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Journal of Forestry 2003: Vol 101 Index PDF

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Preview Journal of Forestry 2003: Vol 101 Index

Changes in Scenic Quality after Pa H Titles and Subjects Harvest: A Decade of Ratings Family Forests: Lets Call Them Hands-on Learning: Its Effective- Articles are listed by title for Six Silvicultural Treat- What They Are, 3(60) ness in Teaching the Public (italic type) and subject ments, 2(30) The Financial Cost to Forest about Wildland Fire, 7(21) grouping (roman type). Clearcutting, 2(30) Landowners Who Implement How, Thanks to a Decision Titles of reviewed books, Communication, 2(60), 3(1), Forest Management Guide- Support System Called marked with an asterisk, 3(6), 3(14), 3(60), 4(1), lines: An Empirical Assessment, “Profiling,” a Forest Manager are also included but are 6(1), 6(8), 6(38), 6(44), 8(37) Saved His Forest But Lost His not cross-referenced by subject. 6(60), 7(8), 7(16), 7(21), Fire, 1(8), 1(30), 2(11), 3(14), Job: A Fable, 6(44) 7(60) 4(10), 5(1), 6(1), 6(8), 7(40) Cooperatives, 2(41) Forest and Garden: Traces of | Costa Rica, 5(18) Wildness in a Modernizing Industry, 1(24), 1(47), 2(48), A Land, 1897-1949, 7(54)* 3(32), 4(42), 5(8), pi ), Adaptive Management and the D Forest Certification of State and 5(36), 6(44), 8(32), 8(42) Northwest Forest Plan: Decision science, 6(38), 6(44) University Lands in North Integrated Graduate pods ation Rhetoric and Reality, \(40) The Decline of Southern Yellow Carolina: A Comparison, 8(26) and Research in Neotropical Aesthetics, 2(30) Pine Timberland, 1(30) Forest Certification: Some Working Forests, 6(31) Afforestation, 1(30) Deforestation, 5(18) Thoughts on Its Vi= 8(60) International Dialogue on Sus- African-American Forestland Deployment of Genetically Forest health, 2(11), 2(18), 6(1) tainable Forest Management: Owners in Alabama’ Black Improved Loblolly and Slash Forest Service, 1(40), 2(11), 5(46) The US Response, 5(46) Belt, 3(38) Pines in the South, 3(32) Forest Streamwater Concentra- International forestry, 1(8), Africanized bees, 1(14) Discourse or Distrust?, 4(1) tions of Nitrogen and Phos- 1(36), 2(37), 2(41), 2(48), Airborne laser altimetry, 4(10) Distance Education: A New phorus: A Comparison with 4(34), 5(entire issue), 6(31) Alabama, 3(38) Course in Wildland Fire EPA’ Proposed Water Quality International Tropical Timber Aspen, 4(29) Ecology, 7(16) Criteria, 1(21) Organization (ITTO), 5(42) Diversity: What Does It Mean to Foresters: The Next Generation, Invasive species, 1(14), 2(18) B SAF?, 1(60) 2(60) Inventory, 1(8), 2(11), 4(4), Bamboo, 1(14) Fragmentation, 3(6), 4(18) 4(24) E Benton MacKaye: Conservationist, From Conquest to Conservation: Inventory-Based Forest Health Planner, and Creator of the Economics, 1(47), 2(48), 3 (2 6), Our Public Lands Legacy, Indicators: Implications for Appalachian Trail, 4(71)* 3(44), 4(42), 5(60), 6(2 4), 5(55)* National Forest Management, Best management practices, 8(37) FSC: Forest Stewardship Council 2(11) 8(37) Ecorisk Assessment Using Indica- Certification, 8(8) It’s a Neighborhood Now: Biodiversity, 1(24), 4(1 8), 5(8), tors of Sustainability: Invasive Fuel Reduction Strategies in Practicing Forestry at the 5(18) Species in the Caribbean Forest Communities: A Longi- Urban Fringe, 3(6) Bolivia, 2(37) National Forest of Puerto tudinal Analysis ofP ublic British Columbia’ Environmental Rico, 1(14) Support, 6(8) L Forestry Policy Record in Education, 1(60), 2(60), 5(18), Land-Grant Universities and Ex- Perspective, 8(42) 6(31), 7(entire issue) G tension into the 21st Century: Broad Field of Forestry: Let It Employment, 4(42) Genetics, 3(32) Renegotiating or Abandoning Stay That Way, 7(60) Employment Transitions in Geographic information systems a Social Contract, 7(53)* Oregon's Wood Products Sector (GIS), 4(4), 4(18), 4(29), Let SAF Take You Higher, (1) ae During the 1990s, 4(42) 7(40) Living in the Appalachian Forest: Canada, 2(48), 8(42) Empowerment through Certifica- GIS: An Updated Primer on a True Tales ofS ustainable For- Canadian lumber tariff, 2(48) tion, 8(1) Powerful Management Tool, estry, 1(54)* Certification, 8 (entire issue) Endangered species, 1(40) 4(4) Localizing National Fragmenta- Certification on Public and Uni- Entomology, 2(18) Give Us the Green Light, 6(1) tion Statistics with Forest Type Maps, 4(18 versity Lands: Evaluations of Environmental Protection Global positioning system FSC and SFI by the Forest Agency, 1(21) (GPS), 4(24) Managers, 8(21) Environmentalism, 4(1), 8(42) GPS after Selective Availability: M Certification: The View from Ethics, 2(1), 6(38) How Accurate Is Accurate Managing a Global Resource: FSC-Certified Land Man- Ethics of Using Science, 2(1) Enough?, 4(24) Challenges ofF orest Conserva- agers, 8(32) European Woodwasp: A Potential Grading Transfer versus Continu- tion and Development, Threat to North America’s ing Students in Undergradu- 2(55)* Conifer Forests, 2(18) ate Forestry: Who Will Excel?, Mapping, 4(4), 4(10), 4(18), 4(24), 4(29) 7(35) December 2003 + Journal of Forestry 57 2003 Index Olam lacttowlacemelaliiat= The following articles appear in the October 2003 issue of Market and Resource Impacts ofa FORESTSCIENCE Canadian Lumber Tariff; 2(48) Meeting the Needs ofN epal’ Poor: Creating Local Criteria and Indicators of Community A BIMONTHLY JOURNAL OF RESEARCH AND TECHNICAL PROGRESS Forestry, 5(24) Minority forestland owners, Risk-Aversion and the Short-Run A 2-Opt Tabu Search Procedure for the 3(38) Supply of Timber Multiperiod Forest Harvesting Problem Montreal Process, 1(14), 4(18), P Gong and K-G. Léfgren with Adjacency, Greenup, Old Growth, 5(46) The Influence of Forest and Stand Con- and Even Flow Constraints Multiple use, 1(24), 6(24) ditions on Spruce Budworm Defoliation E Caro, M. Constantino, I. Martins, in New Brunswick, Canada and A. Weintraub N WE. MacKinnon and D.A. MacLean Light Transmittance Estimates in a NASA and Russian Scientists Ob- What We May Have Is a Failure to Longleaf Pine Woodland serve Land-Cover and Land- Communicate: Labeling Environmen- M.A. Battaglia, RJ. Mitchell, PP Mou, Use Change and Carbon in tally Certified Forest Products and S.D. Pecot Russian Forests, 4(34) ME Teisl Poverty and Employment in Forest- Nepal, 5(24) Above- and Belowground Competition Dependent Counties “New Forestry” in Scotland, from Longleaf Pine Plantations Limits P. Berck, C. Costello, L. Fortmann, 1(36) Performance of Reintroduced Herba- and S. Hoffmann Nonindustrial private forestry, ceous Species Spatial and Temporal Disturbance 1(47), 2(41), 3(38), 3(44), TB. Harrington, C.M. Dagley, Characteristics of Oak-Dominated 3(60), 6(18) and M.R. Edwards Old-Growth Stands in the Central Nontimber forest products, Time Trends in Genetic Parameters for Hardwood Forest Region 5(36), 5(42) Height and Optimal Age for Parental J.S. Rentch, M.A. Fajvan, R.R. Hicks Jr. Nontimber Forest Values: Selection in Scots Pine Relationship Between Foliar '°C and The “Understory” of the G. Jansson, B. Li, and B. Hannrup International Tropical Timber Hydraulic Pathway Length in Pinus Acquisition of a Forest Estate: palustris Organization, 5(42) A Stochastic Optimization Approach L.J. Samuelson, PC. McLemore Ll, North Carolina, 8(26) for Financing and Management and G.L. Somers oO G. Rutegird, L. Linnstedt, and M. Kallio Growth Responses of Abies amabilis Old-growth, 7(40) Estimating the Cost of Land Base Changes Advance Regeneration to Overstory On Both “Transmit” and Due to Wildfire Using Shadow Prices Removal, Nitrogen Fertilization and “Receive,” 3(1) G.W. Armstrong and S.G. Cumming Release from Vaccinium Competition Nantucket Pine Tip Moth Development B.]. Hawkins and J.A. Moran P and Population Dynamics: Influence of The Effects of Exchange Rate Volatility Pacific Northwest, 1(40), 2(30) Nitrogen Fertilization and Vegetation on US Forest Commodities Exports Parcelization, 6(18) Control C. Sun and D. Zhang A Per-Segment Approach to J.T. Nowak, T.B. Harrington, Improving Aspen Mapping and C.W. Berisford from High-Resolution Remote Sensing Imagery, 4(29) Forest Science, published bimonthly, presents significant research in silvicul- Pest management, 2(18) ture, soils, biometry, disease, recreation, photosynthesis, and tree physiology Plantation forestry, 1(30), as well as all aspects of management, harvesting, and policy analysis. 3(26), 3(32), 5(31) Plunder and Wonder, 5(60) ¢ To purchase the October 2003 issuewf Forest Science, contact the SAF Policy, 1(21), 1(40), 2(11), sales office at (301) 897-8720, ext. 106; adade@ svafnoet.porg . 3(44), 4(1), 5(1), 5(8) 5(24), 5(31), 5(36), 5(42), * To subscribe to this or any SAF journal, contact Amy Ziadi at (301) 897- 8720, ext. 102; ziadia @ safnet.org. Individuals also may subscribe online at 5(46), 5(60), 6(1), 6(8), 7(21), 8(42) http://store.safnet.org. Policy Innovations for Private * For online access to SAF journals, visit Forest Management and Conservation in Costa Rica, www.safnet.org (ol| ( o1 te)a 1-1-1( 0)8) (oF- Vm s) 5(18) 58 Journal of Forestry » December 2003 T Pollution, 1(21) South Africa, 5(31) Vv Ponderosa pine, 7(40) Southern United States, 1(30), Taxes, 3(44) A Vision for Forestry and for SAE Poverty, 5(24), 5(60) 3(14), 3(26), 3(32), 3(38) Timber market, 1(47), 2(48), 6(60) Preparing Tomorrows Foresters: Spatial Forest Planning: To Adopt, 3(26), 4(42) Embedding Professional Inter- or Not to Adopt?, 2(24) Twenty Years ofP rice Reporting WwW active Skills in a Technical Stakeholders’ Perceptions of to NIPF Owners: A Progress Water, 1(21), 3(6) Discipline, 7(8) Parcelization in Wisconsin’ Report, 1(47) Wildland Fire in the Southeast: Private forest landowners (see Northwoods, 6(18) Negotiating Guidelines for Nonindustrial private for- Standardized tests, 7(35) U Defensible Space, 3(14) estry) A Strategy for Economic Develop- University forests, 7(28), 8(21), Wildland-urban interface, 3(6), Private Forestland Owners in ment of the Forestry Sector in 8(26) 3(14), 3(20), 6(8), 7(21) Sweden: Large-Scale Coopera- Tomsk, Russia, 5(36) Urban Forestry: The Final Fron- Wildlife, 1(24) tion in Action, 2(41) Strengthening the Science behind tier?, 3(20) Wisconsin, 6(18) Productivity ofS outhern Pine Certification: The Role of Urbanization, 3(6), 3(20), 4(18) Wood versus Water: Timber Plan- Plantations: Where Are We University Research and School USDA Forest Service, 1(40), tations in Semiarid South Africa, 5(31) and How Did We Get Here?, Forests, 7(28) 2(11), 5(46) 3(26) Summer and Smoke, 5(1) Using Airborne Laser Altimetry Woodwasp, 2(18) Professional development, 1(1), Sustainable Forestry in Bolivia: to Determine Fuel Modelsfo r 2(1), 3(1), 7(1) Beyond Planned Logging, Estimating Fire Behavior, 4(10) Property Taxation of Private 2(37) Using History to Plan the Future Forests in the United States: Sustainable Forestry: What Is It? ofO ld-Growth Ponderosa A National Review, 3(44) How Do We Achieve It?, 5(8) Pine, 7(40) Public relations, 2(30), 3(1), Sweden, 2(41) 3(6), 3(14), 6(1), 6(8), 6(18), 6(24), 6(60), 7(21), 7(60) Puerto Rico, 1(8), 1(14) Focus On... Puerto Rico’s Forest Inventory: Articles appearing in the “Focus on...” section are intended to convey practical information in an easy-to- Adapting the Forest Inventory read, hands-on mannerT.he articles published in 2003 are organized here by audience or topic category. and Analysis Program to a Caribbean Island, 1(8) PVF: A Scale to Measure Public Business of Forestry Professional Development Values ofF orests, 6(24) Taking the Mystery Out of Financial Ratios, \(4) The Envelope, Please: Nominate a Colleague for an SAF Award, 8(6) R Community Involvement Local Land-Use Planning: How to Make a Public Outreach Recreation, 6(24) Difference, 1(5) How to Apply for a Foresters’ Fund Grant, 7(A) Relevance and Competence, Today and Tomorrow, 7(1) Field Foresters Urban Forestry Remote sensing, 4(4), 4(10), How to Use a Cordless Drill to Extract Increment Soil, Roots, and Construction: A Deadly Combi- 4(24), 4(29), 4(34) Cores, 5{4) nation, 3(4) Research ethics, 2(1) TechReg: Your Path to Becoming a Technical Wildfire Restoring Dignity to Sound Service Provider, 6(4) The Right Tools: Managinfgo r Fire Using FIA Professional Judgment, 6(38) Forest Certification Inventory Data, 2(4-8) Riparian management, 1(21), How to Prepare for a Third-Party Audit, 8(4) Coming Soon: A National Assessment ofF uel 3(6) Loadings, 2(4) Russia, 4(34), 5(36) Forestry Faculty Fuel-Reduction Treatment: A West-wide Making the Most of Undergraduate Research in S Assessment of Opportunities, 2(5) Forestry Education, 7(5) Scotland, 1(36) Fire Hazard and Potential Treatment Getting Involved Effectiveness: A Statewide Assessment in SFI: Sustainable Forestry Initiative Program, 8(9) State Technical Committees: One Way to Partici- Montana, 2(7) Silviculture, 1(36), 2(11), 2(30), pate in Planning, \(7) FIA BioSum: Applying a Multiscale Evalua- 2(37), 3(20), 3(26), 3(32), tion Tool in Southwest Oregon, 2(8) Inventory 7(40) A Stand Volume Equation for Cruising Small- Youth Outreach Society of American Foresters, Diameter Material, 5(5) Penn State Offers Sustainable Forestry Website to 1(1), 1(60), 3(1), 6(60) Teachers, 3(5) December 2003 + Journal of Forestry 59

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