. M. Kneitel. 2005. Inquiline communities in pitcher plants as a prototypical metacommunity. Pp. 122-145 in Holyoak, M., M. A. Leibold, and R. D. Holt (eds.), Metacommunities: Spatial Dynamics and Ecological Communities. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.

  110. Miller, T., J. M. Kneitel, and J. H. Burns.  2002.  Effects of community structure on invasion success and rate. Ecology 83:898-90.

  111. Miller, T. E., and C. P. terHorst.  2012.  Succession in the water-filled leaves of the purple pitcher plant (Sarracenia purpurea). Oecologia 170:243-251.

  112. Miller, T. E., L. Horth, and R. Reeves. 2002. Trophic interactions in the phytotelmata communities of the pitcher plant, Sarracenia  purpurea.  Community Ecology 3: 109-116.

  113. Mitra, O., M. A. Callaham, M. L. Smith, and J. E. Yack. 2009. Grunting for worms: seismic vibrations cause Diplocardia earthworms to emerge from the soil. Biology Letters 5:16-19.

  114. Molano-Flores, B., S. Primer, J. Annis, M. A. Feist, J. Coons, and R. Digges. 2018. Reproductive ecology of three rare North American Pinguicula species. Plant Species Biology 33:129-139.

  115. Mutz, J., N. Underwood, and B. D. Inouye. 2017. Time since disturbance affects colonization dynamics in a metapopulation. Journal of Animal Ecology 86:1065-1073.

  116. Nystrom, G. S., M. J. Ward, S. A. Ellsworth, and D. R. Rokyta. 2019. Sex-based venom variation in the eastern bark centipede (Hemiscolopendra marginata). Toxicon 169:45-58.

  117. Palis, J.G. 1996. Flatwoods salamander (Ambystoma cingulatum Cope). Natural Areas Journal 16:49-54.

  118. Palis, J.G. 1997. Distribution, habitat, and status of the flatwoods salamander (Ambystoma cingulatum) in Florida, USA. Herpetological Natural History 5:53-65.

  119. Palis, J.G., M.J. Aresco, and S. Kilpatrick. 2006. Breeding biology of a Florida population of Ambystoma cingulatum (Flatwoods salamander) during a drought. Southeastern Naturalist 5:1-8.

  120. Palis, J.G. and M.J. Aresco. 2007. Immigration orientation and migration distance of four pond-breeding amphibians in northwestern Florida. Florida Scientist 70:251-263.

  121. Pauly, G.B., O. Piskurek, H.B. Shaffer. 2006. Phylogeographic concordance in the southeastern United States: the flatwoods salamander, Ambystoma cingulatum, as a test case. Molecular Ecology 16:415-429

  122. Pauly, G.B., S.H. Bennett, J.G. Palis, and H.B. Shaffer. 2012. Conservation and genetics of the frosted flatwoods salamander (Ambystoma cingulatum) on the Atlantic coastal plain. Conservation Genetics 13:1-7.

  123. Perez, H.E., and J.G. Norcini. 2010. A new method of wiregrass (Aristida stricta Michaux.) viability testing using an enhanced forceps press test. Natural Areas Journal 30:387-391.

  124. Picotte, J.J., and K.M. Robertson. 2010. Accuracy of remote sensing wildland fire-burned area in southeastern U.S. coastal plain habitats. Tall Timbers Fire Ecol. Proc. 24:86-93.

  125. Picotte, J.J., and K. Robertson. 2011. Timing constraints on remote sensing of wildland fire burned area in the southeastern U.S. Remote Sensing 3:1680-1690.

  126. Picotte, J.J., and K.M. Robertson. 2011. Validation of remote sensing of burn severity in south-eastern US ecosystems. International Journal of Wildland Fire 20:453-464.

  127. Pitts-Singer, T. L., J. L. Hanula, and J. L. Walker. 2002. Insect pollinators of three rare plants in a Florida longleaf pine forest. Florida Entomologist 85:308-316.

  128. Powell, S. and W. R. Tschinkel. 1999. Ritualized conflict in Odontomachus brunneus and the generation of interaction-based task allocation: a new organizational mechanism in ants. Anim. Behaviour 58:975-972.

  129. Prata, G. A., E. N. Broadbent, D. R. A. de Almeida, J. St Peter, J. Drake, P. Medley, A. P. Dalla Corte, J. Vogel, A. Sharma, C. A. Silva, A. M. A. Zambrano, R. Valbuena, and B. Wilkinson. 2020. Single-Pass UAV-Borne GatorEye LiDAR Sampling as a Rapid Assessment Method for Surveying Forest Structure. Remote Sensing 12.

  130. Rasmussen, A. K., S. C. Harris, and D. R. Denson. 2008. Two new species of Leptoceridae (Trichoptera) from Florida, USA. Zootaxa:55-64.

  131. Repenning, R., and R.F. Labisky. 1985. Effects of even-age timber management on bird communities of the longleaf pine forest in northern Florida. J. Wildl. Manage. 49:1088-1098.

  132. Rink W. J, Dunbar, J.S., Tschinkel W.R., Kwapich C., Repp A., Stanton W. and Thulman, D.K. 2013. Subterranean transport and deposition of quartz by ants in sandy sites relevant to age overestimation in optical luminescence dating. J. Archeol. Sci. 40:2217-2226.

  133. Ross, W. G., D. L. Kulhavy, and R. N. Conner. 1997. Stand conditions and tree characteristics affect quality of longleaf pine for red-cockaded woodpecker cavity trees. Forest Ecology and Management 91:145-154.

  134. Schrader, M. S., E. L. Walters, F. C. James, and E. C. Greiner. 2003. Seasonal prevalence of a haematozoan parasite of red-bellied woodpeckers (Melanerpes carolinus) and its association with host condition and overwinter survival. Auk 120:130-137.

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    Theses/Dissertations

    Gagnon, J.L. 2001. Longleaf pine regeneration dynamics in both artificial and natural gaps in mature longleaf pine ecosystems. M.S. Thesis, Univ. Florida, Gainesville. 101 pp.

    Hess, C.A. 1997. Diet of the Red-cockaded woodpecker in the Apalachicola National Forest. M.S. Thesis, Florida State University, Tallahassee, 56 pp.

    Hovis, J.A. 1982. Population biology and vegetative requirements of the red-cockaded woodpecker (Picoides borealis) in Apalachicola National Forest, Florida. M.S. Thesis, Univ. Florida, Gainesville. 56 pp.

    Kappes, J.J. 1993. Interspecific interactions associated with red-cockaded woodpecker cavities at a north Florida site. M.S. Thesis, Univ. Florida, Gainesville. 71 pp.

    Madsen, D.L. 1999. Seed production and germination studies of Macbridea alba. Ms. Thesis, Clemson University, Clemson, SC. 113 pp.

    Repenning, R.W. 1983. Effects of even-age timber management on bird communities of the longleaf pine forest in north Florida. M.S. Thesis, Univ. Florida, Gainesville. 41 pp.

    Sekerak, C.M. 1994. Vegetation and aquatic vertebrate and macroinvertebrate assemblages in flatwoods salamander breeding ponds in the Apalachicola National Forest. M.S. Thesis, Univ. Florida, Gainesville. 74 pp.

    Walters, E.L. 2004. Estimating species interactions in a woodpecker tree-hole community at the individual, population, and community levels. Ph.D. dissertation. Florida State University, Tallahassee.

    Popular Articles

    Palis, J.G. 1991. Delicate balance: Harper’s beauty. Florida Wildlife 45(6):9.

    Palis, J.G. 1991. Flatwoods salamander. Florida Wildlife 47(5):13-15.

    Palis, J.G. 1995. Cypress domes. Florida Wildlife 49(6):12-14.