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In addition to Registered Professional Foresters, ecological plans for harvesting and growing trees often require the involvement of other scientific professionals including wildlife and fisheries biologists, hydrologists, geologists, archaeologists and historians! [more]

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Glossary The News Room » Research » Educational Briefs

Educational Briefs

General Publication on Forests in California

MacCleery, D. W. American

Forests: A History of Resiliency and Recovery. 1993 (rev.).

Order from Forest History Society, 701 Vickers Avenue, Durham, NC, 27701.

How Can We Live with Wildland Fire? 1997.

UC Cooperative Extension Service.

Order from California Communities Program, Human and Community Deve., Univ. of Calif., One Shields Ave., Davis, CA 95616-8523. .00/copy.

Forests & Salmon: Forest Fisheries Management Relationships in Northern California. Forest Foundation.

Order from California Forest Products Commission, 853 Lincoln Way, Auburn, CA 95603

California Forest Health In 1994 and 1995.

US Forest Service. Pacific Southwest Region. Report R5-FPM-PR-002.

Order from USDA Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Region, 630 Sansome St., San Francisco. CA 94111.

Order the following from American Forests, P. 0. Box 2000, Washington, D.C. 20013;

Forest Ecosystem Health in the Inland West: A Science and Policy Reader.

1995. American Forests.

Forest Health in the United States.

1998. American Forests. /copy.

Public Programs for Private Forests. 1998.

American Forests. /copy.

Barbour. Michael. Bruce Pavlik, Frank Drysdale. and Susan Lingstrom.

California's Changing Landscape: Diversity and Conservation of California Vegetation. 1993.

California Native Plant Society.

Order from CNPS. 1722 J Street, Suite 17, Sacramento. CA 95814.

Barbour, M. G. and Jack Major.

Terrestrial Vegetation of California. 1988.

California Native Plant Society.

Order from CNPS, 1722 J Street, Suite 17, Sacramento, CA 95814.

Order the following from Communication Services, Div. of Ag. and Nat. Res., University of California, 6701 San Pablo Ave., Oakland. C4 94608-1239. danrcs.ucdavis.edu Phone orders 1-800-994-8849.

Sustaining Site Productivity on Forestlands.

UC DANR Publication 21481. 1990. /copy.

Sugar Pine: Status, Values, and Roles in Ecosystems.

Proc. of a symposium. UC DANR Publication 3362. 1996. /copy. incl. shipping and handling.

The Forest Products Industries in California: Their Impact on the State Economy.

UC DANR Publication CNR002. 1994. /copy

Bonnicksen, T. M. (Lead Author), M. K. Anderson, H. T. Lewis, C. E. Kay, and R. Knudson 1997. American Indian Influences on the Development of Forest Ecosystems. A monograph commissioned by the USDA Forest Service. 117 pp. (Accepted.)

Bonnicksen, T. M. 1997. The giant sequoia forest: a window into the past and a vision for the future. Forests 1(5):14-15, 25.

McKillop, W., T. Bonnicksen, C. Oliver, and G. Wood. 1997. Report of the California Forest EIS Review Committee. A committee chartered by the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Forest and Public Land Management, and the House Subcommittee on Forests. Washington, D.C.

Oliver, C., D. Adams, T. Bonnicksen, J. Bowyer, F. Cubbage, N. Sampson, S. Schlarbaum, R. Whaley, and H. Wiant. 1997. Report on forest health of the United States by the Forest Health Science Panel. A panel chartered by Charles Taylor, Member, U.S. Congress. Washington, D.C.

Bonnicksen, T. M. 1996. Reaching consensus on environmental issues: the use of throw away models. Politics and the Life Sciences 15(1):23-34.

Bonnicksen, T. M. 1995. A challenge to resource managers and conservation biologists. Hamilton Roddis Memorial Lecture Series, No. 6. Department of Forestry, University of Wisconsin-Madison. 14 pp.

Bonnicksen, T. M. 1995. An assessment of wildland fire issues in southeastern San Diego County, California. Watershed Fire Council of Southern California. 30 pp. plus appendices.

Bonnicksen, T. M. 1994. An analysis of a plan to maintain old-growth forest ecosystems. Forest Resources Technical Bulletin TB 94-3. American Forest and Paper Association, Washington, D.C. 32 pp. Published from a written statement for the record. Hearing on the Clinton Administration's Forestry Plan for the Pacific Northwest conducted by the Specialty Crops and Natural Resources Subcommittee of the Agriculture Committee, United States House of Representatives. Washington, D.C., November 18. 32 pp. Also in Comments on the Draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement on Management of Habitat for Late-Successional and Old-Growth Forest Related Species Within the Range of the Northern Spotted Owl. The Northwest Forest Resource Council, the American Forest and Paper Association, and others. October, 1993.

Bonnicksen, T. M. 1994. Nature's clearcuts: lessons from the past. In: Closer Look. American Forest and Paper Association, Washington, D.C. Pp. 22-28.

Bonnicksen, T. M. 1993. The biosocial perspective. In: Covington, W. W. and L. F. DeBano (eds.) Sustainable Ecological Systems: Implementing an Ecological Approach to Land Management. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report RM-247. Pp. 292-296.

Bonnicksen, T. M. 1990. Restoring biodiversity in park and wilderness areas: an assessment of the Yellowstone wildfires. Proceedings of a symposium, Wilderness Areas: Their Impact, Utah State University, Logan. April 19-20, 1990. Pp. 25-32.

Bonnicksen, T. M. 1989. Fire gods and federal policy. American Forests 95(7 and 8): 14-16, 66-68.

Bonnicksen, T. M. 1981. Brushland fire-management policies: a cross-impact simulation of southern California. Environmental Management 5(6): 521-529.

Bonnicksen, T. M. and R. G. Lee. 1979. Persistence of the fire exclusion policy in southern California: a biosocial interpretation. Journal of Environmental Management 8(3): 277-293.