Aspen Bibliography

Aspen Bibliography

 
As the most widespread tree species in North America, Quaking Aspen systems provide an array of natural resource products and uses. Often among the most biologically diverse systems in a given landscape, the condition of aspen forests affects the status of numerous floral and faunal associates. Concern over the health, sustainability, aesthetics, and economic value of aspen has spawned a large body of literature in both basic and applied research. The Aspen Bibliography, sponsored by the Quinney Natural Resources Research Library and housed at Merrill-Cazier Library on the Utah State University campus, provides a comprehensive and searchable database of published and unpublished aspen references. Your feedback and participation in updating this database is important to us. If there are items you are aware of related to aspen ecology that are not found in this database, please contact the Aspen Bibliography administrator at quinneylibrary@gmail.com with the citation or mail a hardcopy of the document to Aspen Bibliography - Quinney Library, 5260 Old Main Hill, Logan, UT 84322. All information is provided as is. While every effort is being made to ensure that the information provided is accurate and up-to-date, errors may occur. Also, we provide many links to external web sites. Sometimes the links provided are moved or removed creating a broken link. If you think you have discovered a broken link or an error please notify us at quinneylibrary@aggiemail.usu.edu.

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1927

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Stem and Leaf Structure of Aspen at Different Altitudes in Colorado, Paul F. Shope; American Journal of Botany

1926

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An Ecological Study in Utah, P. Alic Evans; Botanical Gazette

A study of beaver in the Yancey region of Yellowstone National Park, E.R. Warren; Roosevelt Wildlife Annals

1925

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Aspen in the Central Rocky Mountain Region, Frederick S. Baker; United States Department of Agriculture

1924

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A preliminary account of the chromosomes and chromosome behaviour in the Salicaceae, K.B. Blackburn and J.W.H. Harrison; Annals of Botany

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Plant Successions of the Brush-Prairie In North-Western Minnesota, J. Ewing; The Journal of Ecology

1922

Beaver Habits, Beaver Control, and Possibilities in Beaver Farming, Vernon Bailey; U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C.

1921

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Two Races of Aspen, Frederick S. Baker; Journal of Forestry

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Snowshoe rabbits and conifers in the Wasatch Mountains of Utah, F.S. Baker, C.F. Korstian, and N.J. Fetherolf; Ecology

The Chemical Composition of Canadian Woods, L.P. Clermont and H. Schwartz; Pulp Paper Mag. Can.

Effect of a late spring frost upon forest vegetation in the Wasatch Mountains of Utah, Clarence F. Korstian; Ecology

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An Attack of Poplar Canker Following Fire Injury, Alfred H.W. Povah; Phytopathology

1920

Notes on some diseases of aspen, Carl Hartley and Glenn G. Hahn; Phytopathology

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Aspen Borer and How to Control It, George Hofer

The aspen borer and how to control it, George Hofer

Observations on Cytospora chrysosperma in the Northeast, E.E. Hubert; Phytopathology

1919

Effect of Grazing Upon Aspen Reproduction, Arthur W. Sampson

1918

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Aspen as a Temporary Forest Type, Frederick S. Baker; Journal of Forestry

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Aspen Reproduction in Relation to Management, Frederick S. Baker; Journal of Forestry

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An Undescribed Canker of Poplars and Willows Caused by Cytospora Chrysosperma, W.H. Long; Journal of Agricultural Research

1917

Aspen as a Permanent Forest Type, James M. Fetherolf; Journal of Forestry

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The Relation Between Evaporation and Plant Succession in a Given Area, Frank C. Gates; American Journal of Botany

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Foothills Vegetation in the Colorado Front Range, Arthur G. Vestal; Botanical Gazette

1916

The Stability of Aspen as a Type, Arthur W. Sampson; Proceedings of the Society of American Foresters

1914

The Role of Aspen in the Reforestation of Mountain Burns in Arizona and New Mexico, G.A. Pearson; Plant World

Effects of Varying Certain Cooking Conditions in Producing Soda Pulp from Aspen, Henry E. Surface

1913

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Phytogeographic Survey of North America, John W. Harshberger; American Geographical Society

1911

The aspens : their growth and management, William Grant Weigle and Earl Hazeltine Frothingham

1910

The Life History of Lodgepole Burn Forests, F.E. Clements; U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service. Washington, D.C.

How Fire Helps Forestry, G.L. Hoxie; Sunset

1909

The Distribution of Woody Plants in the Pike's Peak Region, E.C. Schneider; Colorado College Publications Science Series. Colorado Springs

Diseases of Deciduous Forest Trees, Hermann von Schrenk and Perley Spaulding; U.S. Department of Agriculture. Washington, D.C.

1905

Results of a Rocky Mountain Forest Fire Studied Fifty Years After its Occurrence, W.J. Gardner; Proceedings of the Society of American Foresters

1902

Forest Conditions of the Northern Sierra Nevada, California, J.B. Leiberg; Forestry 5

1900

Stanislaus and Lake Tahoe Forest Reserves, California, and adjacent territory, George B. Sudworth; Twenty-first annual report of the U.S.G.S., Part 5, Forest Resources

1891

Results of a Biological Reconnaissance of Southcentral Idaho, C. Hart Merriam; U.S. Department of Agriculture, North American Fauna. Washington, D.C.