Microsoft word - catskill biblio explanation.docx

Preliminary Bibliography of Catskill Region Biodiversity & Water Quality Monitoring This preliminary listing is a part of a joint effort by staff in the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Region 3 Office and the Catskill Institute for the Environment to monitor the status of research and knowledge with respect to Catskill Region biodiversity and water quality. The list was created by searching library databases for references including articles in peer-reviewed scientific journals, books, academic dissertations, bulletins and reports focusing on the Catskill Region. Table 1 shows the references available in each of four broad subject categories and each category is further broken down into more specific subject areas. Although the subject areas are somewhat arbitrary, it is hoped that, by providing this categorization, users of the bibliography will find it easier to locate references pertinent to their particular area of interest and that the listing may help to highlight areas where past research has been focused or where published information is lacking. Table 2 is an alphabetical listing of references which correspond to the reference numbers shown in Table 1. It is hoped that users of the list will contribute to this effort by adding references which may have been missed in our preliminary literature search and that through this interaction, the bibliography will be expanded and improved over time. Please email the author at sxparisi@gw.dec.state.ny.us if you know of any references which should be added or have other suggestions regarding how the bibliography may be improved. It is our intent to update the bibliography periodically based on the feedback which is received. Table 1. Preliminary Bibliography of Catskill Region Biodiversity and Water Quality Monitoring & Research Index Published References (Numbers refer to Table 2) 15, 23, 43, 49, 63, 70, 73, 80, 84, 85, 105, 106, 133, 143, 145, 160, 166, 168, 195, 2 26, 44, 45, 113, 155, 164, 166, 169, 170, 194, 196 4 13, 14, 72, 96, 144, 147, 200, 202, 206 11, 13, 16, 34, 35, 36, 37, 39, 41, 42, 46, 48, 50, 51, 58, 59, 71, 78, 93, 101, 120, 121, 122, 126, 127, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 156, 160, 163, 167, 172, 175, 176, 7 51, 52, 54, 62, 74, 75, 98,101, 107, 120, 124, 128, 134, 167, 184, 188, 198, 199 2, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 57, 64, 90, 91, 92, 97, 102, 103, 104, 111, 115, 116, 2 117, 123, 136, 137, 138, 139, 141, 142, 157, 162, 173, 179, 190, 210, 215, 217 B 12 3, 4, 6, 19, 53, 55, 60, 67, 76, 79, 89, 94, 100, 112, 118, 119, 132, 153, 161, 218 17, 56, 64, 66, 68, 81, 83, 98, 102, 103, 104, 111, 117, 116, 115, 126, 127, 128, 1 129, 130, 135, 136, 137, 138, 159, 191, 187, 215, 217 3 7, 8, 82, 91, 92, 109, 110, 162, 174, 193 4 146, 159, 181, 182, 183, 184, 185, 188, 189, 198, 199, 208, 216 2 9, 10, 12, 37, 39, 41, 48, 51, 66, 120, 121, 124, 125, 131, 149, 151, 171, 178, 204, Table 2. Catskill Biodiversity Research & Monitoring Reference List - Preliminary 1 Adams, M.S., R. Acciavatti and R. Davidson. 1999. Ground beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae) in riparian habitats of the Catskill Region. In: M. S. Adams (ed.). Catskill Ecosystem Health. Purple Mountain Press, Fleischmanns, New York. pp. 133-138.
2 Alexander, E.J. 1936. An unsought adventure in the southern Catskills. Jour. N.Y. Bot. Gard. 3 Allen, F.H., 1930. The Song of Bicknell's Thrush: A Correction. The Auk, 47(2), 263-265. 4 Andrle, Robert F. 1971. Range Extension of the Golden-Crowned Kinglet in New York. The Wilson Bulletin 83, no. 3 (September): 313-316. 5 Ashby, J. A. 1996. Controls on riparian denitrification in headwater catchments of a hardwood forest in the Catskill Mountains of New York, USA. Thesis (M.S.)--University of New Hampshire. 6 Atwood, J.L. et al., 1996. Distribution of Bicknell's Thrush in New England and New York. The 7 Azzolina, N. A. 2005. Questioning the hydrogeomorphic paradigm: a geochemical examination of wetlands in the Catskill/Delaware Watersheds, water supply for the City of New York. Thesis (M.S.)--Syracuse University. Syracuse, NY.
8 Azzolina, Nicholas A., Donald I. Siegel, James C. Brower, Scott D. Samson, Martin H. Otz, and Ines Otz. 2007. Can the HGM classification of small, non-peat forming wetlands distinguish wetlands from surface water geochemistry. Wetlands 27, no. 4 (12): 884-893. 9 Baldigo, B.P. and Murdoch, P.S., 1997. Effect of stream acidification and inorganic aluminum on mortality of brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) in the Catskill Mountains. New York, Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 54, 603-615.
10 Baldigo, B.P. and Lawrence, G.B., 2000. Composition of fish communities in relation to stream acidification and habitat in the Neversink River, New York. Trans. Amer. Fish. Soc. 129, 60-76.
11 Baldigo, B.P., Murdoch, P.S., and Burns, D.A., 2005, Stream acidification and mortality of brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) in response to timber harvest in three small watersheds of the Catskill Mountains, New York, USA, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Science, 62: 1168-1183.
12 Baldigo, B.P., Ernst, A.G., Schuler, G.E., and Apse, C.D., 2007, Relations of environmental factors with mussel-species richness in the Neversink River, New York: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2007–1283, 8 p. 13 Baldigo, B.P., A.S.G. Ernst, W. Keller, D.R. Warren, S.J. Miller, D. Davis, T.P. Baudanza, D. DeKoskie, and J.R. Buchanan. 2008. Restoring Geomorphic Stability and Biodiversity in Streams of the Catskill Mountains, New York, USA. American Fisheries Society Symposium 49:1777–1790. 14 Baldigo, Barry P., Dana R. Warren, Anne G. Ernst and Christiane I. Mulvihill. 2008. Response of Fish Populations to Natural Channel Design Restoration in Streams of the Catskill Mountains, New York. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 28:3, 954-969 15 Banks, H. P., J. D. Grierson, and P. M. Bonamo. 1985. The flora of the Catskill clastic wedge. Geological Society of America Special Paper 201: 125-141 Prepared by S.Parisio (sxparisi@gw.dec.state.ny.us) Table 2. Catskill Biodiversity Research & Monitoring Reference List - Unsorted 16 Barten, P. and R.H. Fraser. 1999. Spatially distributed modeling of nonpoint source pollutants. In: M. S. Adams (ed.). Catskill Ecosystem Health. Purple Mountain Press, Fleischmanns, New York. pp. 53-57.
17 Behling, Shawna Joy. 2007. Effects of nitrogen and calcium on photosynthesis and metabolic activity in Acer saccharum in the Catskill Mountains. M.S. Thesis. University of Maryland, College Park. 79 pages. 18 Benion, Denise. 1999. Myxomycetes of the Catskills New York City Watershed: Preliminary Results. In: M. S. Adams (ed.). Catskill Ecosystem Health. Purple Mountain Press, Fleischmanns, New York. pp. 169-172.
19 Bicknell, E.P., 1862. A review of the summer birds of a part of the Catskill Mountains with prefatory notes on the faunal and floral features of the region. Trans. Linnaean Soc. N.Y. I:1-56.
20 Bierhorst, John. 1995. The Ashokan Catskills – A Natural History. Purple Mountain Press. 21 Bilger, M.D., Riva-Murray, Karen, and Wall, G.L., 2005, A checklist of the aquatic invertebrates of the Delaware River Basin, 1990-2000: U.S. Geological Survey Data Series 116, 29 p.
22 Bott, Thomas L., David S. Montgomery, J. Denis Newbold, David B. Arscott, Charles L. Dow, Anthony K. Aufdenkampe, John K. Jackson, and Louis A. Kaplan. 2006. Ecosystem metabolism in streams of the Catskill Mountains (Delaware and Hudson River watersheds) and Lower Hudson Valley. Journal of the North American Benthological Society 25, no. 4 (12): 1018-1044. 23 Boyer, J.S., Jr., Klavins, S.D., Matten, L.C. 1994. Eospermatopteris from Gilboa, N.Y. Fourth European Paleobotany and Palynology Conference : 13 24 Britton, E.G. & Smith, A.M., 1901. Notes on Rare and Little Known Mosses. The Bryologist, 25 Britton, Elizabeth G. 1901. Mosses of the Catskill Mountains. Torreya. I:84. 26 Broad, W.A. (1993) Soil Survey of Greene County New York. United States Department of Agriculture – Soil Conservation Service, in cooperation with Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station. U.S. Government Printing Office. 349 p.
27 Brooks, K.L., 1956. Notes on the Pteridophytes of Delaware County, New York. American Fern 28 Brooks, K.L., 1960. Adoxa and Uvularia in the Delaware County (N. Y.) Flora. Bulletin of the 29 Brooks, K.L., 1979. A Catskill Flora and Economic Botany, I: Pteridophyta. The Ferns and Fern Allies. Bulletin No. 438, New York State Museum. 276 pp.
30 Brooks, K.L., 1980a. A Catskill Flora and Economic Botany, II: Coniferales. The Conifers. Bulletin No. 441, New York State Museum. Albany. 116 pp.
31 Brooks, K.L., 1980b. A Catskill Flora and Economic Botany, III: Apetalae. Including the Poplars, Willows, Hickories, Birches, Beeches, Oaks, Elms, Nettles, Sorrels, Docks, and Smartweeds. Bulletin No. 443, New York State Museum. Albany. 374 pp. 32 Brooks, K.L., 1983. A Catskill Flora and Economic Botany, IV, Part 1. Polypetalae: Chenopodiaceae through Leguminosae. Bulletin No. 453, New York State Museum. Albany. 358 pp.
Prepared by S.Parisio (sxparisi@gw.dec.state.ny.us) Table 2. Catskill Biodiversity Research & Monitoring Reference List - Unsorted 33 Brooks, K.L., 1984. A Catskill Flora and Economic Botany, IV, Part 2. Polypetalae: Sarraceniaceae through Capparidaceae. Bulletin No. 454, New York State Museum. Albany. 283 pp.
34 Burns D.A., Murdoch P.S., Lawrence G.B., Michel R.L. 1998. The effect of ground-water springs on NO3− concentrations during summer in Catskill Mountain streams. Water Resources Research 34: 1987–1996. Available at: http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/1998/98WR01282.shtml 35 Burns, D.A., 1998. Retention of NO in an upland stream environment: A mass balance approach. 36 Burns, D.A., and Kendall, C., 2002, Analysis of d18O and d15N to differentiate NO3- sources in runoff at two watersheds in the Catskill Mountains of New York, Water Resources Research, 38(5), 1051, doi: 10.1029/2001WR000292.
37 Burns, D. A., M. R. McHale, C. T. Driscoll, G. M. Lovett, K. C. Weathers, M. J. Mitchell, and K. M. Roy. 2005. An assessment of recovery and key processes affecting the response of surface waters to reduced levels of acid precipitation in the Adirondack and Catskill Mountains. Final Report 05-03, New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, Albany, New York. 38 Burns, D.A. & Murdoch, P.S., 2005. Effects of a clearcut on the net rates of nitrification and N mineralization in a northern hardwood forest, Catskill Mountains, New York, USA. Biogeochemistry, 72(1), 123-146. 39 Burns, Douglas A., Michael R. McHale, Charles T. Driscoll and Karen M. Roy 2006. Response of surface water chemistry to reduced levels of acid precipitation: comparison of trends in two regions of New York, USA. Hydrol. Process. 20, 1611–1627 40 Burns, D.A., Klaus, J. & McHale, M.R., 2007. Recent climate trends and implications for water resources in the Catskill Mountain region, New York, USA. Journal of Hydrology, 336(1-2), 155-170. 41 Burns, D.A., Riva-Murray, K., Bode, R.W., Passy, S., 2008, Biological and chemical responses to reduced levels of acid deposition in the Neversink River Basin, Catskill Mountains, New
York, 1987-2003, Ecological Indicators , 8: 191-203.
42 Burns, D.A., Boyer, E.W., Elliott, E.M., Kendall, C., 2009, Sources and Transformations of Nitrate from Streams Draining Varying Land Uses: Evidence from Dual Isotope Analysis,
Journal of Environmental Quality , 38: 1149-1159.
43 Buttner, P. J. R., 1977. Physical stratigraphy, sedimentology, and environmental geology of the Upper Devonian stream deposits of the Catskill Mountains of eastern New York State. In: P. C. Wilson (editor), Guidebook to Field Excursions. New York State Geol., Assoc., Syracuse, NY, 1-29.
44 Cadwell, Donald H. 1986. Late Wisconsinin stratigraphy of the Catksill Mountains. in Donald H. Cadwell, (ed.) The Wisconsinan Stage of the First Geologic District, Eastern New York. Albany. New York State Museum Bulletin 455. 45 Cadwell, D.H. 1991. Surficial Geologic Map of New York. Consists of 5 sheets, 1:250,000: Finger Lakes Sheet, 1986; Hudson-Mohawk Sheet, 1987; Niagara Sheet, 1988; Lower Hudson Sheet, 1989; Adirondack Sheet, 1991. Map and Chart Series No. 40. 5 maps: 1:250,000. Prepared by S.Parisio (sxparisi@gw.dec.state.ny.us) Table 2. Catskill Biodiversity Research & Monitoring Reference List - Unsorted 46 Caraco, N.F., J.J. Cole, G.E. Likens, G.M. Lovett, and K.C. Weathers. 2003. Variation in NO3 export from flowing waters of vastly different sizes: Does one model fit all? Ecosystems 6:344-352.
47 Caron, J. 2008. Forest landowner characteristics on fragmented ownerships in the Catskill and Delaware watersheds. Thesis (M.S.) - State University of New York. College of Environmental Science and Forestry, Syracuse, NY.
48 Ceraso, J. 1986. New York City's water supply: acid deposition, inorganic pollution, and the Catskill reservoirs. New York, N.Y. (444 Park Ave. S., New York 10016), Environmental Defense Fund. Survey 49 Chadwick, G. H., & Kay, M. 1933. The Catskill Region. Washington, [National capital press, 50 Chan, A. 2008. Phosphorus and other drain field loads derived from data collected at on-site wastewater treatment systems in the Catskill/Delaware watershed in New York. Thesis (M.S.)--State University of New York. College of Environmental Science and Forestry, Syracuse, NY.
51 Chen, L. and Driscoll, C.T., 2004. Modeling the response of soil and surface waters in the Adirondack and Catskill regions of New York to changes in atmospheric deposition and historical land disturbance. Atmos. Environ. 38, 4099-4109.
52 Christenson, L.M., G.M. Lovett, K.C. Weathers, and M.A. Arthur. 2009. The influence of tree species, nitrogen fertilization, and soil C to N ratio on gross soil nitrogen transformations. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 73:638–646. View the full article online at http://soil.scijournals.org/content/vol73/issue2 53 Chubb, S.H., 1919. The Cerulean Warbler (Dendroica cerulea) in the Catskills. The Auk, 36(4), 54 Clarkin, Sean David. 2003. Rain-induced soil denitrification in a highly acidic, hardwood forest watershed in the Catskill Mountains of New York, U.S.A. Ph.D Thesis. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. 137 pages.
55 Cobb, S., 1920. Midsummer Birds in the Catskill Mountains. The Auk, 37(1), 46-49. 56 Cogbill, C. V., and P. S. White. 1991. The Latitude-Elevation Relationship for Spruce-Fir Forest and Treeline along the Appalachian Mountain Chain. Vegetation 94, no. 2 (July): 153-175. 57 Cole, C.T. & Kuchenreuther, M.A., 2001. Molecular markers reveal little genetic differentiation among Aconitum noveboracense and A. columbianum (Ranunculaceae) populations. Am. J. Bot., 88(2), 337-347. 58 Costello-Walker, C. 1995. Surface water alkalinity in the Neversink Basin, Catskill Mountains, New York. Thesis (M.S.)--Lehigh University.
59 Cutietta-Olson, Charles and Martine Rosenfeld. 1999. Stream biomonitoring in the Catskill Regions of the NYC Water Supply Watershed, 1994-1998. In: M. S. Adams (ed.). Catskill Ecosystem Health. Purple Mountain Press, Fleischmanns, New York. pp. 173-190.
60 Daley, M.W., 1922. Birds of Frost Valley, Slide Mountain Region, Southern Catskills. The Auk, 61 Daniels, Robert A. 1998. Changes in the Distribution of Stream-Dwelling Crayfishes in the Schoharie Creek System, Eastern New York State. Northeastern Naturalist 5, no. 3: 231-248. Prepared by S.Parisio (sxparisi@gw.dec.state.ny.us) Table 2. Catskill Biodiversity Research & Monitoring Reference List - Unsorted 62 DiCicco, J. 2002. Nitrification and denitrification in soils of the White Mountains, New Hampshire and the Catskills, New York. pp. 18-22 In: A. R. Berkowitz, S. E. G. Findlay, F. Keesing, and R. S. Ostfeld (eds.). Undergraduate Research Reports --1998 and 1999. Occasional Publication of the Institute of Ecosystem Studies, Number 16, Millbrook, New York. 63 Dineen, R. J. 1976. Bedrock resources of the Catskill region. Catskill Study Report, No. 11. [Albany, N.Y.], New York State Department of Environmental Conservation.
64 Driese, K.L. et al., 2004. A Vegetation Map for the Catskill Park, NY, Derived from Multi- Temporal Landsat Imagery and GIS Data. Northeastern Naturalist, 11(4), 421-442. 65 Driscoll, Charles T., Gregory B. Lawrence, Arthur J. Bulger, Thomas J. Butler, Christopher S. Cronan, Christopher Eagar, Kathleen F. Lambert, Gene E. Likens, John L. Stoddard, And Kathleen C. Weathers. 2001. Acidic deposition in the northeastern United States: sources and inputs, ecosystem effects, and management strategies. BioScience Vol. 51 No. 3: 180-198.
66 Driscoll, Charles T., Kimberley M. Driscoll, Myron J. Mitchell, Dudley J. Raynal. 2003. Effects of acidic deposition on forest and aquatic ecosystems in New York State. Environmental Pollution, 123(3), 327-336. 67 Dwight, J., 1898. An Untrustworthy Observer. The Auk, 15(2), 213-214. 68 Eallonardo, Anthony S., Jr. 2006. An empirical test of nitrogen saturation in the understory of the Catskill Mountains of New York (Acer saccharum, Dryopteris intermedia, Erythronium americanum, Oxalis acetosella). M.S. Thesis. State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry. 120 pp.
69 Ellison, W.G. 1999. The role of the Catskills in the population history of two thrushes. In: M. S. Adams (ed.). Catskill Ecosystem Health. Purple Mountain Press, Fleischmanns, New York. pp. 23-30 70 Erkey, C. P. 1911. Geology of the New York City (Catskill) aqueduct; studies in applied geology covering problems encountered in explorations along the line of the aqueduct from the Catskill Mountains to New York City. Albany, University of the state of New York.
71 Ernst, A.G., Baldigo, B.P., Schuler, G.E., Apse, C.D., Carter, J.L., and Lester, G.T., 2008, Effects of habitat characteristics and water quality on macroinvertebrate communities along the Neversink River in southeastern New York, 1991–2001: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2008–5024, 15 p.
72 Evans, C., T. D. Davies, and P. S. Murdoch. 1999. Component flow processes at four streams in the Catskill Mountains, New York, analyzed using episodic concentration/discharge relationships. Hydrological Processes 13, no. 4: 563-575. 73 Fisher, D.W., Y.W. Isachsen, and L.V. Rickard. Geologic Map of New York State, 1970. 1:250,000. Consists of five sheets: Niagara, Finger Lakes, Hudson-Mohawk, Adirondack, and Lower Hudson. Map and Chart Series No. 15. 74 Fitzhugh, R.D., Christenson, L.M. & Lovett, G.M., 2003. The Fate of 15NO-2 Tracer in Soils under Different Tree Species of the Catskill Mountains, New York. Soil Sci Soc Am J, 67(4), 1257-1265. Prepared by S.Parisio (sxparisi@gw.dec.state.ny.us) Table 2. Catskill Biodiversity Research & Monitoring Reference List - Unsorted 75 Fitzhugh, Ross D., Gary M. Lovett, and Rodney T. Venterea. 2003. Biotic and abiotic immobilization of ammonium, nitrite, and nitrate in soils developed under different tree species in the Catskill Mountains, New York, USA. Global Change Biology 9, no. 11: 1591-1601. 76 Foerster, N., 1921. Burroughs as Ornithologist. The North American Review, 214(789), 177- 77 Fox, L.B. 1990. Ecology and population biology of the bobcat, (Felis rufus) in New York. Ph.D. 78 Frei, A. et al., 2002. Catskill Mountain Water Resources: Vulnerability, Hydroclimatology, and Climate-Change Sensitivity. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 92(2), 203-224. 79 Frey, S.J. et al., 2008. Identification and sex determination of Bicknell's Thrushes using morphometric data. Journal of Field Ornithology, 79(4), 408–420. 80 Gale, P. E. 1985. Diagenesis of the Middle to Upper Devonian Catskill facies sandstones in southeastern New York State. Thesis (M.A.)--Harvard University.
81 Gasarch, Eve Ilana. 2005. Fire as a local control on forest composition at Bad Man's Cave, Catskills, New York. Bachelor of Science Dissertation, Bates College. Lewiston, Maine. 56 pp.
82 Godwin, K.S., J.P. Shallenberger, D.J. Leopold, and B.L. Bedford. 2002. Linking landscape properties to local hydrogeologic gradients and plant species occurrence in minerotrophic fens of New York: A hydrogeologic setting (HGS) framework. Wetlands 22:722-737.
83 Goldstein, Edward Henry. 1994. The spruce-fir-northern hardwood transition zone forest of the Catskill Mountains. M.S. Thesis. State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry. 109 pages 84 Gordon, E. A. 1986. Sedimentology, paleohydraulics and paleontology of the Early Frasnian Upper Devonian Catskill Facies, Southeastern New York. Thesis (Ph. D.)--State University of New York at Binghamton.
85 Grierson, James D., and Harlan P. Banks. 1983. A new genus of lycopods from the Devonian of New York State. Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 86, no. 1-2: 81-101. 86 Griffin, J. M., G. M. Lovett, M. A. Arthur, and K. C. Weathers. 2003. The distribution and severity of beech bark disease in the Catskill Mountains, NY. Can. J. For. Res. 33:1754-1760 87 Griffin, J. M. 2005. The landscape pathology of beech bark disease in the Catskill Mountains, NY: The effects of land use history on disease progression, and the response of sugar maple to beech decline. M.S. Thesis, Albany, New York, University at Albany, State University of New York. 88 Griffin , J. M., G. M. Lovett, G. R. Robinson, K. C. Weathers, M. A. Arthur, M. Kudish. 2009. Beech bark disease in the Catskill Mountains of New York, U.S.A.: Effects of forest history and influence on sugar maple abundance. Can. J. For. Res. - In Press 89 Grus, Wendy E., Gary R. Graves, and Travis C. Glenn. 2009. Geographic Variation in the mitochondrial control region of Black-throated Blue Warblers (Dendroica caerulescens) 90 Hall, I.H., 1874. Catskill Ferns. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 5(9), 38-39.
Prepared by S.Parisio (sxparisi@gw.dec.state.ny.us) Table 2. Catskill Biodiversity Research & Monitoring Reference List - Unsorted 91 Hall, Brian Richard. 1998. Environment-plant species relationships in groundwater seeps in the Catskill Mountains of New York. M.S. Thesis. State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry. 85 pages.
92 Hall, B.R., Raynal, D.J. & Leopold, D.J., 2001. Environmental influences on plant species composition in ground-water seeps in the Catskill Mountains of New York. Wetlands. Vol. 21, (1), 125-134. 93 Hall, M., R. Germain, M. Tyrell, and N. Sampson. 2008. "Predicting Future Water Quality from Land Use Change Projections in the Catskill-Delaware Watersheds". Prepared for the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, Albany, NY 94 Hames, RS, Lowe, JD, Swarthout, SB, Rosenberg, KV. 2006. Understanding the Risk to Neotropical Migrant Bird Species of Multiple Human-Caused Stressors: Elucidating Processes Behind the Patterns. Ecology and Society [Ecol. Soc.]. Vol. 11, no. 1, 95 Hancock, J. E., M. A. Arthur, K. C. Weathers, and G. M. Lovett. 2008. Carbon cycling along a gradient of beech bark disease impact in the Catskill Mountains, New York. Can. J. For. Res. 38 (5): 1267-1274. 96 Harpold, A.A., Steenhuis, T.S. & Dahlke, H.E., 2006. Lateral Preferential Flow in Soil Pipes on Hillslopes in the Catskill Mountains, New York, USA. AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts, 11, 1340. 97 Harshberger, John. 1905. The plant formations of the Catskills. Plant World 8:276-8198 Heath, Laura A. 2007. Understory plant community response to nitrogen and dolomite additions in a northern hardwood forest of the Catskill Mountains, New York. M.S. Thesis. State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry. 92 pages 99 Heilprin, Angelo. 1907. The Catskill Mountains. Bulletin of the American Geographical Society 100 Hobson, K.A. et al., 2001. Linking breeding and wintering grounds of Bicknell's thrushes using stable isotope analyses of feathers. The Auk, 118(1), 16-23. 101 Homyak, P.M., Yanai, R.D., Burns, D.A., Briggs, R.D., Germain, R.H., 2008, Nitrogen immobilization by wood chip application: Protecting water quality in a northern hardwood
forest, Forest Ecology and Management , 255: 2589-2601.
102 Ibe, Ralph Anthony. 1982. Quaternary palynology of five lacustrine deposits in the Catskill Mountain Region of New York. PhD Thesis. New York University. 210 pages.
103 Ibe, R.A., 1984. Modern Pollen Rain-Vegetation Relations at Four Different Elevations on Slide Mountain, Catskill Mountains, New York. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 111(1), 96-102. 104 Ibe, R.A., 1985. Postglacial Montane Vegetational History Around Balsam Lake, Catskill Mountains, New York. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 112(2), 176-186. 105 Isachsen, Y.W., S.F. Wright, F.A. Revetta, and R.J. Duneen 1992. The Panther Mountain circular structure, a possible buried meteorite crater. In Lunar and Planetary Inst., International Conference on Large Meteorite Impacts and Planetary Evolution p 40 (SEE N93-10112 01-46). Available at: http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1992lmip.confQ.40I.
Prepared by S.Parisio (sxparisi@gw.dec.state.ny.us) Table 2. Catskill Biodiversity Research & Monitoring Reference List - Unsorted 106 Isachsen, Y.W., 1998. Metallic Spherules and a Microtektite Support the Interpretation of a Buried Impact Crater Beneath Panther Mountain in the Central Catskill Mountains, New York. Meteoritics & Planetary Science, vol. 33, p. A74 107 Johnson, C.E., Ruiz-Mendez, J.J. & Lawrence, G.B., 2000. Forest Soil Chemistry and Terrain Attributes in a Catskills Watershed. Soil Science Society of America Journal, 64(5), 1804-1814. 108 Kaiser, George B. 1911. Moss and Lichen Collecting in the Catskills. The Bryologist 14, no. 1 109 Karlin, E.F. & Andrus, R.E., 1986. Sphagnum Vegetation of the Low Shrub Bogs of Northern New Jersey and Adjacent New York. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 113(3), 281-287. 110 Karlin, E.F. & Lynn, L.M., 1988. Dwarf-Shrub Bogs of the Southern Catskill Mountain Region of New York State : Geographic Changes in the Flora of Peatlands in Northern New Jersey and Southern New York. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 115(3), 209-217. 111 Keirnan, Kim Elaine. 2002. Dendroecological analysis of hardwood species in the Catskill Mountains of New York. M.S. Thesis. State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry. 58 pages.
112 Kendeigh, S.C., 1946. Birds of the Beech-Maple-Hemlock Community. Ecology, 27(3), 226- 113 Kirkland, J.T., 1979. Deglaciation events in the western Catskill Mountains, New York. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 90(6), 521-524. 114 Kokas, John E., and Joon-Hak Lee. 2005. The first record of larval collections of Ochlerotatus thibaulti in New York State. Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association 21, no. 1: 100. 115 Kudish, Michael. 1971. Vegetational history of the Catskill high peaks. Ph.D. Thesis. State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry. 248 pages.
116 Kudish, Michael. 1999. First growth forest of the Catskill Mountains. In: M. S. Adams (ed.). Catskill Ecosystem Health. Purple Mountain Press, Fleischmanns, New York. pp. 139-150.
117 Kudish, Michael, 2000. The Catskill Forest A History, Purple Mountain Press, Fleishmanns, 118 Lambert, J. Daniel, Kent P. Mcfarland, Christopher C. Rimmer, Steven D. Faccio, and Jonathan L. Atwood (2005). A practical model of bicknell's thrush distribution in the northeastern united states. The Wilson Bulletin 117(1):1-11. (doi: 10.1676/04-013) 119 Langille, J.H., 1884. Bicknell's Thrush. The Auk, 1(3), 268-270. 120 Lawrence GB, David MB, Lovett GM, Murdoch PS, Burns DA, Baldigo BP, Thompson AW, Porter JH, Stoddard JL. 1999. Soil calcium status and the response of stream chemistry to changing acidic deposition rates in the Catskill Mountains of New York. Ecological Applications 9: 1059–1072.
121 Lawrence, G.B., Lovett, G.M. & Baevsky, Y.H., 2000. Atmospheric deposition and watershed nitrogen export along an elevational gradient in the Catskill Mountains, New York. BioGeochemistryistry, 50(1), 21-43. Prepared by S.Parisio (sxparisi@gw.dec.state.ny.us) Table 2. Catskill Biodiversity Research & Monitoring Reference List - Unsorted 122 Lawrence, G. B., D. A. Burns, B. P. Baldigo, P. S. Murdoch, and G. M. Lovett. 2001. Controls of stream chemistry and fish populations in the Neversink watershed, Catskill Mountains, New York. U.S. Geological Survey, Denver, Colorado. WRIR 00-4040. 123 Longacre, D.J., 1942. Somatic Chromosomes of Aconitum noveboracense and A. uncinatum. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 69(3), 235-239. 124 Lovett, G.M. and H. Rueth. 1999. Soil nitrogen transformations in beech and maple stands along a nitrogen deposition gradient. Ecological Applications 9:1330-1344.
125 Lovett, G. M., A. Thompson, J. Anderson, and J. Bowser. 1999. Elevational patterns of sulfur deposition at a site in the Catskill Mountains, NY. Atmospheric Environment 33:617-624. 126 Lovett, G. M., K. C. Weathers, and W. Sobczak. 2000. Nitrogen saturation and retention in forested watersheds of the Catskill Mountains, New York. Ecol. Appl. 10:73-84. 127 Lovett, G. M., K. C. Weathers, M. A. Arthur. 2001. Is nitrate in stream water an indicator of forest ecosystem health in the Catskills. In: M. S. Adams (ed.). Catskill Ecosystem Health. Purple Mountain Press, Fleischmanns, New York. pp. 23-30. 128 Lovett, G.M., Weathers, K.C. & Arthur, M.A., 2002. Control of Nitrogen Loss from Forested Watersheds by Soil Carbon:Nitrogen Ratio and Tree Species Composition. Ecosystems, 5(7), 0712-0718. 129 Lovett, G.M. et al., 2004. Nitrogen cycling in a northern hardwood forest: Do species matter? 130 Lovett, G.M., and M.J. Mitchell. 2004. Sugar maple and nitrogen cycling in the forests of eastern North America. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 2:81-88 131 Lovett, G.M., 1999. Elevational patterns of sulfur deposition at a site in the Catskill Mountains, New York. Atmospheric Environment, 33(4), 617-624. 132 Martindale, S., 1980. A Numerical Approach to the Analysis of Solitary Vireo Songs. The 133 Matten, L.C. & Banks, H.P., 1967. Relationship between the Devonian Progymnosperm Genera Sphenoxylon and Tetraxylopteris. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 94(4), 321-333. 134 McHale, M.R., Murdoch, P.S., Burns, D.A., and Lawrence, G.B., 2007, Controls on aluminum release from soils after a clearcut in southeastern New York, USA, Biogeochemistry , 84: 311-
331.
135 McHale, M.R., Murdoch, P.S., Burns, D.A., and Baldigo, B.P., 2008, Effects of forest harvesting on ecosystem health in the headwaters of the New York City water supply, Catskill Mountains, New York: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2008–5057, 22 p., also available online at http://pubs.usgs.gov/sir/2008/5057/ 136 McIntosh, R.P. & Hurley, R.T., 1964. The Spruce-Fir Forests of the Catskill Mountains. 137 McIntosh, R.P., 1972. Forests of the Catskill Mountains, New York. Ecological Monographs, 138 McWilliams, William H. 1999. Forest inventory and monitoring information for New York. In: M. S. Adams (ed.). Catskill Ecosystem Health. Purple Mountain Press, Fleischmanns, New York. pp. 191-201.
Prepared by S.Parisio (sxparisi@gw.dec.state.ny.us) Table 2. Catskill Biodiversity Research & Monitoring Reference List - Unsorted 139 Mearns, E.A., 1898. Notes on the mammals of the Catskill Mountains, New York, with general remarks on the fauna and flora of the region. From Proceedings of the United States National Museum. Vol. XXI, 341-360. Government Printing Office. Washington 140 Mearns, E.A. 1899. Fauna and Flora of the Catskill Mountains: Notes on the Mammals of the Catskill Mountains. The American Naturalist, 33 (386), 166. 141 Medsger, Oliver P. 1918. Two months in the southern Catskills. Bul. Torrey Bot. Club 17:294- 142 Medsger, Oliver P. 1927. Flora of the Catskills (Abstract of a lecture before the Torrey Botanical Club, Novemeber 9, 1926). Torreya 27:13,14.
143 Mencher, E. 1938. A sedimentary study of the Catskill facies in New York State. Thesis (Ph. D.)- -Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
144 Miller, S.J. and Davis, D., 2003. Identifying and optimizing regional relationships for bankfull discharge and hydraulic geometry at USGS stream gage sites in the Catskill Mountains, NY. New York City Dept. of Environmental Protection Technical Report.
145 Mintz, J. S., S. G. Driese, and J. D. White. 2010. Environmental and ecological variability of middle Devonian (Givetian) forests in appalachian basin paleosols, New York, United States. PALAIOS 25, no. 2 (1): 85-96.
146 Mitchell, M.J., C.T. Driscol, J.S. Kahl, G.E. Likens, P.S. Murdoch and L.H. Pardo. 1996. Climate control of nitrate loss from forested watersheds in the northeast United States. Environ. Sci. Technol. 30:2609-2612.
147 Mulvihill, C.I., Baldigo, B.P., and Ernst, A.G., 2009, Fish communities and habitat of geomorphically stable reference reaches in streams of the Catskill Mountain region, New York: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2009–5047, 43 p, online only.
148 Murdoch, P. S. 1992. Chemical budgets and stream-chemistry dynamics of a headwater stream in the Catskill Mountains of New York, 1984-85 October 1, 1983 through September 30, 1985. Water-resources investigations report, 88-4035. Albany, N.Y., Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey 149 Murdoch, P.S. & Stoddard, J.L., The Role of Nitrate in the Acidification of Streams in the Catskill Mountains of New York. Avail. at: http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/1992/92WR00953.shtml 150 Murdoch, P.S. & Stoddard, J.L., 1993. Chemical characteristics and temporal trends in eight streams of the Catskill Mountains, New York. Water, Air, & Soil Pollution, 67(3), 367-395. 151 Murdoch, P. S., & Barnes, C. R. 1996. Stream acidification in the Catskill Mountains of New York. U.S. Geological Survey open-file report, 96-221. Troy, N.Y., U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey.
152 Murdoch, P.S., Burns, D.A. & Lawrence, G.B., 1998. Relation of Climate Change to the Acidification of Surface Waters by Nitrogen Deposition. Environmental Science & Technology, 32(11), 1642-1647. 153 Murphy, M.T. 1999. Population trends and source-sink dynamics of Eastern Kingbirds in the Charlotte Valley of Delaware County, New York. In: M. S. Adams (ed.). Catskill Ecosystem Health. Purple Mountain Press, Fleischmanns, New York. pp. 59-78 Prepared by S.Parisio (sxparisi@gw.dec.state.ny.us) Table 2. Catskill Biodiversity Research & Monitoring Reference List - Unsorted 154 Nevin, F. Reese. 1976. Three New Achipterids from the Catskills of New York State, U.S.A. (Acari; Cryptostigmata; Oribatei; Oribatelloidea; Achipteriidae). Journal of the New York Entomological Society 84, no. 4 (December): 246-253. 155 Ozsvath, David Lynn. 1985. Glacial geomorphology and late Wisconsinan deglaciation of the western Catskill Mountains. PhD Thesis. State University of New York at Binghamton. 219 pages 156 Panday, P. K. 2007. Quantifying water quality from spatially-derived landscape characteristics in the Catskill/Delaware watershed in New York. Thesis (M.S.)--State University of New York. College of Environmental Science and Forestry, Syracuse, NY.
157 Parisio, Steven. 1999. Common vascular plants of the Catskill Mountain Region. In: M. S. Adams (ed.). Catskill Ecosystem Health. Purple Mountain Press, Fleischmanns, New York. pp. 151-168.
158 Passy, S. I., Bode, R. W., Carlson, D. M. and Novak, M. A. 2004. Comparative Environmental Assessment in the Studies of Benthic Diatom, Macroinvertebrate, and Fish Communities. International Review of Hydrobiology, 89: 121–138.
159 Perchemlides, K. A. 1995. Influence of canopy tree species and elevation on rates of net N- mineralization and net nitrification in a Catskill Mountain watershed. In: A. R. Berkowitz, S. E. G. Findlay, and S. T. A. Pickett (eds.). Undergraduate Research Reports--1991, 1992 and 1993. Occasional Publication of the Institute of Ecosystem Studies, No. 10, Millbrook, New York. pp. 131-139. 160 Phelan, F. T. 1998. Glacigenic differences in the clays of the Eastern Catskill Mountains: implications for water quality indicators. Thesis (M.S.)--State University of New York College at New Paltz 161 Pierce-Berrin, C. 2001. Distribution and habitat selection of Bicknell’s Thrush (Catharus bicknelli) in the Catskill Mountains of New York State. M.Sc. thesis, Antioch New England Graduate School, Keene, New Hampshire.
162 Podniesinski, G.S. and D.J. Leopold. 1998. Plant community development and peat stratigraphy in forested fens in response to groundwater flow systems. Wetlands 18:409-430.
163 Ramo, C., 2009. Characterization of natural organic matter in the Catskill watershed, Thesis (M.E.) Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art, Albert Nerken School of Engineering, Graduate Division 164 Rich, John L. 1935. Glacial Geology of the Catskills. New York State Museum Bulletin No. 299. 165 Robinson, G.R., N.D. Wright and I.P. Robinson. 1999. Land use history and spatial variability in the beech bark disease. In: M. S. Adams (ed.). Catskill Ecosystem Health. Purple Mountain Press, Fleischmanns, New York. pp. 31-52 166 Rogers, W.B., L.V. Rickard, J.M. Lauber, E. Landing, and Y.W. Isachsen, Editors. 2000. Geology of New York: A Simplified Account, Second Edition. Educational Leaflet No. 28. 284 pp., 169 figs., 4 pls.(Geologic Highway Map).
167 Ruiz-Mendez, J. J. 1995. Spatial variations of soil chemistry at the Winnisook watershed in the Catskill Mountains and their effect on the streamwater chemistry. Thesis (M.S.)--Syracuse University Prepared by S.Parisio (sxparisi@gw.dec.state.ny.us) Table 2. Catskill Biodiversity Research & Monitoring Reference List - Unsorted 168 Scheckler, S.E. & Banks, H.P., 1971. Proteokalon a New Genus of Progymnosperms from the Devonian of New York State and Its Bearing on Phylogenetic Trends in the Group. American Journal of Botany, 58(9), 874-884. 169 Seifried, S.T. (1989) Soil Survey of Sullivan County New York. United States Department of Agriculture – Soil Conservation Service, in cooperation with Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station. U.S. Government Printing Office. 267 p.
170 Seifried, S.T. and M.W. Havens (2006) Soil Survey of Delaware County New York. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture – Soil Conservation Service, in cooperation with Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station. U.S. Government Printing Office. 619 p.
171 Simkin, S.M. et al., 2004. Determination of sulfate, nitrate, and chloride in throughfall using ion- exchange resins. Water, Air, & Soil Pollution, 153(1), 343-354. 172 Skinner, Kathleen M. and Jessica D. Bennett. 2007. Altered gill morphology in benthic macroinvertebrates from mercury enriched streams in the Neversink Reservoir Watershed, New York. Ecotoxicology 16:311–316 173 Smith, S. J. 1976. Rare and endangered plants in the Catskills. Catskill study report, no. 15. [Albany, N.Y.], New York State Department of Environmental Conservation.
174 Spada, Daniel M. 1985. Characterization of the high elevation wetlands of the Catskill Mountains. MS. Thesis. State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry. 175 Starkey, Simon R., Maurice E. White, and Hussni O. Mohammed. 2007. Cryptosporidium and Dairy Cattle in the Catskill/Delaware Watershed: A Quantitative Risk Assessment. Risk Analysis 27, no. 6: 1469-1485. 176 Stehly, M. P. 1972. A water quality study of five streams in the Catskill Mountains. Thesis (M.S.)--State University College of Forestry at Syracuse University. Syracuse, NY.
177 Stoddard, John L. 1991. Trends in Catskill Stream Water Quality: Evidence From Historical Data. Water Resour. Res. 27, no. 11: 2855-2864. 178 Stoddard, John L. and Peter S. Murdoch. 1991. Chapter 8. Catskill Mountains. In Donald F. Charles (Editor) Acidic Deposition and Aquatic Ecosystems – Regional Case Studies. Springer-Verlag. New York. pp 237-271.
179 Taylor, Aravilla Meek. 1924. Some pterdophytes of the western Catskills. Amer. Fern Journ. 180 Taylor, Aravilla Meek. 1927. Moss habitats of the western Catskills. Bryologist 30:9-12.
181 Templer, P., S. Findlay, and G. Lovett. 2003. Soil microbial biomass and nitrogen transformations among five species of the Catskill Mountains, New York, USA. Soil Biol. Biochem. 35:607-613.
182 Templer, P. H. and T. E. Dawson. 2004. Nitrogen uptake by four tree species of the Catskill Mountains, New York: Implications for forest N dynamics. Plant and Soil 262:251-261.
183 Templer, P. H., G. M. Lovett, K. C. Weathers, S. E. G. Findlay, and T. E. Dawson. 2005. Influence of tree species on forest nitrogen retention in the Catskill Mountains, New York, USA. Ecosystems 8(1) 1-16. 184 Templer, P. et al., 2007. Plant and soil natural abundance δ 15N: indicators of relative rates of nitrogen cycling in temperate forest ecosystems. Oecologia, 153(2), 399-406. Prepared by S.Parisio (sxparisi@gw.dec.state.ny.us) Table 2. Catskill Biodiversity Research & Monitoring Reference List - Unsorted 185 Templer, P. H. 2001. Direct and indirect effects of tree species on forest nitrogen retention in the Catskill Mountains, NY. Ph.D. Thesis, Ithaca, New York, Cornell University. 102 pp. 186 Templer, P.H., 2005. Tree Species Effects on Nitrogen Cycling and Retention: A Synthesis of Studies Using 15N Tracers. In Tree Species Effects on Soils: Implications for Global Change. pp. 51-69. 187 Tessier, J. T. 2002. Vernal ecophysiology of understory vegetation and soil microbes in a second- growth northern hardwood forest of the Catskill Mountains, New York. Thesis (Ph. D.)--State University of New York. College of Environmental Science and Forestry, Syracuse, NY.
188 Tessier, J.T. & Raynal, D.J., 2003. Vernal nitrogen and phosphorus retention by forest understory vegetation and soil microbes. Plant and Soil, 256(2), 443-453. 189 Tessier, Jack T., and Dudley J. Raynal. 2003. Use of nitrogen to phosphorus ratios in plant tissue as an indicator of nutrient limitation and nitrogen saturation. Journal of Applied Ecology 40, no. 3: 523-534.
190 Tessier, J.T., 2004. Leaf longevity of Oxalis acetosella (Oxalidaceae) in the Catskill Mountains, New York, USA. Am. J. Bot., 91(9), 1371-1377. 191 Tessier, Jack T. 2007. Re-establishment of three dominant herbaceous understory species following fine-scale disturbance in a Catskill northern hardwood forest. The Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society 134, no. 1 (1): 34-44. 192 Thaler, Jerome S. 1996. Catskill Weather. Purple Mountain Press, Fleishmanns, New York. 167 193 Tiner, R. W. and J. Stewart. 2004. Wetland characterization and preliminary assessment of wetland functions for the Delaware and Catskill watersheds of the New York City Water Supply System. Hadley, MA, USA U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, National Wetlands Inventory, Ecological Services, Region 5.
194 Titus, Robert. 2003. The Catskills in the Ice Age. 2nd Edition. Purple Mountain Press, 195 Titus, Robert. 2004. The Catskills: A Geological Guide. 3rd Edition. Purple Mountain Press, 196 Tornes, L.A. (1979) Soil Survey of Ulster County New York. United States Department of Agriculture – Soil Conservation Service, in cooperation with Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station. U.S. Government Printing Office. 273 p.
197 Townsend, Jason M. 2008. Mercury in Terrestrial Environments: A Large-Scale Assessment of Bioaccumulation and Food Web Transfer In Three Habitat-Specialist Songbirds. Research Report to the Edna Bailey Sussman Foundation. SUNY-College of Environmental Science and Forestry. Available at http://www.esf.edu/sussman/documents/Townsend-report.doc 198 Venterea, R.T. et al., 2003. Landscape Patterns of Net Nitrification in a Northern Hardwood- Conifer Forest. Soil Sci Soc Am J, 67(2), 527-539. 199 Verchot, L.V. et al., 2001. Gross vs net rates of N mineralization and nitrification as indicators of functional differences between forest types. Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 33(14), 1889-1901. Prepared by S.Parisio (sxparisi@gw.dec.state.ny.us) Table 2. Catskill Biodiversity Research & Monitoring Reference List - Unsorted 200 Vitvar, Tomas, Douglas A. Burns, Gregory B. Lawrence, Jeffrey J. McDonnell, and David M. Wolock. 2002. Estimation of baseflow residence times in watersheds from the runoff hydrograph recession: method and application in the Neversink watershed, Catskill Mountains, New York. Hydrological Processes 16, no. 9: 1871-1877. 201 Wang, X., D.A. Burns, R.D. Yanai, R.D. Briggs, R.H. Germain 2006. Changes in stream chemistry and nutrient export following a partial harvest in the Catskill Mountains, New York, USA. Forest Ecology and Management, 223(1-3), 103-112. 202 Warren, Dana R, Ernst, Anne G, and Baldigo, Barry P. 2009. Influence of Spring Floods on Year- Class Strength of Fall- and Spring-Spawning Salmonids in Catskill Mountain Streams. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society [Trans. Am. Fish. Soc.]. Vol. 138, no. 1, pp. 200-210.
203 Way, J. H., 1972. A more detailed discussion of the depositional environmental analysis: Middle and Upper Devonian sedimentary rocks, Catskill Mountain area, New York, Ph.D. dissertation, Rensselaer Polytech. Inst., Troy, NY, 145 p.
204 Weathers, K.C., Lovett, G.M. & Likens, G.E. 1995. Cloud deposition to a spruce forest edge. Atmospheric Environment, 29(6), 665-672. 205 Weathers, K. C., G. M. Lovett, G. E. Likens, and R. Lathrop. 2000. The effect of four landscape features on atmospheric deposition to the Hunter Mountain region, Catskill Mountains, NewYork. Ecological Applications 10:528-540.
206 Wells, J.V.B. 1958. Floods of 1950-51 in the Catskill Mountain region, New York. Water Supply Paper 1227-C. US Geological Survey Welsch, D.L., McDonnell, J.J., Burns, D.A., and Kroll, C., 2001, Relationships between topography and chemistry in subsurface stormflow, Hydrological Processes, 15: 1925-1938.
208 West, J. 2000. Influence of hydrology on nitrate release from forested watersheds of the Catskill Mountains, NY. In: A. R. Berkowitz. S. E. G. Findlay, and S. T. A. Pickett. (eds.). Undergraduate Research Reports -- Summer 1996 and 1997. Occasional Publication of the Institute of Ecosystem Studies, Number 14, Millbrook, New York. pp. 81-86. 209 West, A. J., S. E. G. Findlay, D. A. Burns, K. C. Weathers, and G. M. Lovett. 2001. Catchment-scale variation in the nitrate concentration of groundwater seeps in the Catskill Mountains, New York, U.S.A. Water Air Soil Pollut. 132:389-400. 210 Wiley, Farida. 1936. Catskill trip (of the Torrey Botanical Club). September 12-14 (1936). 211 Willis, B. J. 1987. Sedimentology of the upper Middle Devonian Catskill magnafacies at the Catskill Front, New York. Thesis (M.A.)--State University of New York at Binghamton.
212 Wolff, M. P. 1963. Stratigraphy and clay mineralogy of lower Hamilton sedimentary rocks along the Catskill escarpment in southeastern New York. Thesis (M.S.)--University of Rochester. Dept. of Geology and Geography.
213 Wygodzinsky, Pedro. 1973. On a Species of Simulium (Ectemnaspis) from the Northeastern United States (Diptera). Journal of the New York Entomological Society 81, no. 1 (March): 10-12. Prepared by S.Parisio (sxparisi@gw.dec.state.ny.us) Table 2. Catskill Biodiversity Research & Monitoring Reference List - Unsorted 214 Wyman, R.L. 1999. Environmental influences on amphibian communities in the Catskill Mountain Region of and amphibians as regulators of forest floor dynamics. In: M. S. Adams (ed.). Catskill Ecosystem Health. Purple Mountain Press, Fleischmanns, New York. pp. 117-132 215 Yorks, T.E., Leopold, D.J. & Raynal, D.J., 2000. Vascular plant propagule banks of six eastern hemlock stands in the Catskill Mountains of New York. Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society, 127(1), 87-93. 216 Yorks, T.E. 2001. Effects of forest harvest, deer herbivory, and tree mortality on nutrient cycling in the Catskill Mountains of New York. Ph.D Thesis. State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry. 265 pages; AAT 3007108 217 Zheng, X. 2007. Linear unmixing of AVIRIS data to identify white ash in the Catskill mountain region, New York. Thesis (M.S.)-- State University of New York. College of Environmental Science and Forestry, Syracuse, NY.
218 Ziegler, Peter E., Susan E. Wade, Stephanie L. Schaaf, David A. Stern, Christopher A. Nadareski, and Hussni O. Mohammed. 2007. Prevalence of Cryptosporidium species in wildlife populations within a watershed landscape in southeastern New York State. Veterinary Parasitology 147, no. 1-2 (June 20): 176-184. Prepared by S.Parisio (sxparisi@gw.dec.state.ny.us)

Source: http://www.catskillinstitute.org/bibliography.pdf

Emergency medicine

Emergency Medicine Clerkship Handbook Created by: Emergency Medicine Clerkship Seminar Series Objectives All seminars are small group, case based sessions, with an emphasis on interaction 1. Toxicology Describe the specific components of ABC’s as they refer to emergency assessment. Take a goal directed history in order to identify the offending toxin, and quantifying the amount of

Ene_1231_com 666.672

2. Headache Classification Committee of thereport of a patient with triptan responsiveInternational Headache Society The Inter-national Classification of Headache Dis-orders. Cephalalgia 2004; 24: 1–160. 3. Relja G, Zorzon M, Locatelli L, Carraro N,istered on an open-label basis; (2) frova-cervical and intracranial vessels and thetriptan was effective only two times; andhistory gave

Copyright © 2014 Medical Pdf Articles