Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station (Portland, Or.)
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The organization Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station (Portland, Or.) represents an institution, an association, or corporate body that is associated with resources found in Internet Archive - Open Library.
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Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station (Portland, Or.)
Resource Information
The organization Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station (Portland, Or.) represents an institution, an association, or corporate body that is associated with resources found in Internet Archive - Open Library.
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- Pacific Northwest Forest and Range Experiment Station (Portland, Or.)
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- PNW research note, 328
- U.S. Forest Service research note PNW, 105
- U.S. Forest Service research note., PNW-40
- U.S. Forest Service research note., PNW-41
- U.S. Forest Service research note., PNW-43
- U.S.D.A Forest Service research paper PNW, 258
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 107
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 108
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 109
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 110
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 111
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 112
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 113
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 116
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 135
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 136
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 138
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 139
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 140
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 141
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 142
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 143
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 144
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 145
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 146
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 147
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 148
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- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 150
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 151
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- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 158
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- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 176
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 177
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 178
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- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 181
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- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 198
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- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 201
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 202
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 203
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 204
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 205
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 206
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 207
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 208
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 209
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 210
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 211
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 212
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 213, etc
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 215
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 218
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 219
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- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 221
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- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 229
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 231
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- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 237
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- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 241
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- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 249
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 250
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 251
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- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 253
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 254
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 255
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 257
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 258
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 259
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 260
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 261
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 264
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 265
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 266
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 267
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 268
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 269
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 270
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 273
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 274
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 275
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 277
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 278
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 289
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note PNW, 327
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note., PNW-100
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note., PNW-101
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note., PNW-103
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note., PNW-104
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note., PNW-92
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note., PNW-97
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research note., PNW-98
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research paper PNW, 266
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research paper PNW, 270
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research paper PNW, 274
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research paper PNW, 284
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research paper PNW, 289
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service research paper PNW, no. 290
- U.S.D.A. Forest Service resource bulletin PNW, 276
- U.S.D.A. Forest research note PNW, 243
- U.S.D.A. Forest research note PNW, 256
- USDA Forest Service research note, PNW-214
- 3P sample log scaling
- A "battery saver" for event recorders
- A 3-year pattern of dispersed recreation and forest fires in Pacific Northwest forests
- A 31-day battery-operated recording weather station
- A 4-year record of Sitka spruce and western hemlock seed fall
- A case history of a mud and rock slide on an experimental watershed
- A case study of a Douglas-fir tussock moth outbreak and stand conditions 10 years later
- A checklist of the vascular plants in Abbott Creek Research Natural Area, Oregon
- A classification of forest environments in the South Umpqua basin
- A comparison of high-lead yarding production rates in windthrown and standing timber
- A comparison of two rodent repellents in broadcast seeding Douglas-fir
- A computer program for determining the load-carrying capability of the running skyline
- A digital temperature monitor for photorecording
- A field guide for stand basal area, average diameter, and tree spacing relationships
- A guide for comparing height growth of advance reproduction and planted seedlings
- A guide to the H. J. Andrews Experimental Forest
- A measure of wind-caused fuels
- A method for sampling western spruce budworm pupae
- A method for sampling yeasts and bacteria in sound wood
- A method of estimating log weights
- A method of forecasting returns from ponderosa pine dwarfmistletoe control
- A new and easier way to estimate the quality of inland Douglas-fir sawtimber
- A new method for reporting and interpreting textural composition of spawning gravel
- A ponderosa pine-grand fir spacing study in central Oregon : results after 10 years
- A portable vacuum for collecting arthropods from drop cloths
- A recirculating stream aquarium for ecological studies
- A stockability equation for forest land in Siskiyou County, California
- A successful direct seeding of sugar pine
- A synthetic sex pheromone for the large aspen tortrix in Alaska
- A technique for predicting logging residue volumes in the Douglas-fir region
- A test of commercial thinning on the Hemlock Experimental Forest
- A western larch-Engelmann spruce spacing study in eastern Oregon : results after 10 years
- Aboveground tree biomass on productive forest land in Alaska
- Adjustment of relative humidity and temperature for differences in elevation
- Air drying of softwood lumber, Fairbanks, Alaska
- Air temperature and wind profiles in an Alaskan lowland black spruce stand
- Albino seedlings of white spruce
- Ammonium thiocyanate does not increase herbicidal control of salmonberry
- An air pycnometer for forest and range soils
- An automatic photoelectric triggering mechanism for a data-recording camera
- An equation for [estimating the (value and / volume) of (western larch trees)]
- An evaluation of the slash (I) fuel model of the 1972 National Fire Danger Rating System
- An evaluation of two measures of competition for National Forest timber sales
- An exploratory study of cone maturity in noble fir
- An improved technique for freeze sampling streambed sediments
- An improved tri-tube cryogenic gravel sampler
- An inexpensive meteorological radiation shield for thermistors and thermocouples
- An instrument to measure stream channel gradient and profiles
- Applicability of four regional volume tables for estimating growth response to thinning in Douglas fir
- Arsenic in cattle hair after forests are precommercially thinned with organic arsenical herbicides
- Atrazine promotes ponderosa pine regeneration
- Average biomass of four Northwest shrubs by fuel size class and crown cover
- Avifauna associated with early growth vegetation on clearcuts in the Oregon Coast Ranges
- Big huckleberry abundance as related to environment and associated vegetation near Mount Adams, Washington
- Bioassay of acephate-treated foliage on three instars of the Douglas-fir tussock moth / J. Wayne Brewer, George P. Markin
- Biology and behavior of a larch bud moth, Zeiraphera sp., in Alaska
- Biomass estimators for thinned second-growth ponderosa pine trees
- Bluebunch wheatgrass (Agropyron spicatum), 1920-1964 : a bibliography
- Board-foot and cubic-foot volume tables for Western redcedar in Southeast Alaska
- Board-foot tree volume equations for electronic computers
- Botanical reconnaissance of Silver Lake Research Area, North Cascades National Park, Washington
- Brush control on forest lands with emphasis on promising methods for the Pacific northwest : (a review of selected references)
- Budbreak sprays for site preparation and release from six coastal brush species
- Bystander intervention and litter control : evaluation of an appeal-to-help program
- CLIMACS : a computer model of forest stand development for western Oregon and Washington
- Calculating moisture content of 1000-hour timelag fuels in western Washington and western Oregon
- Cassette tapes for interpretation
- Changes in streamflow following timber harvest in southwestern Oregon
- Changes in thermal regime after prescribed burning and select tree removal (Grass Camp, 1975)
- Characteristics of residues in a balloon logged area of old-growth Douglas-fir
- Characteristics of residues in a cable-logged area of old-growth Douglas-fir
- Characteristics of residues in a helicopter logged area of old-growth Douglas-fir
- Checklist of the vascular plants of Steamboat Mountain Research Natural Area
- Chemical characteristics of some forest and grassland soils of Northeastern Oregon, I. Results from reference profile sampling on the Starkey Experimental Forest and Range
- Chemical characteristics of some forest and grassland soils of Northeastern Oregon, II, Progress in defining variability in Tolo and Klicker soils
- Chemical composition and deer browsing of red alder foliage
- Chemical control of brush in ponderosa pine forests of central Oregon
- Christmas storm damage on the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest
- Classification, description, and dynamics of plant communities after fire in the taiga of interior Alaska
- Code-a-site : a system for inventory of dispersed recreational sites in roaded areas, back country, and wilderness
- Comparison of a degree-day computer and a recording thermograph in a forest environment
- Comparison of logging residue from lump sum and log scale timber sales
- Comparison of silvicultural methods at Coyote Creek watersheds in southwestern Oregon : a case history
- Competition for national forest timber in the Northern, Pacific Southwest, and Pacific Northwest regions
- Composition of root pressure exudate from conifers
- Compounds leached from western redcedar shingle tow found toxic to Douglas-fir seedlings
- Computer program for calculating veneer recovery volume and value
- Cone production by upper-slope conifers
- Considering departures from current timber harvesting policies : case studies of four communities in the Pacific Northwest
- Constructing aerial photo stand volume tables
- Construction guides for exposed wood decks
- Control of depth to permafrost and soil temperature by the forest floor in black spruce/feathermoss communities
- Controlled field test of stabilized pyrethrins against the western hemlock looper
- Converting brush and hardwoods to conifers on high sites in western Washington and Oregon : progress, policy, success and costs
- Correction of average yarding distance factor for circular settings
- Creating snags with explosives
- Cruise design for a 5-year period of the 50-year timer sales in Alaska
- Cubic-foot tree volume equations and tables for western juniper
- Day-to-day survival of late-instar western spruce budworm larvae and pupae
- Decay in tops killed by Douglas-fir tussock moth in the Blue Mountains
- Decay of grand fir in the Blue Mountains of Oregon and Washington
- Defect estimation for grand fir in the Blue Mountains of Oregon and Washington
- Defect estimation for white fir in the Rogue River National Forest
- Degree-day accumulation related to the phenology of Douglas-fir tussock moth and white fir during five seasons of monitoring in southern Oregon
- Detecting suboutbreak populations of the Douglas-fir tussock moth by sequential sampling of early larvae in the lower tree crown
- Determination of skyline load capability with a programmable pocket calculator
- Development of Sirococcus shoot blight following thinning in western hemlock regeneration
- Diagraming surface characteristics of true fir logs : Supplement to log diagraming guide for western softwoods
- Differential effects of the 1944-56 spruce budworm outbreak in eastern Oregon
- Digitizing topographic data for skyline design programs
- Direct seeding experiments on the 1951 Forks Burn
- Dispersal of lodgepole pine seed into clear-cut patches
- Dispersed recreation on three forest road systems in Washington and Oregon : first year data
- Does harvest in west slope Douglas-fir increase peak flow in small forest streams?
- Dominant Douglas-fir respond to fertilizing and thinning in southwest Oregon
- Dominant ponderosa pines do respond to thinning
- Douglas fir tussock moth egg hatch and larval development in relation to phenology of grand fir and Douglas-fir in northeastern Oregon
- Douglas' squirrels cut Pacific silver fir cones in the Washington Cascades
- Douglas-fir thinning values sensitive to price-diameter relationships
- Douglas-fir tussock moth egg hatch and larval development in relation to phenology of white fir in southern Orgeon
- Duff reduction caused by prescribed fire on areas logged to different management intensities
- Early wide spacing in red alder (Alnus rubra Bong.) : effects on stem form and stem growth
- Economic considerations in Douglas-fir stand establishment
- Economic evaluation and choice in old-growth Douglas-fir landscape management
- Economic evaluation of potential European pine shoot moth damage in the ponderosa pine region
- Economic guides for a method of precommercial thinning of ponderosa pine in the Northwest
- Economics and design of a radio-controlled skyline yarding system
- Economics of thinning stagnated ponderosa pine sapling stands in the pine-grass areas of central Washington
- Ectomycorrhizal inoculation of containerized western conifer seedlings
- Effect of Zectran on microbial activity in a forest soil
- Effect of date of cone collection and stratification period on germination and growth of Douglas-fir seeds and seedlings
- Effect of defoliation by the Douglas-fir tussock moth on moisture stress in grand fir and subsequent attack by the fir engraver beetle (Coleoptera: scolytidae)
- Effect of kind and number of measured tree heights on lodgepole pine site-quality estimates
- Effect of lauricidin and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid on growth of nine hymenomycetous fungi
- Effect of wetting mode on shear strength of two aggregated soils
- Effect of wildfire on soil wettability in the high Cascades of Oregon
- Effect on diameter estimates of rounding rules in scaling
- Effectiveness of three insecticides applied at two droplet sizes for control of the Douglas-fir tussock moth and western spruce budworm
- Effects of an aerial application of urea fertilizer on young spruce and western hemlock at Thomas Bay, Alaska
- Effects of ash leachates on growth and development of Armillaria mellea in culture
- Effects of defoliation by Douglas-fir tussock moth on timing and quantity of streamflow
- Effects of different sources of fertilizer nitrogen on growth and nutrition of western hemlock seedlings
- Effects of gravel morphology on fine sediment accumulation and survival of incubating salmon eggs
- Effects of herbicides on some important brush species in southwestern Oregon
- Effects of leader topping and branch pruning on efficiency of Douglas-fir cone harvesting with a tree shaker
- Effects of manganese and manganese-nitrogen applications on growth and nutrition of Douglas-fir seedlings
- Effects of nitrogen and phosphorus fertilizers on deer browsing and growth of young Douglas-fir
- Effects of semistarvation during late larval stages on survival and fecundity of the hemlock sawfly in the laboratory
- Effects of soil and foliar applications of nitrogen fertilizers on a 20-year-old Douglas-fir stand
- Effects of the Douglas-fir tussock moth nucleopolyhedrosis virus (Baculovirus) on three species of salmonid fish
- Effects on eastern larch beetle of its natural attractant and synthetic pheromones in Alaska
- Emergence and premating behavior patterns of the adult European pine shoot moth in western Washington
- Employment:wood consumption ratios for the forest products industry in subareas of Oregon and Washington, 1976
- Environment and forest regeneration in the Illinois Valley area of southwestern Oregon
- Environment, vegetation, and regeneration after timber harvest in the Applegate area of southwestern Oregon
- Environment, vegetation, and regeneration after timber harvest in the Hungry-Pickett area of southwest Oregon
- Enzyme nitrate reductase of some parasitic fungi
- Eradicating European pine shoot moth on ornamental pines with methyl bromide
- Estimate of dry veneer volume losses in Douglas-fir plywood manufacture
- Estimating D.B.H. from stump diameters on second-growth Douglas-fir
- Estimating Douglas-fir site quality from aerial photographs
- Estimating biomass of shrubs and forbs in central Washington Douglas-fir stands
- Estimating cubic volume of small diameter tree-length logs from ponderosa and lodgepole pine
- Estimating merchantable volumes of second growth Douglas-fir stands from total cubic volume and associated stand characteristics
- Estimating productivity on sites with a low stocking capacity
- Estimating the weight of crown segments for old-growth Douglas-fir and western hemlock
- Estimating tree bole and log weights from green densities measured with the Bergstrom xylodensimeter
- Estimating value and volume of ponderosa pine trees by equations
- Estimating volume of Douglas-fir butt logs
- Estimation of decay in old-growth western hemlock and Sitka spruce in southeast Alaska
- Estimation of needle populations on young, open-grown Douglas-fir by regression and life table analysis
- Estimators and characteristics of logging residue in Montana
- Evaluation of R-55 and Mestranol to protect douglas-fir seed from deer mice
- Evaluation of a passive flame-height sensor to estimate forest fire intensity
- Evaluation of a small diameter baffled culvert for passing juvenile salmonids
- Evaluation of blown down Alaska spruce and hemlock trees for pulp
- Evaluation of sticking agents mixed with Bacillus thuringiensis for control of Douglas-fir tussock moth
- Evaluation techniques for interpretation : study results from an exhibition on energy
- Field life of Orthene, Sevin-4-oil, and Dylox 1.5 bioassay with Douglas-fir tussock moth larvae
- Field survival and growth of Douglas-fir by age and size of nursery stock
- Field test of acephate against two Douglas-fir Christmas tree pests
- Field testing of Bacillus thuringiensis for control of western hemlock looper
- Field tests of Bacillus thuringiensis and aerial application strategies on western mountainous terrain
- Fifty-year development of Douglas-fir stands planted at various spacings
- Financial consequences of commercial thinning regimes in young-growth Douglas-fir
- Financial precommerical thinning guides for northwest ponderosa pine stands
- Fire hazard from precommercial thinning of ponderosa pine
- Fire in the northern environment : Proceedings
- Fire season climatic zones of mainland Alaska
- First-year performance of Douglas-fir and noble fir outplanted in large containers
- Flow rates and characteristics of Dimilin, Dylox 1.5, Orthene 75S, and Sevin 4-oil
- Foliage sprays for site preparation and release from six coastal brush species
- Foliar essential oils and deer browsing preference of Douglas-fir genotypes
- Foliar nitrogen content and tree growth after prescribed fire in ponderosa pine
- Forces in balloon logging
- Forest fuels, prescribed fire, and air quality
- Forest resources and forest industries of northeast Washington : administrative report prepared for the Area Redevelopment Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce
- Forest resources of the ponderosa pine region of Washington and Oregon
- Formation of ectomycorrhizae following inoculation of containerized Sitka spruce seedlings
- Fourwing saltbush establishment in the Keating Uniform Shrub Garden : first year results
- Frequency of dry east winds over northwest Oregon and southwest Washington
- Genetic variation in rootability of cuttings from one-year-old western hemlock seedlings
- Georgia's forest products industry : performance and contribution to the state's economy, 1970 to 1980
- Germination of red alder seed
- Grades for inland Douglas-fir saw logs in standing trees
- Grass seeding and soil erosion in a steep, logged area in northeastern Oregon
- Grass-legume mixtures for roadside soil stabilization
- Gross and net yield tables for lodgepole pine
- Gross static lifting capacity of logging balloons
- Gross yield and mortality tables for fully stocked stands of Douglas-fir
- Gross yields for even-aged stands of Douglas-fir and white or grand fir, east of the cascades in Oregon and Washington
- Growth after partial cutting of ponderosa pine on permanent sample plots in eastern Oregon
- Growth and development of red alder compared with conifers in 30-year old stands
- Growth and soil moisture in thinned lodgepole pine
- Growth and yield of well-stocked white spruce stands in Alaska
- Growth and yield of western larch : 15-year results of a levels-of-growing-stock study
- Growth of Douglas-fir, ponderosa pine, and western larch seedlings following seed treatment with 30 percent hydrogen peroxide
- Growth of frost-damaged Douglas-fir seedlings
- Growth of ponderosa pine poles thinned to different stocking levels in central Oregon
- Growth of suppressed grand fir and shasta red fir in central Oregon after release and thinning : 10-year results
- Growth of young even-aged western larch stands after thinning in eastern Oregon
- Growth response of suppressed true fir and mountain hemlock after release
- Growth-simulation model for lodgepole pine in central Oregon
- Guidelines for developing or supplementing natural photo series
- Guidelines for log grading Coast Douglas-fir
- Harvesting residue from thinnings for use as an energy source
- Height growth and site index curves for Douglas-fir on dry sites in the Willamette National Forest
- Height growth and site index curves for managed, even-aged stands of ponderosa pine in the Pacific Northwest
- Height growth and site index estimates for noble fir in high elevation forests of the Oregon-Washington Cascades
- Herbicide and conifer options for reforesting upper slopes in the Cascade Range
- Herbicides for control of western swordfern and western bracken
- Herbicides for grass and forb control in Douglas-fir plantations
- High-lead logging costs as related to log size and other variables
- How to identify brooms in Douglas-fir caused by dwarf mistletoe
- Hunters at regulated plant-and-shoot pheasant areas in western Washington
- Identification of parasites of the Douglas-fir tussock moth, based on adults, cocoons, and puparia
- Illustrated key to introduced and common native parasites of larch casebearer
- Impact of the Douglas-fir tussock moth on forest recreation in the Blue Mountains
- Importance of timber-based employment to the economic base of the Douglas-fir region of Oregon, Washington, and northern California
- Improved adapter for increment borer ratchet assembly
- Infestation characteristics of the balsam woolly aphid in the Pacific Northwest
- Influence of cambial contact length on graft survival and leader elongation in Douglas-fir
- Influence of endrin on soil microbial populations and their activity
- Influence of fertilizer nitrogen source on deer browsing and chemical composition of nursery-grown Douglas-fir
- Influence of red alder on chemical properties of a clay loam soil in western Washington
- Influence of slash burning on regeneration, other plant cover, and fire hazard in the Douglas-fir region : (a progress report)
- Inheritance of stockiness in ponderosa pine families
- Instability of forest land ownership in western Oregon and Washington, 1932-41
- Interactions between domestic and export markets for softwood lumber and plywood : tests of six hypotheses
- International board-foot volume tables for trees in the Susitna River Basin, Alaska
- Invertebrates of the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest, Western Cascades, Oregon, I, An annotated checklist of fleas
- Invertebrates of the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest, Western Cascades, Oregon, II, An annotated checklist of caddisflies (Trichoptera)
- Investigating dominance in Douglas-fir stands
- Ips pini attack density in ponderosa pine thinning slash as related to felling date in eastern Oregon
- Juvenile height growth of four upper-slope conifers in the Washington and northern Oregon Cascade range
- Key to adult bark beetles commonly associated with white spruce stands in Interior Alaska
- Laminated root rot damage in a young Douglas-fir stand
- Land ownership patterns in the Tanana River Basin, Alaska, 1984
- Levels-of-growing-stock study in thinned western larch pole stands in eastern Oregon
- Light thinning of Douglas-fir does not stimulate regeneration
- Literature on the Bitterlich method of forest cruising : a bibliography
- Litter fall in a young Douglas-fir stand as influenced by thinning
- Log prices in western Washington and northwest Oregon, 1963-68
- Logging costs for a trial of intensive residue removal
- Logging damage in thinned, young-growth true fir stands in California and recommendations for prevention
- Logging test of a single-hull balloon
- Long-term growth of eight legumes introduced at three forest locations in southwest Oregon
- Losses associated with Douglas-fir and true fir tops killed by western spruce budworm in eastern Washington
- Low-cost counter assembly for current-meter measurements
- Lumber grade recovery from Oregon coast type Douglas-fir
- Lumber grade yields from paper birch and balsam poplar logs in the Susitna River Valley, Alaska
- Lumber recovery from Douglas-fir thinnings at a bandmill and two chipping canters
- Lumber recovery from insect-killed lodgepole pine in the northern Rocky Mountains
- Lumber recovery from live and dead lodgepole pine in southwestern Wyoming
- Lumber recovery from old-growth coast Douglas-fir
- Lumber recovery from ponderosa in western Montana
- Lumber recovery from ponderosa pine in northern California
- Lumber recovery from ponderosa pine in the Black Hills, South Dakota
- Lumber recovery from second-growth Douglas-fir
- Lumber recovery from young-growth red and white fir in northern California
- Lumber yield and log values of Shasta red fir
- Lumber yield from Engelmann spruce in Arizona
- Lumber yield from western white pine in northern Idaho
- Lumber yields by the new timber cruising log grades for old-growth coast Douglas-fir
- Maintaining cultures of wood-rotting fungi
- Managing logging residue under the timber sale contract
- Manpower use in the wood-products industries of Oregon and Washington, 1950-1963
- Marking methods for improving aerial application of forest pesticides
- Mass soil movements in the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest
- Mechanics of running skylines
- Meeks Table Research Natural Area : reference sampling and habitat classification
- Mergers and economic concentration in the Douglas-fir lumber industry
- Method of estimating ground fuels under two inches in diameter in southwestern ponderosa pine stands
- Micro-organisms from the pith region of suppressed grand fir understory trees
- Midsummer foliage sprays on salmonberry and thimbleberry
- Moisture content of glulam timbers in use in the Pacific Northwest
- More natural regeneration by controlling seed-eating rodents / by William I. Stein
- Morphology of the internal reproductive organs in relation to the sex pheromone glands of the spear-marked black moth
- Mortality estimation in fully stocked stands of young-growth Douglas-fir
- Mount St. Helens ash and mud : chemical properties and effects on germination and establishment of trees and wildlife browse plants
- Mountain hemlock : a bibliography with abstracts
- Natural regeneration after shelterwood cutting in a grand fir-shasta red fir stand in central Oregon
- Natural regeneration of Douglas-fir and associated species using modified clear-cutting systems in the Oregon Cascades
- New timber cruising grades for coast douglas-fir
- Noble fir : a bibliography with abstracts
- Normal yield tables for red alder
- North Carolina's forest products industry : performance and contribution to the State's economy, 1970 to 1980
- Northwest range-plant symbols adapted to automatic data processing
- Nutrient cycling by throughfall and stemflow precipitation in three coastal Oregon forest types
- Occurrence and genotypic differences of chlorogenic acid in Douglas-fir foliage
- Occurrence and growth of four northwestern tree species over shallow water tables
- Occurrence of insect and disease pests on young-growth Sitka spruce and western hemlock in southeastern Alaska
- Occurrence of shrubs and herbaceous vegetation after clear cutting old-growth Douglas-fir in the Oregon Cascades
- Origin and development of vegetation after spraying and burning in a coastal Oregon clearcut
- Partial cutting of western hemlock and Sitka spruce in southeast Alaska
- Particle sizes in slash fire smoke
- Periodic variation in physical and chemical properties of two central Washington soils
- Peroral bioassay of nucleopolyhedrosis viruses in larvae of the western spruce budworm
- Peroral bioassay of technical-grade preparations of the Douglas-fir tussock moth nucleopolyhedrosis virus (Baculovirus)
- Photo stratification improves northwest timber volume estimates
- Physical and chemical properties of some Blue Mountain soils in the northeastern Oregon
- Physical properties of woody fuels in the Blue Mountains of Oregon and Washington
- Place of partial cutting in old-growth stands of the Douglas-fir region
- Planning single-span skylines
- Plantation survival and growth in two brush-threat areas in coastal Oregon
- Poisoning and trapping pocket gophers to protect conifers in northeastern Oregon
- Ponderosa pine lumber recovery : young growth in northern California
- Population and community responses of small mammals to 2,4,5-T
- Population response of the northern red-backed vole (Clethrionomys rutilus) to differentially cut white spruce forest
- Postseason hunting to reduce deer damage to Douglas-fir in western Oregon
- Potential for economical recovery of fuel from land clearing residue in interior Alaska
- Potential production in thinned Douglas-fir plantations
- Precipitation and streamwater chemistry in an undisturbed watershed in southwest Alaska
- Predicting moisture content of fuel-moisture-indicator sticks in the Pacific northwest
- Predicting wildfire behavior in black spruce forests in Alaska
- Predicting wood volumes for ponderosa pine from outside bark measurements
- Prediction of spray behavior above and within a forest canopy
- Pregermination treatments for redstem ceanothus seeds
- Prelimimary [sic] lumber recovery for dead and live Engelmann spruce
- Preliminary crown weight estimates for tanoak, black oak, and Pacific madrone
- Preliminary results of experimental fires in the black spruce type of Interior Alaska
- Preliminary site index curves for noble fir from stem analysis data
- Preliminary test of two stump surface protectants against Fomes annosus
- Preparing manuscripts for proceedings and compendiums
- Procedure for developing a site index estimating system from stem analysis data
- Procedures and equipment for fumigating European pine shoot moth on ornamental pines
- Product recovery from hemlock "pulpwood" from Alaska
- Production rates in commercial thinning of young-growth Douglas- fir
- Projections of the demand for national forest stumpage by region, 1980-2030
- Protecting exposed ends of timber beams in the Puget Sound area
- Protecting forest trees and their seed from wild mammals : a review of the literature
- Radial growth in grand fir and Douglas-fir related to defoliation by the Douglas-fir tussock moth in the Blue Mountains outbreak
- Rates of spread of wildfire in Alaskan fuels
- Rearing the western tussock moth on artificial diet with application to related species
- Recent (1977-1980) releases of imported larch casebearer parasites for biological control
- Reducing wind damage in the forests of the Oregon coast range
- Regeneration in mixed conifer and Douglas-fir shelterwood cuttings in the Cascade Range of Washington
- Regeneration in mixed conifer clearcuts in the Cascade Range and the Blue Mountains of Eastern Oregon
- Regeneration in mixed conifer partial cuttings in the Blue Mountains of Oregon and Washington
- Regeneration in mixed conifer shelterwood cuttings in the Cascade Range of eastern Oregon
- Regeneration of tree seedlings after clearcutting on some upper-slope habitat types in the Oregon Cascade Range
- Regeneration outlook on BLM lands in the southern Oregon, Cascades
- Relation between moisture content of fine fuels and relative humidity
- Relationship of needle surface area to needle volume in ponderosa pine and lodgepole pine
- Releases of recently imported larch casebearer parasites for biological control in the western United States, including relocations of Agathis pumila
- Repeated spraying to control four coastal brush species
- Repellents reduce deer browsing on ponderosa pine seedlings
- Response of Penstemon fruticosus to fertilization
- Response of a 110-year-old Douglas-fir stand to urea and ammonium nitrate fertilization
- Response of a pole-size ponderosa pine stand to nitrogen, phosphorus, and sulfur
- Response of a poor-site western redcedar stand to precommercial thinning and fertilization
- Response of ponderosa pine 8 years after fertilization
- Response of sitka spruce and western hemlock to commercial thinning
- Response of thinned lodgepole pine after fertilization
- Response of thinned ponderosa pine to fertilization
- Response to commercial thinning in a 110-year old Douglas-fir stand
- Response to urea and ammonium nitrate fertilization in an 80-year-old Douglas-fir stand
- Results of shelterwood cutting in western hemlock
- Results of shelterwood harvesting of Douglas-fir in the Cascades of western Oregon
- Road and landing criteria for mobile-crane yarding systems
- Root strength changes after logging in southeast Alaska
- Running skyline design with a desk-top computer-plotter
- Rust cankers : a threat to central Oregon lodgepole pine?
- Sampling low density populations of the Douglas-fir tussock moth by frequency of occurrence in the lower tree crown
- Seasonal forage use by deer and elk on the Starkey Experimental Forest and Range, Oregon
- Seasonal height growth of upper-slope conifers
- Seasonal progress of radial growth of Douglas-fir, western redcedar and red alder
- Seasonal variation of infiltration capacities of soils in western Oregon
- Seasoning and surfacing degrade in kiln-drying western hemlock in western Washington
- Seeding habits of upper-slope tree species
- Seedling growth of eight Northwestern tree species over three water tables
- Selection and propagation of highly graft-compatible Douglas-fir rootstocks, a case history
- Seven-year response of 35-year-old Douglas-fir to nitrogen fertilizer
- Should ponderosa pine be planted on lodgepole pine sites?
- Shrub plantings for erosion control in eastern Washington : progress and research needs
- Silvical characteristics of Douglas-fir (var. menziesii)
- Silvical characteristics of Noble fir
- Silvical characteristics of Oregon white oak
- Silvical characteristics of Pacific madrone
- Silvical characteristics of Pacific silver fir
- Silvical characteristics of Port-Orford-cedar
- Silvical characteristics of Sitka spruce
- Silvical characteristics of Western hemlock
- Silvical characteristics of bigleaf maple
- Silvical characteristics of mountain hemlock
- Silvical characteristics of red alder
- Silvical characteristics of western juniper
- Site index and height growth curves for managed, even-aged stands of Douglas-fir east of the Cascades in Oregon and Washington
- Site index and height growth curves for managed, even-aged stands of white or grand fir east of the Cascades in Oregon and Washington
- Site index and height growth curves for unmanaged even-aged stands of western hemlock and sitka spruce in southeast Alaska
- Site index, height growth, normal yields, and stocking levels for larch in Oregon and Washington
- Skyline yarding cost estimating guide
- Snow accumulation and melt in strip cuttings on the west slopes of the Oregon Cascades
- Softwood log exports and the value and employment issues
- Soil and air temperature and biomass after residue treatment
- Soil and air temperatures for different habitats in Mount Rainier National Park
- Soil compaction and initial height growth of planted ponderosa pine
- Soil moisture and the distribution of lodgepole and ponderosa pine : (a review of the literature)
- Soil moisture trends under three different cover conditions
- Soil water trends after clearcutting in the Blue Mountains of Oregon
- Soil water use by Ceanothus velutinus and two grasses
- Some characteristics of a sample of logging residue in eastern Oregon
- Some characteristics of forest floors and soils under true fir-hemlock stands in the Cascade Range
- Some effects of logging and slash burning on physical soil properties in the Corvallis watershed
- Some effects of predaceous birds and ants on the western spruce budworm on conifer seedlings
- Some water problems and hydrologic characteristics of the Umpqua Basin
- Sour sawdust and bark : its origin, properties, and effect on plants
- Spacing and understory vegetation affect growth of ponderosa pine saplings
- Spread factors of pesticidal spray formulations on Kromekote cards
- Spruce budworm control in Oregon and Washington, 1949-1956
- Stabilization of newly constructed road backslopes by mulch and grass-legume treatments
- Streamflow after patch logging in small drainages within the Bull Run Municipal Watershed, Oregon
- Streamflow nitrogen loss following forest erosion control fertilization
- Stumpage price projections for selected western species
- Substitution and the USDA Forest Service log export restrictions
- Successional status of subalpine fir in the Cascade Range
- Supplemental treatments to aid planted Douglas-fir in dense bracken fern
- Suppressed grand fir and Shasta red fir respond well to release
- Survival and growth of bitterbrush on the Silver Lake deer winter range in central Oregon
- Survival and growth of planted conifers on the Dead Indian Plateau, east of Ashland, Oregon
- Survival and growth of thirteen tree species in coastal Oregon
- Survival of Douglas-fir seedlings sprayed with atrazine, terbacil, and 2,4-D
- Susceptibility of 10 spruce species and hybrids to the white pine weevil (=Sitka spruce weevil) in the Pacific Northwest
- Ten-year history of an Oregon coastal plantation
- Tentative ecological provinces within the true fir-hemlock forest areas of the Pacific Northwest
- Test of wind predictions for peak fire-danger stations in Oregon and Washington
- Testing partial atmospheric fumigation for eradicating European pine shoot moth on baled and bagged pine seedlings
- The ... fire season in the Pacific Northwest
- The Value of roaded, multiple-use areas as recreation sites in three national forests of the Pacific Northwest
- The Wind River Arboretum, 1912-1956
- The balsam woolly aphid problem in Oregon and Washington
- The economic significance of mortality in old-growth Douglas-fir management
- The effect of cattle and big game grazing on a ponderosa pine plantation
- The influence of residue removal and prescribed fire on distributions of forest nutrients
- The land base for management of young-growth forests in the Douglas-fir region
- The outlook for housing in Japan to the year 2000
- The recording quizboard : a device for evaluating interpretive services
- The reliability of determining age of red alder by ring counts
- The wild huckleberries of Oregon and Washington : a dwindling resource
- Thinning ponderosa pine in the Pacific northwest
- Thirteen years of thinning in a Douglas-fir woodland
- Timber trends in western Oregon and western Washington
- Timber volumes in the mangrove forests of Pohnpei, Federated States of Micronesia
- Toxicity of herbicides on three northwestern conifers
- Transport of bedload sediment and channel morphology of a southeast Alaska stream
- Tree basal area as an index of thermal cover for elk
- Tree form quotients as variables in volume estimation
- Tree mortality and top-kill related to defoliation by the Douglas-fir tussock moth in the Blue Mountains outbreak
- Tree shaking machine aids cone collection in a Douglas-fir seed orchard
- Trends in commercial timberland area in the United States by state and ownership, 1952-77, with projections to 2030
- Trends in reforestation and its cost in the Pacific Northwest,
- Twenty-year growth of ponderosa pine saplings thinned to five spacings in central Oregon
- Twenty-year growth of thinned and unthinned ponderosa pine in the Methow Valley of northern Washington
- Two-year results of a west-east transect-provenance test of Douglas-fir in Oregon
- Urea fertilizer increases growth of 20-year-old, thinned Douglas-fir on a poor quality site
- Use of pre-fabricated Parshall flumes to measure streamflow in permafrost-dominated watersheds
- Using fire-weather forecasts and local weather observations in predicting burning index for individual fire-danger stations
- Utilization of mill residues in the timber products mills in the Lakeview working circle
- Value for small diameter stumpage affected by product prices, processing equipment, and volume measurement
- Variation in vegetation following slash fires near Oakridge, Oregon
- Vegetation and soil condition changes on a subalpine grassland in Eastern Oregon
- Vegetation survey of Moen, Dublon, Fefan, and Elen, State of Truk, Federated States of Micronesia
- Vegetation survey of Yap, Federated States of Micronesia
- Vegetation survey of the Republic of Palau
- Vegetation-soil units in the central Oregon juniper zone
- Vegetative indicators, soils, overstory, canopy, and natural regeneration after partial cutting on the Dead Indian Plateau of southwestern Oregon
- Vegetative propagation of 11 common Alaska woody plants
- Veneer grade yield from pruned Douglas-fir
- Veneer recovery from Douglas-fir logs
- Veneer recovery from old-growth coast Douglas-fir
- Veneer recovery from second-growth Douglas-fir
- Veneer recovery of red and white fir-- California
- Veneer yield by log grade and size from Black Hills ponderosa pine