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A Bibliography of the Publications of Peter S. White Compiled by William R. Burk and Elizabeth A. Appleton, with the assistance of Ian Ewing, Laura Bell Wright, Christian Higgins, and Peter S. White. Volume 1 1971 Woody plants of the Bennington College campus. I. Patterns of vegetation of New England and adjacent area. II. Detailed study of the woody plant ecology of the campus. A thesis submitted to the faculty of Bennington College, Bennington, Vermont, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts. June 1971. 2 volumes. 1976 The upland forest vegetation of the Second College Grant, New Hampshire. A thesis submitted to the faculty in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, May 1976. x, 294 leaves 1978 Big trees on the Dartmouth Grant. Forest Notes 132: 9-10. Work plan: the ecology of natural disturbances in logged and unlogged stands in the Cades Cove and Tremont Area of Great Smoky Mountains National Park, pp.1-9. In Work plan: subprojects of the vegetation survey, 1978. Gatlinburg, TN: Uplands Field Research Laboratory, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Twin Creeks Area. 1 volume, various pagings. [Abstract]. The ecology of natural disturbances in logged and unlogged stands in the Cades Cove and Tremont areas of Great Smoky Mountains National Park, p. 39. In National Park Service Fourth Annual Scientific Research Meeting, Southeast Region, June 16-17, 1978. Gatlinburg, TN: Great Smoky Mountains National Park. xvii, 46 pp. 1979 [Abstract]. (with Susan P. Bratton and Raymond C. Mathews, Jr.). Impacts of an agricultural area within a natural area, p. 21. In Fifth Annual Scientific Research Meeting, U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service-Southeast Region, June 21-23, 1979. Gatlinburg, TN: Great Smoky Mountains National Park. [8], 50 pp. [Abstract]. Bibliographic and herbarium computerization at Great Smoky Mountains National Park, p. 24. In Fifth Annual Scientific Research Meeting, U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service-Southeast Region, June 21-23, 1979. Gatlinburg, TN: Great Smoky Mountains National Park. [8], 50 pp.

A Bibliography of the Publications of Peter S. White...(with Susan Bratton and Raymond Mathews, Jr.). Cades Cove, an overview; the impacts of an agricultural area within a natural

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  • A Bibliography of the Publications of Peter S. White

    Compiled by William R. Burk and Elizabeth A. Appleton, with the assistance of Ian Ewing, Laura

    Bell Wright, Christian Higgins, and Peter S. White.

    Volume 1

    1971

    Woody plants of the Bennington College campus. I. Patterns of vegetation of New England and

    adjacent area. II. Detailed study of the woody plant ecology of the campus. A thesis submitted to

    the faculty of Bennington College, Bennington, Vermont, in partial fulfillment of the requirements

    for the degree of Bachelor of Arts. June 1971. 2 volumes.

    1976

    The upland forest vegetation of the Second College Grant, New Hampshire. A thesis submitted to

    the faculty in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.

    Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, May 1976. x, 294 leaves

    1978

    Big trees on the Dartmouth Grant. Forest Notes 132: 9-10.

    Work plan: the ecology of natural disturbances in logged and unlogged stands in the Cades Cove

    and Tremont Area of Great Smoky Mountains National Park, pp.1-9. In Work plan: subprojects of

    the vegetation survey, 1978. Gatlinburg, TN: Uplands Field Research Laboratory, Great Smoky

    Mountains National Park, Twin Creeks Area. 1 volume, various pagings.

    [Abstract]. The ecology of natural disturbances in logged and unlogged stands in the Cades Cove

    and Tremont areas of Great Smoky Mountains National Park, p. 39. In National Park Service

    Fourth Annual Scientific Research Meeting, Southeast Region, June 16-17, 1978. Gatlinburg, TN:

    Great Smoky Mountains National Park. xvii, 46 pp.

    1979

    [Abstract]. (with Susan P. Bratton and Raymond C. Mathews, Jr.). Impacts of an agricultural area

    within a natural area, p. 21. In Fifth Annual Scientific Research Meeting, U.S. Department of the

    Interior, National Park Service-Southeast Region, June 21-23, 1979. Gatlinburg, TN: Great Smoky

    Mountains National Park. [8], 50 pp.

    [Abstract]. Bibliographic and herbarium computerization at Great Smoky Mountains National Park,

    p. 24. In Fifth Annual Scientific Research Meeting, U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park

    Service-Southeast Region, June 21-23, 1979. Gatlinburg, TN: Great Smoky Mountains National

    Park. [8], 50 pp.

  • [Abstract]. Floristics, rare plants, limestone flora, and additions to the flora of Great Smoky

    Mountains National Park, p. 32. In Fifth Annual Scientific Research Meeting, U.S. Department of

    the Interior, National Park Service-Southeast Region, June 21-23, 1979. Gatlinburg, TN: Great

    Smoky Mountains National Park. [8], 50 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with Susan P. Bratton). After preservation: managerial issues concerning rare plants in

    Great Smoky Mountains National Park, p. 32. In Fifth Annual Scientific Research Meeting, U.S.

    Department of the Interior, National Park Service-Southeast Region, June 21-23, 1979. Gatlinburg,

    TN: Great Smoky Mountains National Park. [8], 50 pp.

    [Abstract]. The structure of vegetation in logged and unlogged areas on the north side of Great

    Smoky Mountains National Park, p. 79. In Research activities of the southeast region, U.S.

    Department of the Interior, National Park Service, 1978. Atlanta, GA: Natural Science and

    Research Division, Southeast Regional Office. i, 163 pp.

    [Abstract]. Rare and endangered plant species and special protection areas survey,

    p.81. In Research activities of the southeast region, U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park

    Service, 1978. Atlanta, GA: Natural Science and Research Division, Southeast Regional Office. i,

    163 pp.

    Pattern, process, and natural disturbance in vegetation. Botanical Review 45: 229-299.

    [Abstract]. Herbarium computerization project, p. 102. In Abstracts: 2nd Conference on Scientific

    Research in the National Parks, 26-30 November 1979, San Francisco, California. [s.l. : s.n.]. 426

    pp.

    [Abstract]. Rare plant monitoring in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, p. 219. In Abstracts:

    2nd Conference on Scientific Research in the National Parks, 26-30 November 1979, San

    Francisco, California. [s.l. : s.n.]. 426 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with Susan Bratton and Raymond Mathews, Jr.). Cades Cove, an overview; the impacts

    of an agricultural area within a natural area, p. 308. In Abstracts: 2nd Conference on Scientific

    Research in the National Parks, 26-30 November 1979, San Francisco, California. [s.l. : s.n.]. 426

    pp.

    [Abstract]. (with Susan Bratton, Francis Singer, and Mark Harmon). Rooting impacts of the

    European wild boar on the vegetation of Great Smoky Mountains National Park during a year of

    mast failure, p. 244. In Abstracts: 2nd Conference on Scientific Research in the National Parks, 26-

    30 November 1979, San Francisco, California. [s.l. : s.n.]. 426 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with Susan Bratton). Preservation and change—dilemmas of rare plant management in

    preserve systems, p. 229. In Abstracts: 2nd Conference on Scientific Research in the National

    Parks, 26-30 November 1979, San Francisco, California. [s.l. : s.n.]. 426 pp.

  • 1980

    [Abstract]. Impacts of white-tailed deer on the vegetation of Cades Cove, Great Smoky Mountains

    National Park, p. 10. In Jim Wood (compiler and editor), Second Annual Resource Management

    Workshop, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, March 3-6, 1980. Atlanta, GA: U.S.

    Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Natural Science and Research Division,

    Southeast Regional Office. 19 pp. [Note: Susan P. Bratton is author of abstract, but Peter S. White

    gave the presentation in Ms. Bratton's absence.]

    [Abstract]. After preservation what?, p. 1. In Jim Wood (compiler and editor), Second Annual

    Resource Management Workshop, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, March 3-6, 1980.

    Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Natural Science and Research

    Division, Southeast Regional Office. 19 pp.

    Herbarium computerization at Great Smoky Mountains National Park, pp. 47-61. In Proceedings of

    the Second Conference on Scientific Research in the National Parks, San Francisco, California,

    November 26-30, 1979, Vol. 4. Sponsored by: National Park Service and American Institute of

    Biological Sciences. U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service. 12 volumes (each with

    independent page numbering). Springfield, Va.: National Technical Information Service.

    Rare plant monitoring in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, pp. 46-59. In Proceedings of the

    Second Conference on Scientific Research in the National Parks, San Francisco, California,

    November 26-30, 1979, Vol. 8. Sponsored by: National Park Service and American Institute of

    Biological Sciences. U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service. 12 volumes (each with

    independent page numbering). Springfield, Va.: National Technical Information Service.

    (with Susan P. Bratton). Preservation and change: dilemmas of rare plant management in preserve

    systems, pp. 192-202. In Proceedings of the Second Conference on Scientific Research in the

    National Parks, San Francisco, California, November 26-30, 1979, Vol. 8. Sponsored by: National

    Park Service and American Institute of Biological Sciences. U.S. Department of the Interior,

    National Park Service. 12 volumes (each with independent page numbering). Springfield, Va.:

    National Technical Information Service.

    (with Susan P. Bratton and others). Rooting impacts of the European wild boar on the vegetation of

    Great Smoky Mountains National Park during a year of mast failure, pp. 276-293. In Proceedings

    of the Second Conference on Scientific Research in the National Parks, San Francisco, California,

    November 26-30, 1979, Vol. 8. Sponsored by: National Park Service and American Institute of

    Biological Sciences. U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service. 12 volumes (each with

    independent page numbering). Springfield, Va.: National Technical Information Service.

    [Abstract]. Rare and endangered species: how secure are they in Great Smoky Mountains National

    Park and surrounding areas?, pp. 6-7. In Jim Wood (compiler and editor), Sixth Annual Scientific

    Research Meeting, The Uplands Areas of the Southeast Region National Park Service, June 27-28,

    1980, Holiday Inn, Gatlinburg, Tennessee 37738. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of the Interior,

    National Park Service, Southeast Regional Office, Natural Science and Research Division. iv, 36

    pp.

  • [Abstract]. Rarity at Great Smoky Mountains National Park: the vascular plants, p. 9. In Jim Wood

    (compiler and editor), Sixth Annual Scientific Research Meeting, The Uplands Areas of the

    Southeast Region National Park Service, June 27-28, 1980, Holiday Inn, Gatlinburg, Tennessee

    37738. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Regional

    Office, Natural Science and Research Division. iv, 36 pp.

    (with Susan P. Bratton). After preservation: philosophical and practical problems of change.

    Biological Conservation 18: 241-255.

    (with Susan Power Bratton). Rare plant management—after preservation what? Rhodora 82: 49-75.

    (with Susan Power Bratton and Raymond C. Mathews, Jr.). Agricultural area impacts within a

    natural area: Cades Cove, a case history. Environmental Management 4: 433-448.

    Reports on rare, threatened, and endangered vascular plants: discussion and guidelines.

    Research/Resources Management Report No. 33. United States Department of the Interior,

    National Park Service, Southeast Region. Gatlinburg, TN: Uplands Field Research Laboratory,

    Great Smoky Mountains National Park. 42 pp.

    1981

    [Abstract]. The adaptive geometry and life history of Aralia spinosa L., devil's walking stick.

    Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 62(2): 73.

    [Abstract]. Rarity: the case for vascular plants at Great Smoky Mountains National Park. ASB

    Bulletin 28(2): 84.

    [Abstract]. (with Ron L. Jones). Vegetation and flora of Shiloh National Military Park, Tennessee.

    ASB Bulletin 28(2): 90.

    [Abstract]. (with George S. Ramseur). Island biogeography of the high peaks of the southern

    Appalachians: vascular plants, p. 32. In Jim Wood (compiler and editor), Seventh Annual Scientific

    Research Meeting, National Park Service-Southeast Region, June 25-26, 1981, Great Smoky

    Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of the Interior,

    National Park Service, Southeast Regional Office, Natural Science and Research Division. iv, 38

    pp.

    [Abstract]. The architecture of eastern deciduous trees, p. 34. In Jim Wood (compiler and editor),

    Seventh Annual Scientific Research Meeting, National Park Service-Southeast Region, June 25-26,

    1981, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Atlanta, GA: U.S.

    Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Regional Office, Natural Science and

    Research Division. iv, 38 pp.

    [Abstract]. Additions to the vascular flora of Great Smoky Mountains National Park, p. 37. In Jim

    Wood (compiler and editor), Seventh Annual Scientific Research Meeting, National Park Service-

    Southeast Region, June 25-26, 1981, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg,

  • Tennessee. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Southeast

    Regional Office, Natural Science and Research Division. iv, 38 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with Susan Bratton). Historic vegetation of Fort Frederica National Monument, p.

    59. In Jim Wood (compiler and editor), Third Annual Southeast Region Research Prospectus,

    Fiscal Year 1981, United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service. Atlanta, GA:

    Natural Science and Research Division, Southeast Regional Office. iv, 132 pp.

    Flora of Panama. Barbieria, pp. 553-555. In R.E. Woodson, Jr., R.W. Schery, and collaborators.

    Part V, Fascicle 5. Family 83. Leguminosae. Subfamily Papilionideae. Annals of the Missouri

    Botanical Garden 67: 523-818.

    Flora of Panama. Cracca, pp. 595-599. In R.E. Woodson, Jr., R.W. Schery, and collaborators. Part

    V, Fascicle 5. Family 83. Leguminosae. Subfamily Papilionideae. Annals of the Missouri Botanical

    Garden 67: 523-818.

    Flora of Panama. Dalea, pp. 616-622. In R.E. Woodson, Jr., R.W. Schery, and collaborators. Part

    V, Fascicle 5. Family 83. Leguminosae. Subfamily Papilionideae. Annals of the Missouri Botanical

    Garden 67: 523-818.

    Flora of Panama. Diphysa, pp. 675-678. In R.E. Woodson, Jr., R.W. Schery, and collaborators. Part

    V, Fascicle 5. Family 83. Leguminosae. Subfamily Papilionideae. Annals of the Missouri Botanical

    Garden 67: 523-818.

    Flora of Panama. Gliricidia, pp. 702-705. In R.E. Woodson, Jr., R.W. Schery, and collaborators.

    Part V, Fascicle 5. Family 83. Leguminosae. Subfamily Papilionideae. Annals of the Missouri

    Botanical Garden 67: 523-818.

    Flora of Panama. Indigofera, pp. 706-714. In R.E. Woodson, Jr., R.W. Schery, and collaborators.

    Part V, Fascicle 5. Family 83. Leguminosae. Subfamily Papilionideae. Annals of the Missouri

    Botanical Garden 67: 523-818.

    Flora of Panama. Lennea, pp. 715-719. In R.E. Woodson, Jr., R.W. Schery, and collaborators. Part

    V, Fascicle 5. Family 83. Leguminosae. Subfamily Papilionideae. Annals of the Missouri Botanical

    Garden 67: 523-818.

    Flora of Panama. Sesbania, pp. 760-765. In R.E. Woodson, Jr., R.W. Schery, and collaborators.

    Part V, Fascicle 5. Family 83. Leguminosae. Subfamily Papilionideae. Annals of the Missouri

    Botanical Garden 67: 523-818.

    Flora of Panama. Tephrosia, pp. 777-783. In R.E. Woodson, Jr., R.W. Schery, and collaborators.

    Part V, Fascicle 5. Family 83. Leguminosae. Subfamily Papilionideae. Annals of the Missouri

    Botanical Garden 67: 523-818.

    Flora of Panama. Willardia, pp. 802-804. In R.E. Woodson, Jr., R.W. Schery, and collaborators.

    Part V, Fascicle 5. Family 83. Leguminosae. Subfamily Papilionideae. Annals of the Missouri

    Botanical Garden 67: 523-818.

  • (with Susan P. Bratton). Monitoring vegetation and rare plant populations in U.S. national parks

    and preserves, pp. 265-278. In Hugh Synge (editor), The biological aspects of rare plant

    conservation. Chichester: John Wiley and Sons. xxviii, 558 pp.

    (with Susan P. Bratton). Rare and endangered plant species management: potential threats and

    practical problems in U.S. national parks and preserves, pp. 459-474. In Hugh Synge (editor), The

    biological aspects of rare plant conservation. Chichester: John Wiley and Sons. xxviii, 558 pp.

    (with P.M. Vitousek). Process studies in succession, pp. [267]-276. In Darrell C. West, Herman H.

    Shugart, and Daniel B. Botkin (editors), Forest succession: concepts and application. Springer

    Advanced Texts in Life Sciences. New York: Springer-Verlag. xv, 517 pp.

    How do we insure our natural area parks function to preserve species and natural systems? Journal

    of the Natural Areas Association 1(2): 9-10.

    (with Susan P. Bratton). Grassy balds management in parks and nature preserves: issues and

    problems, pp. 96-113. In Paul Richard Saunders (editor), Status and management of southern

    Appalachian mountain balds: proceedings of a workshop sponsored by the Southern Appalachian

    Research/Resource Management Cooperative (SARRMC), November 5-7, 1980, Corpening

    Training Center, Crossnore, North Carolina. Cullowhee, NC: SARRMC, School of Arts and

    Sciences, Western Carolina University. 124 pp.

    (with Susan P. Bratton and Mark E. Harmon). Disturbance and recovery of plant communities in

    Great Smoky Mountains National Park: successful dynamics and concepts of naturalness, pp. 42-

    79. In Miles A. Hemstrom and Jerry F. Franklin (editors), Successional research and environmental

    pollutant monitoring associated with biosphere reserves: proceedings, Second U.S.-U.S.S.R.

    Symposium on Biosphere Reserves, March 10-15, 1980, Everglades National Park, Florida, U.S.A.

    U.S. National Committee for Man and the Biosphere in cooperation with U.S. Department of

    Agriculture, Forest Service and U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Denver.

    Denver, CO: Denver Service Center, National Park Service. 271 pp.

    (with Ronald L. Jones). The vascular flora of Shiloh National Military Park, Hardin County,

    Tennessee. Research/Resources Management Report No. 50. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of the

    Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Regional Office, Natural Science and Research Division.

    iii, 49 pp.

    (with Teri Butler). Exotic woody plants of Shiloh National Military Park, Tennessee: a population

    study of aggressive species. Research/Resources Management Report No. 51. Atlanta, GA: U.S.

    Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Regional Office, Natural Science and

    Research Division. iii, 23 pp.

  • Volume 2

    1981

    (with B.Gene Wofford). Systematics and identification of southern Appalachian phanerogams: an

    indexed bibliography. Research/Resources Management Report No. 53. Atlanta, GA: U.S.

    Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Regional Office. 69 pp.

    (with A.Murray Evans and Charlotte Pyle). Southern Appalachian pteridophytes: an indexed

    bibliography, 1833-1980. Research/Resources Management Report No. 44. Atlanta, GA: U.S.

    Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Regional Office, Natural Science and

    Research Division. iii, 35 pp.

    (with Alison Mack et al.). A survey of ecological inventory, monitoring, and research in U.S.

    National Park Service Biosphere Reserves. Research/Resources Management Report No. 49.

    Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Regional Office,

    Natural Science and Research Division. ii, 23 pp.

    Looking for Linnaea. Tennessee Conservationist 47 (5): 14-16.

    1982

    [Abstract]. East Asian–East American biogeographic relations: the community level, p.

    29. In 29th Annual Systematics Symposium, Biogeographical relationships between temperate

    eastern Asia and temperate eastern North America. 23-25 September 1982. St. Louis: Missouri

    Botanical Garden. 2 volumes.

    [Abstract]. (with Donald A. Stratton). The origin and distribution of heath balds in the Great Smoky

    Mountains, North Carolina and Tennessee. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 63(2): 72.

    [Abstract]. (with Donald A. Stratton). Population structure of root crown sprouters in mature forests

    of the Great Smoky Mountains, North Carolina and Tennessee. Bulletin of the Ecological Society

    of America 63(2): 200.

    [Abstract]. (with George A. Ramseur). Island biogeography of the southern Appalachian high

    peaks. ASB Bulletin 29(2): 91-92.

    [Abstract] Vegetation mapping and monitoring in Great Smoky Mountains National Park: a

    management summary for heath and grass balds, p. 12. In Eighth Annual Scientific Research

    Meeting, National Park Service-Southeast Region, June 24-25, 1982, Great Smoky Mountains

    National Park, Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park

    Service, Southeast Regional Office, Natural Science and Research Division. vii, 65 pp.

    Dr. Peter S. White, plant ecologist, p.30. In Uplands Field Research Laboratory, Regional Review

    Team Package, June 21, 1982. Gatlinburg, TN: Uplands Field Research Laboratory, Great Smoky

    Mountains National Park. 81 pp.

  • New and noteworthy plants from Great Smoky Mountains National Park, North Carolina and

    Tennessee. Castanea 47: 78-83.

    (with Susan P. Bratton and Mark E. Harmon). Patterns of European wild boar rooting in the

    western Great Smoky Mountains. Castanea 47: 230-242.

    (with Susan P. Bratton and India Owen). The status of botanical information on national parks in

    the southeastern United States. Castanea 47: 137-147.

    The flora of Great Smoky Mountains National Park: An annotated checklist of the vascular plants

    and a review of previous floristic work. Research/Resources Management Report SER-55. Atlanta,

    GA: Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Regional Office. iv, 219 pp.

    (with Donald A. Stratton). Grassy balds of Great Smoky Mountains National Park: vascular plant

    floristics, rare plant distributions, and an assessment of the floristic data base. Research/Resources

    Management Report SER-58. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service,

    Southeast Regional Office, Natural Science and Research Division. v, 33, 17 pp.

    (with Harry R. DeYoung and H.R. DeSelm). Vegetation of the southern Appalachians: an indexed

    bibliography, 1805-1982. Research/Resources Management Report SER-63. Atlanta, GA: U.S.

    Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Regional Office, Natural Science and

    Research Division. xv, 94 pp.

    (with Raymond Hermann). The Great Smoky Mountains National Park: monitoring environmental

    impacts. IUCN Bulletin, new series 13: 68.

    Volume 3

    1983

    Review of Woodland conservation and management, by George F. Peterken. New York: Chapman

    and Hall, in association with Methuen, Inc. 1982. BioScience 33: 521.

    [Abstract]. (with Mark D. Mackenzie). Woody vegetation of the Great Smoky Mountains based on

    data collected in the 1930s. ASB Bulletin 30(2): 67.

    [Abstract]. (with Mark D. Mackenzie). Disturbance and community organization in southern

    outliers of spruce-fir vegetation. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 64(2): 108.

    [Abstract]. Special topic session: the southern Appalachian spruce-fir ecosystem, pp. 16-

    17. In Ninth Annual Scientific Research Meeting, National Park Service-Southeast Region, May

    19-20,1983, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Atlanta, GA: U.S.

    Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Regional Office. 24 pp.

    Eastern Asian-Eastern North American floristic relations: the plant community level. Annals of the

    Missouri Botanical Garden 70: 734-747.

  • Corner's Rules in eastern deciduous trees: allometry and its implications for the adaptive

    architecture of trees. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 110: 203-212.

    Evidence that temperate east North American evergreen woody plants follow Corner's Rules. New

    Phytologist 95: 139-145.

    (with Ronald I. Miller and Susan P. Bratton). Island biogeography and preserve design: preserving

    the vascular plants of Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Natural Areas Journal 3 (4): 4-13.

    (with Alison Mack and others). A survey of ecological inventory, monitoring, and research in the

    US National Park Service Biosphere Reserves. Biological Conservation 26: 33-45.

    (with E. Schell and John C. Warden). Streptopus amplexifolius (L.) DC, new to Tennessee.

    Castanea 48: 159.

    Earthwatch comes to Tennessee. Tennessee Conservationist 49 (2): [16]-19.

    (with Mark E. Harmon and Susan P. Bratton). Disturbance and vegetation response in relation to

    environmental gradients in the Great Smoky Mountains. Vegetatio 55: 129-139.

    1984

    [Abstract]. (with Peter M. Vitousek). Disturbance effects on resource availability, nutrient cycling,

    and community development. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 65(2): 54-55.

    [Abstract]. (with Ragan M. Callaway and Edward E.C. Clebsch). Prediction of wood volume

    increment of canopy trees in classified stands in the western Great Smoky Mountains National

    Park. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 65(2): 63.

    Introduction. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America. 65(2): 111.

    [Abstract]. (with Thomas M. Frost). Scale and the definition of disturbance: disturbance regimes on

    Long Term Ecological Research Sites. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 65(2): 112.

    Use of renewable resources—workshop summary, pp. 131-136. In Proceedings of the Conference

    on the Management of Biosphere Reserves. Held at the Sheraton Gatlinburg Hotel, Gatlinburg,

    Tennessee, November 27-29, 1984. Gatlinburg, TN: Uplands Field Research Laboratory, Great

    Smoky Mountains National Park Biosphere Reserve. 207 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with Ragan M. Callaway and Edward E. C. Clebsch). Prediction of wood volume

    increment of canopy trees in classified stands in the western Great Smoky Mountains, p.

    5. In Tenth Annual Scientific Research Meeting, The Uplands Areas of the Southeast Region,

    National Park Service, May 24-25, 1984, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg,

    Tennessee. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Science

    Publications Office. ii, 26 pp.

  • [Abstract]. (with N. S. Nicholas). Great Smoky Mountains National Park hard mast survey: an

    evaluation of the current survey, analysis of past data, and discussion of alternatives for future

    surveys, pp. 5-6. In Tenth Annual Scientific Research Meeting, The Uplands Areas of the Southeast

    Region, National Park Service, May 24-25, 1984, Great Smoky Mountains National Park,

    Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service,

    Science Publications Office. ii, 26 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with N. S. Nicholas). The effect of balsam woody aphid infestation on fuel loading in

    spruce-fir forests of Great Smoky Mountains National Park, pp. 7-8. In Tenth Annual Scientific

    Research Meeting, The Uplands Areas of the Southeast Region, National Park Service, May 24-25,

    1984, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Atlanta, GA: U.S.

    Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Science Publications Office. ii, 26 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with N. S. Nicholas). The effect of southern pine beetle on fuel loading in yellow pine

    forests of Great Smoky Mountains National Park, p 8. In Tenth Annual Scientific Research

    Meeting, The Uplands Areas of the Southeast Region, National Park Service, May 24-25, 1984,

    Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of

    the Interior, National Park Service, Science Publications Office. ii, 26 pp.

    The architecture of devil's walking stick, Aralia spinosa (Araliaceae). Journal of the Arnold

    Arboretum 65: 403-418.

    (with Ronald I. Miller and George S. Ramseur). The species-area relationship of the southern

    Appalachian high peaks: vascular plant richness and rare plant distributions. Castanea 49: 47-61.

    (with B.Eugene Wofford). Rare native Tennessee vascular plants in the flora of Great Smoky

    Mountain[s] National Park. Journal of the Tennessee Academy of Science 59: 61-64.

    The southern Appalachian spruce-fir ecosystem: its biology and threats. National Park Service,

    Southeast Region, Research/Resources Management Report SER-71.Atlanta, GA: United States

    Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Region. x, 268 pp. [Edited by Peter S.

    White].

    Foreword, pp. iii-v. In Peter S. White (editor), The southern Appalachian spruce-fir ecosystem: its

    biology and threats. Research/Resources Management Report SER-71. Atlanta, GA: United States

    Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Region. x, 268 pp.

    The southern Appalachian spruce-fir ecosystem: an introduction, pp. [1]-21. In Peter S. White

    (editor), The southern Appalachian spruce-fir ecosystem: its biology and threats.

    Research/Resources Management Report SER-71. Atlanta, GA: United States Department of the

    Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Region. x, 268 pp.

    (with L.A. Renfro). Appendix I. Vascular plants of southern Appalachian spruce-fir: annotated

    checklists arranged by geography, habitat, and growth form, pp. 235-246. In P.S. White (editor),

    The southern Appalachian spruce-fir ecosystem: its biology and threats. Research/Resources

    Management Report SER-71. Atlanta, GA: United States Department of the Interior, National Park

    Service, Southeast Region. x, 268 pp.

  • (with Christopher Eagar). Appendix II. Bibliography of research on southern Appalachian spruce-

    fir vegetation, pp. 247-268. In P.S. White (editor), The southern Appalachian spruce-fir ecosystem:

    its biology and threats. Research/Resources Management Report SER-71. Atlanta, GA: United

    States Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Region. x, 268 pp.

    Impacts of cultural and historic resources on natural diversity: lessons from Great Smoky

    Mountains National Park, North Carolina and Tennessee, pp. [119]-132. In James L. Cooley and

    June H. Cooley (editors), Natural diversity in forest ecosystems. Athens, GA: Institute of Ecology,

    University of Georgia. iii, 290 pp.

    Exclosure research in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, pp. 23-24. In Jane Tate (editor),

    Techniques for controlling wild hogs in Great Smoky Mountains National Park: proceedings of a

    workshop, November 29-30, 1983. National Park Service, Southeast Region, Research/Resources

    Management Report SER-72. Atlanta, GA: United States Department of the Interior, National Park

    Service, Southeast Regional Office, Natural Science and Research Division. 87 pp.

    (with Christopher Eagar and David Silsbee). Monitoring and research related to atmospheric

    deposition in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, North Carolina and Tennessee. National Acid

    Precipitation Assessment Program, Asheville, N.C., 1984 Annual Meeting. [s.l. : s.n.]. 6 pp.

    (with N.S. Nicholas). The effect of the southern pine beetle on fuel loading in yellow pine forests of

    Great Smoky Mountains National Park. National Park Service, Southeast Region,

    Research/Resources Management Report SER-73. Atlanta, GA: United States Department of the

    Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Regional Office, Natural Science and Research Division.

    iv, 31 pp.

    (with N.S. Nicholas). The Great Smoky Mountains National Park hard mast survey: an evaluation

    of the current survey, an analysis of past data, and a discussion of alternatives for future surveys.

    [Southeast Region], Research/Resource Management Report SER-68. Atlanta, GA: National Park

    Service, Southeast Regional Office. 66 pp.

    [Beyond the park checklist]. Park Science 4 (4): 23.

    (with Christopher Eagar and Dean Berg). Propose[d] age class management strategy in Fraser fir

    rescue effort (Tennessee, North Carolina). Restoration and Management Notes 2: 77.

    (with Dean Berg). Grassy balds pose restoration, management puzzle in Great Smoky Mountains

    National Park (Tennessee and North Carolina). Restoration and Management Notes 2: 84.

    What is rarity? Tennessee Conservationist 50 (2): 2-4.

    Diversity in a protected landscape: Smoky Mountain flora, pp. 20-[23]. In The Great Smoky

    Mountains National Park golden anniversary commemorative book. Gatlinburg, TN: Oakley

    Enterprises. 131 pp.

  • The Great Smoky Mountains National Park: an international biosphere reserve, pp. 124,

    126. In The Great Smoky Mountains National Park golden anniversary commemorative book.

    Gatlinburg, TN: Oakley Enterprises. 131 pp.

    Review of O.L. Lange and others (editors). 1983. Physiological plant ecology IV: ecosystem

    processes--mineral cycling, productivity and man's influence. Quarterly Review of Biology 59:

    480.

    Volume 4

    1985

    [Abstract]. (with N.S. Nicholas, S. M. Zedaker, C.C. Eagar, and T.E. Burke). SARRMC

    investigation of stand and site conditions of southern Appalachian spruce-fir, p. 23. In Harvey

    Olem (editor), Proceedings: Second Annual Acid Rain Conference for the Southern Appalachians,

    October 28-30, 1985, Glenstone Lodge, Gatlinburg, Tennessee. TVA/ONRED/AWR 86/11.

    Chattanooga, TN: Tennessee Valley Authority, office of Natural Resources and Economic

    Development. 63 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with Charlotte Pyle, Michael P. Schafale, and Thomas R. Wentworth). Overview of

    spruce-fir disturbance history and effects at Mount Rogers National Recreation Area, Great Smoky

    Mountains National Park, and the Black Mountains, p. 24. InHarvey Olem, editor. Proceedings:

    Second Annual Acid Rain Conference for the Southern Appalachians, October 28-30, 1985,

    Glenstone Lodge, Gatlinburg, Tennessee. TVA/ONRED/AWR 86/11. Chattanooga: TN: Tennessee

    Valley Authority, office of Natural Resources and Economic Development. 63 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with H.R. Delcourt and P.A. Delcourt). Landscape evolution, geomorphic disturbances,

    and vegetation stability in the Great Smoky Mountains. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of

    America 66(2): 293.

    [Abstract]. (with Mark D. MacKenzie). Remote sensing and vegetation mapping in Great Smoky

    Mountains National Park, North Carolina and Tennessee, pp. 14-15. In Eleventh Annual Scientific

    Research Meeting, The Uplands Areas of the Southeast Region, National Park Service, May 23-24,

    1985, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Atlanta, GA: U.S.

    Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Science Publications Office. iii, 49 pp.

    (with Mark D. MacKenzie and Richard T. Busing). Natural disturbance and gap phase dynamics in

    southern Appalachian spruce-fir forests. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 15: 233-[240].

    (with M.D. MacKenzie and Richard T. Busing). A critique on overstory/understory comparisons

    based on transition probability analysis of an old growth spruce-fir stand in the Appalachians.

    Vegetatio 64: 37-45.

    (with S.T.A. Pickett). Chapter 1. Natural disturbance and patch dynamics: an introduction, pp. 3-

    13. In S.T.A. Pickett and P.S. White (editors), The ecology of natural disturbance and Patch

    Dynamics. New York: Academic Press. 496 pp.

  • (with S.T.A. Pickett). Chapter 21. Patch dynamics: a synthesis, pp. 371-384. In S.T.A. Pickett and

    P.S. White (editors), The ecology of natural disturbance and patch dynamics. New York: Academic

    Press. 496 pp.

    Use of renewable resources--workshop summary, pp. 131-136. In John D. Peine (editor),

    Proceedings of the Conference on the Management of Biosphere Reserves, held at the Sheraton

    Gatlinburg Hotel, Gatlinburg, Tennessee, November 27-29, 1984. Conference Host: Great Smoky

    Mountains National Park Biosphere Reserve. Cosponsors: UNESCO MAB Secretariat; Canadian

    National Committee for Man and the Biosphere; United States National Committee for Man and

    the Biosphere; National Parks and Conservation Association; U.S. Department of the Interior,

    National Park Service; U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service; The Southern Appalachian

    Research and Resource Management Cooperative. Gatlinburg, TN: Uplands Field Research

    Laboratory, Great Smoky Mountains National Park Biosphere Reserve. 207 pp.

    (with S.R. Edwards and L.D. Martin). Natural history specimens: labeling and

    cataloging. In National Park Service museum handbook, part II, museum records. Washington,

    D.C.: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service. 198 pp.

    (with N.S. Nicholas). The effect of balsam woolly aphid infestation on fuel levels in spruce-fir

    forests of Great Smoky Mountains National Park. National Park Service, Southeast Region,

    Research/Resources Management Report SER-74. Atlanta, GA: United States Department of the

    Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Regional Office, Natural Science and Research Division.

    iii, 24 pp.

    (with John D. Peine and Charlotte Pyle). Environmental monitoring and baseline data management

    strategies and the focus of future research in Great Smoky Mountains National Park. National Park

    Service - Southeast Region, Research/Resources Management Report SER-76. Atlanta, GA: United

    States Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Regional Office, Natural

    Science and Research Division. iii, 114 pp.

    Field trip to Great Smoky Mountains National Park, North Carolina and Tennessee, September 27-

    29, 1985. Sponsored by: Southeast Chapter of the Ecological Society of America, Great Smoky

    Mountains National Park, Tremont Environmental Education Center. [s.l. : s.n.]. 27 pp.

    Volume 5

    1986

    [Abstract]. (with D. Berg, M.E. Harmon, and N.S. Nicholas). Fire history and management in Great

    Smoky Mountains National Park, an update, p. 123. In Conference on Science in the National

    Parks: the fourth triennial conference on research in the national parks and equivalent reserves, July

    13-18, 1986. Fort Collins, CO: George Wright Society and National Park Service. 274 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with J.D. Peine, D.A. Silsbee, and C. Eagar). The air quality program at Great Smoky

    Mountains National Park, p. 161. In Conference on Science in the National Parks: the fourth

    triennial conference on research in the national parks and equivalent reserves, July 13-18, 1986.

    Fort Collins, CO: George Wright Society and National Park Service. 274 pp.

  • [Abstract]. (with M. E. Harmon). Long-term research and monitoring the terrestrial ecosystems of

    US National Parks, p. 181. In Conference on Science in the National Parks: the fourth triennial

    conference on research in the national parks and equivalent reserves, July 13-18, 1986. Fort

    Collins, CO: George Wright Society and National Park Service. 274 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with W.G. Wathen, C. Eagar, C.E. Noseworthy, and J.D. Peine). The wild hog research

    program in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, p. 196. In Conference on Science in the

    National Parks: the fourth triennial conference on research in the national parks and equivalent

    reserves, July 13-18, 1986. Fort Collins, CO: George Wright Society and National Park Service.

    274 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with V. H. Dale and R. H. Gardner). Understanding landscape pattern in the Great

    Smoky Mountains: interaction of scale-dependent ecosystem processes, p. 126. In Program of the

    IV International Congress of Ecology, 71st Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America,

    5th Meeting of the International Society of Ecological Modeling, State University of New York,

    Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York, August 10-16, 1986. [s.l. : s.n.]. 377 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with N. S. Nicholas, S. M. Zedaker, and C. C. Eagar). Stand and site characteristics of

    southern Appalachian spruce-fir ecosystems, p. 255. In Program of the IV International Congress of

    Ecology, 71st Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America, 5th Meeting of the

    International Society of Ecological Modeling, State University of New York, Syracuse University,

    Syracuse, New York, August 10-16, 1986. [s.l. : s.n.]. 377 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with N. S. Nicholas, S. M. Zedaker, and C. C. Eagar). Forest classification of southern

    Appalachian spruce-fir ecosystems. Virginia Journal of Science 37(2): 47.

    [Abstract]. Pattern and process in natural ecosystems, p. 472. Annales de l'ACFAS 54: 472.

    [Abstract]. (with N. S. Nicholas, S. M. Zedaker, and C. Eagar). Southern Appalachian research-

    resource management cooperative: spruce-fir assessment, p. 18. In Harvey Olem (editor),

    Proceedings: Third Annual Acid Rain Conference for the Southern Appalachians, October 27-29,

    1986, Glenstone Lodge, Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Chattanooga, TN: Tennessee Valley Authority. 87

    pp.

    [Abstract]. (with N.S. Nicholas, S. M. Zedaker, and C. Eagar) Relationships between site and stand

    characteristics of southern Appalachian spruce-fir, p.20. In Abstracts of the Twelfth Annual

    Scientific Research Meeting, The Uplands Areas of the Southeast Region, National Park Service,

    May 22-23, 1986, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Atlanta, GA:

    U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Science Publications Office. iv, 32 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with Mark MacKenzie and John Rehder). Remote sensing of vegetation patterns in

    Great Smoky Mountains National Park, p. 22. In Abstracts of the Twelfth Annual Scientific

    Research Meeting, The Uplands Areas of the Southeast Region, National Park Service, May 22-23,

    1986, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Atlanta, GA: U.S.

    Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Science Publications Office. iv, 32 pp.

  • [Abstract]. (with R. H. Gardner and V. H. Dale). Determinants of landscape pattern in a

    heterogeneous environment, p. 24. In Abstracts of the Twelfth Annual Scientific Research Meeting,

    The Uplands Areas of the Southeast Region, National Park Service, May 22-23, 1986, Great

    Smoky Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of the

    Interior, National Park Service, Science Publications Office. iv, 32 pp.

    (with Ronald I. Miller). Considerations for preserve design based on the distribution of rare plants

    in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, USA. Environmental Management 10: 119-124.

    Many and large, large and small: nature reserves debate goes on. Park Science 6 (3): 13-15.

    (with M.D. MacKenzie). Chapter 6. Remote sensing and landscape pattern in Great Smoky

    Mountains National Park Biosphere Reserve, North Carolina and Tennessee, pp. 52-70. In M.I.

    Dyer and D.A. Crossley, Jr. (editors), Coupling of ecological studies with remote sensing:

    potentials at four biosphere reserves in the United States. [Department of State Publication 9504].

    Washington, D.C.: U.S. Man and the Biosphere Program, Department of State. 143 pp.

    (with John A. Churchill). Melanthium latifolium in Tennessee. Castanea 51: 68-69.

    1987

    [Abstract]. (with Christpher Eagar, Paul C. Durr, Shepard M. Zedaker, and Niki S. Nicholas). The

    condition of southern Appalachian spruce-fir forests, p. 15. In Abstracts of the Thirteenth Annual

    Scientific Research Meeting, The Uplands Areas of the Southeast Region, National Park Service,

    May 21-22, 1987, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Atlanta, GA:

    U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Science Publications Office. iv, 38 pp.

    Natural disturbance, patch dynamics, and landscape pattern in natural areas. Natural Areas Journal

    7: 14-22.

    (with Ragan M. Callaway and Edward E.C. Clebsch). A multivariate analysis of forest

    communities in the western Great Smoky Mountains National Park. American Midland Naturalist

    118: 107-120.

    (with Ronald I. Miller and Susan P. Bratton). A regional strategy for reserve design and placement

    based on an analysis of rare and endangered species' distribution patterns. Biological Conservation

    39: 255-268.

    Research objectives in US National Park Service Biosphere Reserves, with special reference to

    Great Smoky Mountains National Park, pp. 153-163. In Yang Hanxi and others (editors), The

    temperate forest ecosystem: ITE symposium no. 20: Proceedings of International Symposium on

    Temperate Forest Ecosystem Management and Environmental Protection, Changbai Mountain

    Research Station, Academia Sinica, Antu, Jilin Province, People's Republic of China, 5-11 July

    1986. Cumbria, U.K: Institute of Terrestrial Ecology. 189 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with T.R. Wentworth and others). Compilation and interpretation of the vegetation data

    base and disturbance history of southern Appalachian spruce-fir, p. 13. In Abstracts, National Acid

  • Precipitation Assessment Program, Terrestrial Effects Task Group (V), Atlanta, Georgia, March 8-

    13, 1987. Atlanta, GA: National Acid Precipitation Assessment Program.

    [Abstract]. (with S.M. Zedaker and others). Site and stand characteristics associated with potential

    decline and regeneration success of spruce-fir stands in the southern Appalachians, p.

    3. In Abstracts, National Acid Precipitation Assessment Program, Terrestrial Effects Task Group

    (V), Atlanta, Georgia, March 8-13, 1987. Atlanta, GA: National Acid Precipitation Assessment

    Program.

    [Abstract]. (with Virginia H. Dale and Robert H. Gardner). Predicting spatial patterns of vegetation

    in a heterogeneous landscape. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 68(3): 288-289.

    [Abstract]. Gap dynamics of high elevation forests of the southern Appalachian Mountains.

    Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 68(3): 445-446.

    Terrestrial plant ecology in Great Smoky Mountains National Park Biosphere Reserve: a fifteen-

    year review and a program for future research. National Park Service - Southeast Region,

    Research/Resources Management Report SER-84. Atlanta, GA: United States Department of the

    Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Regional Office, Natural Science and Research Division.

    v, 70 pp. + appendices.

    1988

    (with Renee Lee Ann Franklin and others.). PLOTSAM: a simulation of systematic and random

    sampling. Environmental Sciences Division Publication No. 3025. Prepared for the Carbon Dioxide

    Research Division, Office of Energy Research (Activity No. HA 02 05 00 0). Prepared by the Oak

    Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37831 operated by Martin Marietta Energy

    Systems, Inc. for the U.S. Department of Energy under contract DE-AC05-84OR21400. Oak Ridge

    National Lab Technical Report TM-10670. Springfield, VA: National Technical Information

    Service, U.S. Department of Commerce. xii, 60 pp.

    Prickle distribution in Aralia spinosa (Araliaceae). American Journal of Botany 75: 282-285.

    (with Ronald I. Miller). Topographic models of vascular plant richness in the southern Appalachian

    high peaks. Journal of Ecology 76: 192-199.

    (with T.R. Wentworth, C. Pyle and M.P. Schafale). Compilation and interpretation of the

    vegetation data base and disturbance history of southern Appalachian spruce-fir, pp. 145-

    149. In [G. Hertel, technical coordinator], Proceedings of the US/FRG Research Symposium:

    Effects of Atmospheric Pollutants on the Spruce-fir Forests of the Eastern United States and the

    Federal Republic of Germany, October 19-23, 1987, Burlington, Vermont. Sponsored by USDA

    Forest Service, USDA Office of International Cooperation and Development, U.S. Environmental

    Protection Agency, University of Vermont, Vermont Division of Forestry, and Coal Producers.

    United States Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northeastern Forest Experiment Station,

    General Technical Report NE-120. Broomall, PA: Northeastern Forest Experiment Station. 543 pp.

  • (with Shepard M. Zedaker, N.S. Nicholas, Chris Eagar and Thomas E. Burk). Stand characteristics

    associated with potential decline of spruce-fir forests in the southern Appalachians, pp. 123-

    131. In [G. Hertel, technical coordinator], Proceedings of the US/FRG Research Symposium:

    Effects of atmospheric pollutants on the spruce-fir forests of the eastern United States and the

    Federal Republic of Germany, October 19-23, 1987, Burlington, Vermont. Sponsored by USDA

    Forest Service, USDA Office of International Cooperation and Development, U.S. Environmental

    Protection Agency, University of Vermont, Vermont Division of Forestry, and Coal Producers.

    United States Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northeastern Forest Experiment Station,

    General Technical Report NE-120. Broomall, PA: Northeastern Forest Experiment Station. 543 pp.

    Our eastern highlands. Nature Conservancy Magazine 38(2): 4-11.

    1989

    (with Ragan M. Callaway and Edward E.C. Clebsch). Predicting wood production by canopy trees

    in forest communities in the western Great Smoky Mountains. Forest Science 35: 338-348.

    Leading the way for diversity: environmental changes, conservation needs enhance role of North

    Carolina Botanical Garden. Carolina Alumni Review 78 (2): [29]-35.

    Botanical basics: the form and function of botanical gardens. Landscape Architecture. 79(1): 68-74.

    1990

    [Abstract]. (with Thomas Wentworth and others). Barrier island forests of North Carolina. ASB

    Bulletin 37(2): 102.

    [Abstract]. Ecological processes influencing natural diversity. ASB Bulletin, 37(4), 19-20.

    (with Charles D. Canham and others). Light regimes beneath closed canopies and tree-fall gaps in

    temperate and tropical forests. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 20: 620-631.

    (with Grant Jones). The designer and the administrator: Peter White and Grant Jones. Public

    Garden 5(1): 8-9.

    High-forest heritage of the southern mountains. Garden 14(1): 12-15, 32.

    Review of Gene E. Likens (editor). 1989. The necessity of long-term study in ecology. BioScience

    40: 55-57.

    1991

    [Abstract]. (with Richard T. Busing). Old-growth forest plots for long-term vegetation monitoring

    in the Roaring Fork watershed, p. 6. In Abstracts of the Seventeenth Annual Scientific Research

    Meeting, The Uplands Areas of the Southeast Region National Park Service, Great Smoky

    Mountains National Park, May 16-17, 1991. Gatlinburg, TN: U.S. Department of the Interior,

    National Park Service, Uplands Field Research Laboratory. iii, 33 pp.

  • (with C.V. Cogbill). The latitude-elevation relationship for spruce-fir forest and treeline along the

    Appalachian Mountain chain. Vegetatio 94: 153-175.

    Plants of the New World: forests and grasses of the East; strategies for survival; a changed

    landscape; plants of the Great Smoky Mountains, pp. 52-59. In D. Moore (editor), Plant Life. New

    York: Oxford University Press. 256 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with R. A. Reed, M. W. Palmer, and R. K. Peet). Change in correlations between site

    variables and species composition with change in scale of observation in a piedmont hardwood

    forest. ASB Bulletin 38(2): 103.

    [Abstract] (with R. T. Busing and E. E. C. Clebsch). Biomass, production and nutrient content of

    southern Appalachian cove forests. ASB Bulletin 38(2): 117.

    (with Richard T. Busing and Julia O. Larke). Conservation project: the William Lanier Hunt

    Arboretum and Gray Bluff Garden. Chapel Hill: North Carolina Botanical Garden, University of

    North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 450 pp.

    1992

    (with Jeffrey C. Nekola). [Chapter] 2. Biological diversity in an ecological context, pp. 10-

    27. In Jerry R. Barker and David T. Tingey (editors), Air pollution effects on biodiversity. New

    York: Van Nostrand Reinhold. xii, 322 pp.

    (with Charles V. Cogbill). [Chapter] 1. Spruce-fir forests of eastern North America, pp. [3]-

    39. In Christopher Eagar and Mary Beth Adams (editors), Ecology and decline of red spruce in the

    eastern United States. Ecological Studies, v. 96. New York: Springer-Verlag. xii, 417 pp.

    (with A.H. Johnson and others). [Chapter] 10. Synthesis and conclusions from epidemiological and

    mechanistic studies of red spruce decline, pp. [385]-411. In Christopher Eagar and Mary Beth

    Adams (editors), Ecology and decline of red spruce in the eastern United States. Ecological

    Studies, v. 96. New York: Springer-Verlag. xii, 417 pp.

    Review of G.M. Woodwell (editor). 1990. The Earth in transition: patterns and processes of biotic

    impoverishment. American Scientist. 80: 396.

    (with T.R. Wentworth and others). A preliminary classification of North Carolina barrier island

    forests, pp. 31-46. In Charles Andrew Cole and Kent Turner (editors), Barrier Island ecology of the

    Mid-Atlantic coast: a symposium. Technical Report NPS/SERCAHA/NRTR-93/04. Atlanta, GA:

    National Park Service, Southeast Regional Office, Science and Natural Resources Division. vi, 208

    pp.

    (with Richard T. Busing and Julia O. Larke). Conservation project: the Mason Farm Biological

    Reserve, final report. Chapel Hill: North Carolina Botanical Garden, University of North Carolina

    at Chapel Hill. 400 pp.

  • Volume 6

    1993

    [Abstract]. (with J. Nekola, and S. Wiser). Scale, biological diversity, and the distance decay of

    similarity, p. 107. In Pattern and process in landscape ecology: Eighth Annual U.S. Landscape

    Ecology Symposium, 24-27 March 1993. Oak Ridge, TN: Oak Ridge National Laboratory. 110 pp.

    [Abstract]. Great Smoky Mountains National Park Field Trip, Saturday, March 27, 1993, 8:30 to

    6:00 pm. In Pattern and process in landscape ecology: Eighth Annual U.S. Landscape Ecology

    Symposium, 24-27 March 1993. Oak Ridge, TN: Oak Ridge National Laboratory. 110 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with R.K.Peet, T.R. Wentworth, M.P. Schafale, A.S.Weakley). North Carolina

    Vegetation Survey: A university-agency collaboration. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of

    America 74(supplement): 389.

    [Abstract]. Dynamics of southern Appalachian spruce-fir forests, USA, p. 24. In International

    workshop: forest dynamics and its mechanisms, September 7-9, 1993, Program and abstracts.

    Tokyo: Agriculture, Forest and Fisheries, Research Council Secretariat, Ministry of Agriculture,

    Forestry and Fisheries.

    Review of Paul G. Risser (editor). 1991. Long-term ecological research: an international

    perspective. Ecology 74: 636-637.

    (with R.A. Reed and others). Scale dependence of vegetation-environment correlations: a case

    study of a North Carolina piedmont woodland. Journal of Vegetation Science 4: 329-340.

    (with R.T. Busing). Effects of area on old-growth forest attributes: implications for the equilibrium

    landscape concept. Landscape Ecology 8: 119-126.

    (with R.T. Busing and E.E.C. Clebsch). Biomass and production of southern Appalachian cove

    forests reexamined. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 23: 760-765.

    (with R.T. Busing and M.D. MacKenzie). Gradient analysis of old spruce-fir forests of the Great

    Smoky Mountains circa 1935. Canadian Journal of Botany 71: 951-958.

    (with Carol Ann McCormick). Conservation project: the Nature Trail Area, Coker Pinetum, and

    Stillhouse Bottom Nature Preserve: final report. Chapel Hill: North Carolina Botanical Garden,

    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 450 pp.

    (with Edward Buckner and others). High elevation forests: spruce-fir forests, northern hardwood

    forests, and associated communities, pp. 305-337. In William H. Martin and others (editors),

    Biodiversity of the southeastern United States: upland terrestrial communities. New York: John

    Wiley and Sons. xv, 373 pp.

    (with Richard T. Busing). LTERM: long-term monitoring and research in Great Smoky Mountains

    National Park. Technical Report NPS/SERGRSM/NRTR-93/10. Vegetation monitoring and an

  • assessment of past studies. A report in partial fulfillment of Amendment No. 1 to Subagreement

    No. 8 Cooperative Agreement CA-5000-3-8025. [Atlanta, GA]: United States Department of the

    Interior, National Park Service, Southeast Regional Office. 31, [25] pp. + 4 appendices.

    Introduction, pp. xiii-xvii. In John K. Terres, From Laurel Hill to Siler's Bog: the walking

    adventures of a naturalist. With an afterword by the author, a new introduction by Peter S. White,

    and illustrations by Charles L. Ripper. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. xxiii, 232

    pp.

    Review of Stuart L. Pimm. 1991. The balance of nature? Ecological issues in the conservation of

    species and communities; Peggy L. Fiedler and Subodh K. Jain (editors). 1992. Conservation

    biology: the theory and practice of nature conservation, preservation and management. American

    Scientist 81: 488-489.

    1994

    (with Joy Bannerman, Jeffrey Nekola, Sue Glenn, and Patricia Mehlhop). National Park Service

    Biological Inventory Database development: report on the working group meeting and

    recommendations. [s.l., s.n.]. 41 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with Kathleen Baker-Brosh and Robert K. Peet). Selection for heterozygosity during

    stand development in Pinus taeda. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 75(2): 8.

    [Abstract]. (with C.V. Cogbill). Eastern montane spruce-fir forests: history, composition, and

    structure. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America. 75(2): 39-40.

    [Abstract]. (with James H. Graves and Robert K. Peet). Resource availability and the outcome of

    competition between woody and herbaceous plants of the forest floor. Bulletin of the Ecological

    Society of America 75(2): 80.

    [Abstract]. (with Robert D. Sutter). Managing biodiversity in historic, human-created habitats: case

    history of the Southern Appalachian grassy balds. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America

    75(2): 224.

    [Abstract]. Will the real species-area relation please stand up: revisiting scale dependence and the

    species-area relation in conservation biology and the southern Appalachians. Bulletin of the

    Ecological Society of America 75(2): 247.

    [Abstract]. (with Hong Qian). Diversity patterns at the community level. American Journal of

    Botany 81(6, supplement): 138.

    [Abstract]. (with Robert K. Peet). The landscape of the Great Smoky Mountains reconsidered:

    contributions to plant ecology and unique old growth forests. Field trip 23, August 12-August 14,

    1994. Field Excursion co-sponsored by the International Association for Vegetation Science and

    the Ecological Society of America in conjunction with the Annual Meeting of AIBS, Knoxville,

    Tennessee. Peter S. White, Department of Biology, Campus Box 3280, University of North

    Carolina at Chapel Hill. [s.l. : s.n.]

  • (with Matthew Barnett-Lawrence and Hong Qian). Conservation project: The Botanical Garden

    Foundation Nature Preserves, final report. Chapel Hill: North Carolina Botanical Garden,

    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

    (with Michael W. Palmer). On the existence of ecological communities. Journal of Vegetation

    Science 5: 279-282.

    (with Donald L. DeAngelis). [Chapter] 2. Ecosystems as products of spatially and temporally

    varying driving forces, ecological processes, and landscapes: a theoretical perspective, pp. 9-

    27. In Steven M. Davis and John C. Ogden (editors), Everglades: the ecosystem and its restoration.

    Delray Beach, FL: St. Lucie Press. xv, 826 pp.

    [Chapter] 18. Synthesis: vegetation pattern and process in the Everglades ecosystem, pp. 445-

    458. In Steven M. Davis and John C. Ogden (editors), Everglades: the ecosystem and its

    restoration. Delray Beach, FL: St. Lucie Press. xv, 826 pp.

    (with Michael W. Palmer). Scale dependence and the species-area relationship. American

    Naturalist 144: 717-740.

    1995

    [Abstract]. Spatial dependence, scale dependence, and the integration of vegetation monitoring with

    detection of change in species richness, p. 54. In EMAP Symposium: Monitoring, assessment and

    science policy: March 7-9, 1995. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina.

    (with James H. Graves and Robert K. Peet). The tradeoff in relative abundance of herbs and woody

    plants in temperate deciduous forests. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 76 (3): 334.

    Conserving biodiversity: lessons from the Smokies. Forum for Applied Research and Public Policy.

    1995(Summer): 116-120.

    1996

    Review of Michael L. Rosensweig. 1995. Species diversity in space and time. American Scientist

    84: 499-500.

    (with Tom Condon and others). Wildflowers of the Smokies. Gatlinburg, TN: Great Smoky

    Mountains Natural History Association. 206 pp.

    [Chapter] 3. Spatial and biological scales in reintroduction, pp. 49-86. In Donald A. Falk,

    Constance I. Millar, and Margaret Olwell (editors), Restoring diversity: strategies for reintroduction

    of endangered plants. Washington, DC: Island Press, xxii, 505 pp.

    (with Susan K. Wiser and Robert K. Peet). High-elevation rock outcrop vegetation of the southern

    Appalachian Mountains. Journal of Vegetation Science 7: 703-722.

  • [Information Sheets]. Woody plants of the Southeast and native trees of North Carolina Botanical

    Garden, for the visit of the International Dendrological Society, May 11, 1996.

    (with Eddy van der Maarel and Ladislav Mucina). The Journal of Vegetation Science in 1996.

    Journal of Vegetation Science 7:1-2.

    (with Ricky D. White). Chapter 13. Old-growth oak and oak-hickory forests, pp. 178-198. In Mary

    Byrd Davis (editor), Eastern old-growth forests: prospects for rediscovery and recovery.

    Washington, DC: Island Press. xvi, 383 pp.

    In search of the conservation garden. Public Garden 11(2): 11-13, 40.

    Wild ideas: nature's predictability and nature's surprises. Chinquapin 4(2): 14-16.

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    1997

    [Abstract]. (with R. G. Westbrooks). Exotic pest plants in the United States: an ecological

    explosion in slow motion, [abstract] 350. Program: Symposium on Subtropical Florida: a major

    beachhead for exotic plants in the United States, Weed Science Society of America, Orlando,

    Florida. [s.l. : s.n.]. x, 198 pp.

    (with Eddy van der Maarel and Ladislav Mucina). The Journal of Vegetation Science in 1997.

    Journal of Vegetation Science 8: 1-2.

    [Abstract]. (with Mark D. MacKenzie and Jonathan Harrod). The vegetation of Great Smoky

    Mountains National Park: sources of landscape variation as seen in the Miller data set (1935-1937).

    ASB Bulletin. 44: 103.

    [Abstract]. (with Sarah C. Rollins). Calcareous glade communities in the central basin of

    Tennessee. ASB Bulletin 44: 129.

    Biodiversity and the exotic species threat, pp. 1-7. In Kerry O. Britton (editor), Exotic Pests of

    Eastern Forests: Conference Proceedings. Nashville, TN: Tennessee Exotic Pest Plant Council,

    USDA Forest Service. 198 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with Stephanie P. Wilds and Donald A. Stratton). The distribution of heath balds in

    Great Smoky Mountains National Park, North Carolina and Tennessee, p. 121. In 12th Annual

    Symposium, the Pace and Pattern of Landscape Change, March 16-19, 1997, Washington Duke Inn

    and Golf Club and Nicholas School of the Environment, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina.

    United States Regional Association, International Association for Landscape Ecology. [s.l. : s.n.]

    [Abstract]. Biodiversity and exotics, p. 6. In Exotic pests of eastern forests, conference, April 8-10,

    1997, ClubHouse Inn, Nashville, Tennessee. Tennessee Exotic Pest Plant Council (TN-EPPC),

    Fairview, Tennessee, and USDA Forest Service, Washington, D.C. Nashville, TN: Tennessee

    Exotic Pest Plant Council. 22 pp.

  • [Abstract]. (with Jonathan Harrod). Disturbance regimes and the historical and future variation of

    ecosystems. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America. 78(4): 38.

    (with Joan L. Walker). Approximating nature's variation: selecting and using reference information

    in restoration ecology. Restoration Ecology 5(4): 338-349.

    (with Peggy L. Fiedler and Robert A. Leidy). [Chapter] 6. The paradigm shift in ecology and its

    implications for conservation, 83-92 pp. In S.T.A. Pickett [and others], (editors), The ecological

    basis of conservation: heterogeneity, ecosystems, and biodiversity. New York: Chapman and Hall.

    xxi, 466 pp.

    (with Jonathan Harrod). [Chapter] 5. Disturbance and diversity in a landscape context, pp. 128-

    159. In John A. Bissonette (editor), Wildlife and landscape ecology: effects of pattern and scale.

    New York: Springer. xiii, 410 pp.

    (with Mark A. Withers and others). Changing patterns in the number of species in North American

    floras. Accessed 24 May 2007, Land Use History of North America

    (LUHNA). http://biology.usgs.gov/luhna/chap4.html.

    (with Richard T. Busing). Species diversity and small-scale disturbance in an old-growth temperate

    forest: a consideration of gap partitioning concepts. Oikos 78: 562-568.

    (with Charles V. Cogbill and Susan K. Wiser). Predicting treeline elevation in the southern

    Appalachians. Castanea 62: 137-146.

    A bill falls due: botanical gardens and the exotic species problem. Public Garden 12(2): 22-25.

    [Abstract]. (with Richard T. Busing). Species diversity and small scale disturbance in an old-

    growth temperate forest. Proceedings of the Pacific Division, American Association for the

    Advancement of Science 16 (1): 43.

    [Abstract] (with R. T. Busing) Does forest gap partitioning promote tree species diversity? p.

    15. In Conference Abstracts, IAVS '97 Symposium, Ceské Budejovice, Czech Repuplic, 18-23

    August 1997. [s.l. : s.n.]. 144 pp.

    1998

    (with Eddy van der Maarel and Ladislav Mucina). The Journal of Vegetation Science in 1998.

    Journal of Vegetation Science 9: 1-2.

    (with Tohru Nakashizuka, Chadwick D. Oliver, and Akira Osawa, editors), Foreword. Journal of

    Sustainable Forestry 6: 1.

    Proclaiming the wonder of the plant kingdom around us: the importance of native plant collections.

    The Public Garden 13 (3): 31-32.

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  • (with Allison E. Schwarz). Where do we go from here? The challenges of risk assessment for

    invasive plants. Weed Technology 12: 744-751.

    (with Charlotte Jones-Roe). Living with the plant kingdom at the North Carolina Botanical Garden.

    Popular Government 64: 22-27.

    (with Peter B. Landres, Greg Aplet, and Anne Zimmerman). [chapter] Naturalness and natural

    variability: definitions, concepts and strategies for wilderness management, pp. 41-50. In David L.

    Kulhavy, and Michael H. Legg (editors). Wilderness and natural areas in eastern North America :

    research, management and planning. Nacogdoches, TX: Center for Applied Studies in Forestry,

    Stephen F. Austin State University. 321 pp.

    (with Susan K. Wiser and Robert K. Peet). Prediction of rare-plant occurrence: a Southern

    Appalachian example. Ecololgical Applications 8: 909-920.

    (with Robert K. Peet and Thomas R. Wentworth). A flexible, multipurpose method for recording

    vegetation composition and structure. Castanea 63: 262-274.

    (with Jonathan Harrod and Mark E. Harmon). Changes in xeric forests in western Great Smoky

    Mountains National Park, 1936-1995. Castanea 63: 346-360.

    (with Mark A. Withers and others). [chapter] Changing patterns in the number of species in North

    American floras, pp. 23-31. In Sisk, Thomas D., (editor). Perspectives on the land-use history of

    North America: a context for understanding our changing environment. Biological Science Report

    USGS/BRD/BSR—1998-0003, U.S. Geological Survey, Biological Resources Division. Reston,

    VA: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, Biological Resources Division. 104 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with S.T.A. Pickett). Lessons learned and complexities discovered: 20 years of

    research on temperate and boreal forest dynamics, p. 31. In Erik Sjögren, Eddy van der Maarel, and

    Galina Pokarzhevskaya (editors), Vegetation science in retrospect and perspective (abstracts),

    [41st International Association of Vegetation Science Symposium]. Studies in plant ecology 20.

    Uppsala: Opulus Press. 119 pp.

    (with Mark D. MacKenzie). Vegetation of Great Smoky Mountains National Park, 1935-1938.

    Castanea 63(3): 323-336.

    Southeast, pp. [255]-314. In M. J. Mac and others, Status and trends of the nation's biological

    resources. Reston, VA: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey. 964 pp.

    (with Eddy van der Maarel and Ladislav Mucina). Applied Vegetation Science, a new IAVS-

    journal. Applied Vegetation Science 1: 1-2.

    (with Eddy van der Maarel and Ladislav Mucina). The Journal of Vegetation Science after the

    Uppsala symposium. Journal of Vegetation Science 9: 461-462.

  • 1999

    North Carolina Botanical Garden issues the Chapel Hill Thesis. Southeast-EPPC News. 6(4): 1, 3-

    5.

    Viewpoint: exploring the wilderness in our backyards. Public Garden. 14(2): 35-36.

    (with Jeffrey C. Nekola). The distance decay of similarity in biogeography and ecology. Journal of

    Biogeography 26: 867-878.

    The Chapel Hill challenge for halting invasives. AABGA Newsletter No. 298.

    The Chapel Hill thesis. Botanic Gardens Conservation News 3(3): 13.

    (with Susan K. Wiser). High-elevation rock outcrops and barrens of the southern Appalachian

    Mountains, pp. 119-132. In Roger C. Anderson, James S. Fralish, and Jerry M. Baskin (editors),

    Savannas, barrens, and rock outcrop plant communities of North America. New York: Cambridge

    University Press. ix, 470 pp.

    (with Jonathan Harrod, William H. Romme, and Julio Betancourt). Disturbance and temporal

    dynamics, pp. 281-312. In Robert C. Sarzo, Nels C. Johnson, William T. Sexton, and A. J. Malk

    (editors), Ecological stewardship: a common reference for ecosystem management, Vol. 2. Oxford:

    Elsevier Science. xxviii, 741 pp.

    (with Hong Qian, Karel Klinka, and Christine Chourmouzis). Phytogeographical and community

    similarities of alpine tundras of Changbaishan Summit, China, and Indian Peaks, USA. Journal of

    Vegetation Science 10: 869-882.

    (with Robert D. Sutter). [Chapter] 18. Managing biodiversity in historic habitats: case history of the

    southern Appalachian grassy balds, pp. 375-395. In John D. Peine (editor), Ecosystem management

    for stability: principles and practices illustrated by a regional biosphere reserve cooperative. Boca

    Raton: Lewis Publishers. 500 pp.

    Volume 8

    2000

    Part V: Case for support, pp. 64-68. In Laurie Stewart Radford and Albert E. Radford. The

    Herbarium of the University of North Carolina: 1908-2000: History and perspective. Chapel Hill:

    The Herbarium (NCU), The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 104 pp.

    (with J.C. Harrod and M. E. Harmon). Post-fire succession and 20th century reduction in fire

    frequency on xeric southern Appalachian sites. Journal of Vegetation Science 11: 465-472.

    [Abstract]. (with Anke Jentsch). Impact of disturbance on landscape diversity. In Jesper Brandt,

    Barbel Tress, and Gunther Tress (editors), Multifunctional landscapes: interdisciplinary approaches

  • to landscape research and management. Roskilde, Denmark: Centre for Landscape Research. 264

    pp.

    (with J. Greenberg, E. Daniel, and J. Massey). The Plant Information Center (PIC): a web-based

    learning center for botanical study, pp. 217-226. In Gordon Davies and Charles Owen (editors),

    WebNet 2000, World Conference on the WWW and Internet: Proceedings of WebNet 2000—

    World Conference on the WWW and Internet, San Antonio, Texas, October 20- November 4, 2000.

    Norfolk, VA: Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education. 1008 pp.

    (with Evelyn Daniel, Jane Greenberg, and James Massey). The Plant Information Center. First

    Monday 5(6). Accessed 16 April 2004. http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue5_6/daniel/index.html.

    (with Stephanie Wilds, John R. Boetsch, Frank T. van Manen, and Joseph D. Clark). Modeling the

    distributions of species and communities in Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Computers and

    Electronics in Agriculture 27: 389-392.

    (with Jonathan Harrod, Joan L. Walker, and Anke Jentsch). Disturbance, scale, and boundary in

    wilderness management, pp. 27-42. In Wilderness Science in a Time of Change Conference,

    Missoula, Montana, May 23-27,1999, Volume 2: Wilderness within the Context of Larger Systems.

    USDA Forest Service Proceedings RMRS-P-15. Ogden, UT: United States Department of

    Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station. 5 volumes.

    (with Brenda L. Wichmann and Allä L. Wally). Conservation project: the Laurel Hill Nature

    Preserve and "Billy Hunt's Garden" with an update on the rare species and exotic species of the

    Hunt Arboretum, Gray Bluff Garden, and the Mason Farm Biological Reserve: final report. Chapel

    Hill: North Carolina Botanical Garden. 269 pp.

    (with L. Mucina and J. Leps, editors) Vegetation science in retrospect and perspective, Proceedings

    of the 41st IAVS symposium, 26 July-August 1998. Uppsala: Opulus Press. 119 pp.

    [Abstract] (with Michael Palmer, Peter Earls, and others). Quantitative tools for perfecting species

    lists, abstract 13. In Global to Local Perspectives of Vegetation Science: Search for New Paradigms

    for the 21st Century, Abstracts of the Plenary, Symposium Papers and Posters presented at the

    43rd Symposium of the International Association for Vegetation Science, Nagano, July 23-28, 2000.

    [s.l. : s.n.]. 163 pp.

    2001

    (with B. Collins and Donald W. Imm). Introduction to ecology and management of rare plants of

    the Southeast. Natural Areas Journal 21: 4-11.

    [Abstract]. Herbaria in botanical gardens. Southeastern Biology 48(2): 187.

    [Abstract]. (with Anke Jentsch). Disturbance, scale, and boundary issues: challenges for European

    and American conservation strategies. In Abstracts: the Association of American Geographers,

    97th Annual Meeting, February 27-March 3, 2001. Washington, D.C.: The Association of

    American Geographers. [accessed online, now unavailable].

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  • [Abstract]. (with Anke Jentsch). The search for generality in studies of disturbance and ecosystem

    dynamics. In Abstracts: the Association of American Geographers, 97th Annual Meeting, February

    27-March 3, 2001. Washington, D.C.: The Association of American Geographers. [accessed online,

    now unavailable].

    Developing a code of conduct: the North Carolina Botanical Garden experience, pp. 22-24; and

    Appendix B. Literature, developing a code of conduct: The North Carolina Botanical Garden

    experience, p. 30. In Kate Fay and K.C. Fay and associates (editors), Linking ecology and

    horticulture to prevent plant invasions. Proceedings of the workshop at the Missouri Botanical

    Garden, St. Louis, Missouri, 1-4 December 2001. [St. Louis]: Missouri Botanical Garden. 41 pp.

    [Abstract]. Extent and conservation biology, p. 36. In Keeping all the parts: preserving, restoring

    and sustaining complex ecosystems. The Ecological Society of America, 86th Annual Meeting,

    Monona Terrace, Madison, Wisconsin, August 5-10, 2001. ESA 86th Annual Meeting Abstracts.

    Washington, D.C.: The Ecological Society of America. 389 pp.

    (with Jan P. Baker, Jari Oksanen, and J. Bastow Wilson). A dozen years. Journal of Vegetation

    Science 12: 1-2.

    (with S. P. Wilds and D. A. Stratton). The distribution of heath balds in the Great Smoky

    Mountains, North Carolina and Tennessee. Journal of Vegetation Science 12: 453-466.

    (with Anke Jentsch). The search for generalities in studies of disturbance and ecosystem dynamics.

    Progress in Botany 62: [399]-450.

    (with Sarah Hayden Reichard). Horticulture as a pathway of invasive plant introductions in the

    United States. BioScience 51: 103-113.

    (with Stephanie P. Wilds). Dynamic terrestrial ecosystem patterns and processes, pp. 338-

    351. In Mark E. Jenson and Patrick S. Bourgeron (editors), A guidebook for integrated ecological

    assessments. New York: Springer-Verlag. 536 pp.

    2002

    [Abstract]. (with Anke Jentsch and Carl Beierkuhnlein). Disturbance for biodiversity? —Effects on

    competition, rhythm and inertia in ecological systems, p. 39. In Workshop Program and abstracts:

    4th International Workshop on Disturbance Dynamics in Boreal Forests, Disturbance Processes and

    Their Ecological Effects, August 9-14, 2002, Prince George, British Columbia, Canada. [s.l. : s.n.].

    [Abstract]. (with Anke Jentsch). The search for generality in studies of disturbance and ecosystem

    dynamics, p. 24. In Workshop program abstracts: 4th International Workshop on Disturbance

    Dynamics in Boreal Forests, Disturbance Processes and Their Ecological Effects, August 9-14,

    2002, Prince George, British Columbia, Canada. [s.l. : s.n.].

    (with Johnny Randall). Carrying out a self-assessment on the invasive plant issue. Public Garden

    17(4): 18-20.

  • (with Anke Jentsch and Carl Beierkuhnlein). Scale, the dynamic stability of forest ecosystems, and

    the persistence of biodiversity. Silva Fennica 36(1): 393-400.

    (with J.G. Canadell and W. L. Steffen). IGBP/GCTE terrestrial transects: dynamics of terrestrial

    ecosystems under environmental change—introduction. Journal of Vegetation Science 13(3): 298-

    300.

    [Abstract]. The search for generality in studies of disturbance and ecosystem dynamics, p.

    46. In Science at the Highest Level, Denver 2002, Annual meeting exposition abstracts with

    programs, October 27-30, 2002. Boulder, CO: Geological Society of America.

    The Ice Age and the Southeast's lesson on endemism. Chinquapin 10(3): 21. ["Reprinted by

    permission from North Carolina Botanical Garden Newsletter 29(4): 2." (2001).]

    Linking ecology and horticulture to prevent plant invasions: an introduction to the St. Louis

    Declaration and the Codes of Conduct. Wildland Weeds 6(1): 4-6.

    (with J.G. Canadell and W.L. Steffen). IGBP/GCTE terrestrial transects: dynamics of terrestrial

    ecosystems under environmental change—Introduction. Journal of Vegetation Science 13: 298-

    300.

    (with Jane Greenberg and others). Student comprehension of classification applications in a science

    education digital library, [560]-567. In Maristella Agosti and Constantino Thanos (editors),

    Research and advanced technology for digital libraries: 6th European conference, ECDL 2002,

    Rome, Italy, September 16-18, 2002, proceedings. New York: Springer. 664 pp.

    (with Michael A. Jenkins). Cornus florida L., mortality and understory composition changes in

    western Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society 129(3):

    194-206.

    (with Jeffrey C. Nekola.). Conservation, the two pillars of ecological explanation and the paradigm

    of distance. Natural Areas Journal 22: 305-310.

    (with Michael W. Palmer, Peter G. Earls, Bruce W. Hoagland, and Thomas Wohlgemuth).

    Quantitative tools for perfecting species lists. Environmetrics 13 (2): [121]-137.

    (with J.Bastow Wilson, Jan P. Bakker, and Jari Okansen). Editorial. Journal of Vegetation Science

    13: 1-2.

    [Abstract]. (with Michael W. Palmer, Peter G. Earls, Gary L. Wade, and Mark A. Withers). How

    many species? An analysis of North American floras. Ecological Society of America Annual

    Meeting Abstracts 87: 230. Accessed 15 December

    2005http://abstracts.co.allenpress.com/pweb/esa2002/document/?ID=4507.

    [Abstract] (with Anke Jentsch). Tackling the intermediate disturbance hypothesis, p.

    27. In 45th Symposium of the International Association for Vegetation Science, Porto Alegre,

    Brazil. [s.l. : s.n.]. 215 pp.

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  • 2003

    A note from the chair. ATBI Quarterly 4(4): 2.

    [Abstract]. (with Michael A. Jenkins and Shibu Jose). Influence of soil, topographic, and stand

    characteristics on Cornus florida distribution before and after anthracnose, p. 167. In Abstracts, the

    Ecological Society of America, 88th Annual Meeting held jointly with the International Society for

    Ecological Modeling—North American Chapter, Uplands to Lowlands: Coastal Processes in a

    Time of Global Change, August 3-8, 2003, Savannah, Georgia. [Washington, D.C.: Ecological

    Society of America.]. [accessedhttp://www.esajournals.org/esaonline].

    [Abstract]. (with Thomas R. Wentworth and others). Nested versus non-nested characterization of

    vegetation composition and species richness at multiple spatial scales, p. 355. In Abstracts, the

    Ecological Society of America, 88th Annual Meeting held jointly with the International Society for

    Ecological Modeling—North American Chapter, Uplands to Lowlands: Coastal Processes in a

    Time of Global Change, August 3-8, 2003, Savannah, Georgia. [Washington, D.C.: Ecological

    Society of America.]. [accessedhttp://www.esajournals.org/esaonline].

    [Abstract]. (with Meghan McKnight and Joan L. Walker). Endemism, hot spots of diversity, and

    ecosystems in the Southeast: the template on which climate change will act, p. 357. In Abstracts,

    the Ecological Society of America, 88th Annual Meeting held jointly with the International Society

    for Ecological Modeling—North American Chapter, Uplands to Lowlands: Coastal Processes in a

    Time of Global Change, August 3-8, 2003, Savannah, Georgia. [Washington, D.C.: Ecological

    Society of America]. [accessed http://www.esajournals.org/esaonline].

    [Abstract]. (with Dane M. Kuppinger and Michael A. Jenkins). Predicting the invasion of the exotic

    species Paulownia tomentosa following burning in pine and oak-pine forests of the mountains.

    Poster Session: Fire and Invasions. Invasive Plants in Natural and Managed Systems: Linking

    Science and Management, 7th International Conference on the Ecology and Management of Alien

    Plant Invasions, November 3-7, 2003, Wyndham Bonaventure Resort, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.

    [Lawrence, KS: Ecological Society of America; Washington, D.C.: Weed Science Society of

    America.]. Accessed 2 February 2004. http://www.esa.org.

    (with Sarah Hayden Reichard). Invasion biology: an emerging field of study. Annals of the

    Missouri Botanical Garden 90(1): 64-66.

    (with Anke Jentsch and Carl Beierkunhlein). Scale dependence in species richness and the

    intermediate disturbance hypothesis (IDH) in a multipatch frame. Verhandlungen der Gesellschaft

    für Ökologie 33: 236.

    [Abstract]. (with Kristin Taverna). Forests of continuity of the North Carolina Piedmont; species

    composition and distribution across the landscape. Southeastern Biology 50(2): 110.

    [Abstract]. (with Dane M. Kuppinger and Michael A. Jenkins). Predicting the invasion of the exotic

    species Paulownia tomentosa following burning in pine and oak-pine forests of the mountains.

    Southeastern Biology 50(2): 114.

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  • [Abstract]. (with D. B. Vandermast). Long-term vegetation change in late-successional high

    elevation beech forests of Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Southeastern Biology 50(2): 166.

    (with J. Bastow Wilson, Jan P. Bakker, and Sandra Díaz). Editorial. Journal of Vegetation Science

    14: 1-2.

    (with Bastow Wilson, Jan Bakker, and Sandra Díaz). Editorial 2003 (and Editor's Award for 2002).

    Applied Vegetation Science. 6: 1-2.

    2004

    A note from the chair: making a list. ATBI Quarterly 5(1): 2.

    Chairman's message: new scales, new worlds of life. ATBI Quarterly 5(2): 2.

    President's corner: exploring and sampling for biodiversity: another way we can lead! ATBI

    Quarterly 5(4): 2.

    (with Randy G. Westbrooks). [chapter]. An ecological explosion in slow motion, pp. 8-16. In Kerry

    O. Britton (editor). Biological Pollution: an Emerging Global Menace. Saint Paul, MN: The

    American Phytopathological Society. 113 pp.

    [Abstract]. (with David Vandermast and Michael Jenkins). Environmental correlates of long-term

    change in the high-elevation hardwood forests of Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

    Southeastern Biology 51(2): 169.

    [Abstract]. (with Dane Kuppinger and Michael Jenkins). Biotic and abiotic factors that affect the

    invasion success of Paulownia tomentosa following wildfires in pine and oak-pine forests of the

    southern Appalachian mountains. Southeastern Biology 51(2): 182.

    (with J. Bastow Wilson, Jan P. Bakker, and Sandra Díaz). Ecotones, herbivory, acceptance rate and

    electronic access. Journal of Vegetation Science 15(1): 1-2.

    [Abstract]. (with David B. Vandermast and Michael A. Jenkins). Long-term high-elevation

    deciduous forest dynamics of the Great Smoky Mountains, North Carolina, and Tennessee, p.

    520. In Lessons of Lewis and Clark: ecological exploration of inhabited landscapes, August 1-6,

    2004, Portland, Oregon, 89th Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America. Washington,

    D.C.: Ecological Society of America. 2 volumes.

    (with A. Jentsch). Disturbance, succession, and community assembly in terrestrial plant

    communities. pp. 342-366. In V. Temperton, R. Hobbs, T. Nuttle, and S. Halle (editors), Assembly

    Rules and Restoration Ecology. Washington, D.C.: Island Press. 439 pp.

    (with Robert E. Ricklefs and Hong Qian). The region effect on mesoscale plant species richness

    between eastern Asia and eastern North America. Ecography 27: 129-136.

  • (with J. Bastow Wilson, Jan P. Bakker, and Sandra Díaz). Restoration, succession, and climatic

    change. Applied Vegetation Science 7: 151-152.

    (with Tom Condon and others). Wildflowers of the Smokies: new expanded edition. Gatlinburg,

    TN: Great Smoky Mountains Association. 238 pp.

    2005

    Message from the chair. ATBI Quarterly 6(1): 1.

    The president's corner: biodiversity as a focus of conservation. ATBI Quarterly 6(2): 2.

    Chairman's message: Paul Hebert and the DNA barcodes of life. ATBI Quarterly 6(3): 2.

    Chairman's corner. ATBI Quarterly 6(4): 2.

    (with Hong Qian and Robert E. Ricklefs). Beta diversity of angiosperms in temperate floras of

    eastern Asia and eastern North America. Ecology Letters 8: 15-22.

    (with J. Bastow Wilson, Jan P. Bakker, Sandra Díaz, and Janet Franklin). Functional signatures,

    epizoochory, mapping from satellites and Editor's Award. Applied Vegetation Science 8: 1-2.

    (with Jason D. Fridley, Robert K. Peet, an