volume 15 author indexer.uwpress.org/content/15/2/local/back-matter.pdfan introduction to the...

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Volume 15 Author Index Abrahamson, J., 44 Abrahamson, W., 44 Ahearn-Meyerson, L., 156 Albazzaz, M.B., 1 Allen, J.A., 113, 127 Amsberry, K., 168 Anderson, B., 102 Anderson, B.W., 54.1 Anderson, R., 34 Auble, G.T., 120 Back, J., 120 Baron, D., 28.1 Barth, S., 180 Belsky, J., 67 Benefield, C., 54.2 Berlyn, G.P., 156 Beyers, J., 43.1 Bissett, N., 6 Blakespoor, G., 7 Bossard, C., 54.2 Botti, S., 71.2 Bowles, M., 30 Boyd, D., 54.3 Briese, D., 60 Briggs, J., 11 Brinson, M.M., 115 Brooks, R.P., 117 Brumback, B., 48 Brunner, R.D., 176 Burke, D., pp. 168-172 Cairns, Jr., J., 89 California EPPC Broom Control Working Group, 54.4 Cannon, J., 85 Carleton, G., 82 Carter, J., 160 Castille, S., 160 Chambers, J.L., 127 Charles, L., 83.1 Choi, Y., 133 Christensen, J., 35 Ciravolo, T.G., 37 Clubine, S., 148 Cohn, E., 15 Cole, C.A., 125 Colthurst, K., 13 Conrad, E., 16 Cowan, B., 42 Creech, D., 141 Crisman, T., 118 Cronin, G., 51 Crowder, W.A., 145, 146 Davis, A., 107 Davis, K.J., 3 Davis, M., 107 Davis, M.M., 25 de Szalay, F.A., 112 Dedy, P., 17 Dietz, J., 85 Dietz, L., 85 Doren, R., 27 Drummond, C., 17 Durbahn, B.J., 2 Edelen, W.J., 145,146 Egan, D., pp. 38-44, 125, 70, 92-96, 98, 185-196, 198 Englert, J.M., 135 Farley, P.M., 115 Fischer, R.A., 154 Fishman, N., 86 France, R., 121 Francis, J., 18 Francisco, R., 28.2 Friedman, J.M., 120 Fry, J., 123 Fuge, E.L., 157 Garbisch, E., 114 Gascon, C., 108 Gibb-Randall, S., pp. 64-66 Gill, C., 16 Givnish, T., 9 Glass, S., 70, 91 Gobster, P.H., pp. 32-37 Gordon, D., 75 Gordon-Reedy, P., 47 Grant, J., 61 Gregory, S., 165 Grese, R., pp. 64-66 Gruber, E., 167.1 Grumbine, R.E., 177 Gustafson, E., 109 Hall, M., pp. 173-178 Halward, T., 49 Hanbey, R., 78 Handel, S., 33 Harmer, R., 19 Harper, M.G., 154 Harris, J., p. 5 Harty, F., 183 Hawkes, C., 45 Heckman, J.R., 89 Heim, J., 65 Higgs, E., 178 Hill, P.Q., 157 Hirsch, D., 162 Hodge, S., 19 Holderman, R., 36 Holmes, T., 20 Hormann, J.W., 14 Ibsen, T., 107 Jaffee, D., pp. 147-155 Jellinek, A., 21 Johnson, K., 30 Johnson, S.R., 136, 142 Jones, R., 68 Jordan III. W.R., pp. 3-4, 16, 115 Joumet, A.R.P., 14 Jurena, P., 12 Kaye, T., 137.1 Keane, M.T., 66 Kent, R., 13 King, S.L., 113 Kitajima, K., 8 Klauke Minato, A., p. 183 Kline, A., 40 Knapp, A., 103 Knott, D.M., 128 Kress, S.W., 124 Ksander, G.G., 122 Kujawski, J.L., 135 Kutka, F.J., 158 Lambdin, P., 61 Laurence, W., 108 Leach, M., 9 Ledbetter, W., 73 Lee, V.J., 120 Lesica, P., 62 Lockwood, J.L., pp. 45-50 Longnecker, M.T., 129 Lym, R., 149 Magill, A., 79.1 Mansfield, B., pp. 138-146 Martin, C.O., 154 Martin, D.W., 130 Masters, R.A., 63 May, J., 7 Mayfield, A.E., 156 McBride, J., 30 McGinnis, M.V., pp. 74-77 Mclninch, S., 114 McLain, J.E.T., 156 McLeod, K.W., 37 McMahan, L., 175.1 Means, D.B., pp. 52-55 Meinke, R., 168 Menges, E., 45, 75 Mesta, R., 76 Metcalfe, B., 72 Meyer, G., 111.1 Miller, D., 129 Millett, P., 15 Miner, J.J., pp. 156-160 Mistretta, O., 47 Mitsch, W.J., 119 Molnar, G., 27 Muir, T., 179 Mulholland, R., 150 Munro, J., 181 Nellis, D., 11 Northrup, K., 31 Noss, R., 84 O’Keefe, M., 100 Oelschlaeger, M., 88 Omi, P., 71.2 Osmund, D., 144 Palermo, M.R., 25 Parker, G., 109 Patten, D.T., 123 Patterson, D.R., 131 Pena, G., 43.1 Peters, J.R., 1 Pezeshki, S.R., 127 Pierce, E., 46 Portier, K., 118 Pritchett, D.A., p. 51 Prybyla, D., 180 Reed, M.R., 37 Reiley, J., 72 Reinartz, J.A., 90, 151 RESTORATION & MANAGEMENT NOTES 15:2 Winter 1997 217

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Page 1: Volume 15 Author Indexer.uwpress.org/content/15/2/local/back-matter.pdfAn Introduction to the Tallgrass Prairie of the Upper Midwest: Its History, Ecology, Pres-ervation and Reconstruction

Volume 15 Author IndexAbrahamson, J., 44Abrahamson, W., 44Ahearn-Meyerson, L., 156Albazzaz, M.B., 1Allen, J.A., 113, 127Amsberry, K., 168Anderson, B., 102Anderson, B.W., 54.1Anderson, R., 34Auble, G.T., 120Back, J., 120Baron, D., 28.1Barth, S., 180Belsky, J., 67Benefield, C., 54.2Berlyn, G.P., 156Beyers, J., 43.1Bissett, N., 6Blakespoor, G., 7Bossard, C., 54.2Botti, S., 71.2Bowles, M., 30Boyd, D., 54.3Briese, D., 60Briggs, J., 11Brinson, M.M., 115Brooks, R.P., 117Brumback, B., 48Brunner, R.D., 176Burke, D., pp. 168-172Cairns, Jr., J., 89California EPPC Broom Control Working

Group, 54.4Cannon, J., 85Carleton, G., 82Carter, J., 160Castille, S., 160Chambers, J.L., 127Charles, L., 83.1Choi, Y., 133Christensen, J., 35Ciravolo, T.G., 37Clubine, S., 148Cohn, E., 15Cole, C.A., 125Colthurst, K., 13Conrad, E., 16Cowan, B., 42Creech, D., 141Crisman, T., 118Cronin, G., 51Crowder, W.A., 145, 146Davis, A., 107Davis, K.J., 3Davis, M., 107Davis, M.M., 25de Szalay, F.A., 112Dedy, P., 17Dietz, J., 85Dietz, L., 85Doren, R., 27

Drummond, C., 17Durbahn, B.J., 2Edelen, W.J., 145,146Egan, D., pp. 38-44, 125, 70, 92-96, 98,

185-196, 198Englert, J.M., 135Farley, P.M., 115Fischer, R.A., 154Fishman, N., 86France, R., 121Francis, J., 18Francisco, R., 28.2Friedman, J.M., 120Fry, J., 123Fuge, E.L., 157Garbisch, E., 114Gascon, C., 108Gibb-Randall, S., pp. 64-66Gill, C., 16Givnish, T., 9Glass, S., 70, 91Gobster, P.H., pp. 32-37Gordon, D., 75Gordon-Reedy, P., 47Grant, J., 61Gregory, S., 165Grese, R., pp. 64-66Gruber, E., 167.1Grumbine, R.E., 177Gustafson, E., 109Hall, M., pp. 173-178Halward, T., 49Hanbey, R., 78Handel, S., 33Harmer, R., 19Harper, M.G., 154Harris, J., p. 5Harty, F., 183Hawkes, C., 45Heckman, J.R., 89Heim, J., 65Higgs, E., 178Hill, P.Q., 157Hirsch, D., 162Hodge, S., 19Holderman, R., 36Holmes, T., 20Hormann, J.W., 14Ibsen, T., 107Jaffee, D., pp. 147-155Jellinek, A., 21Johnson, K., 30Johnson, S.R., 136, 142Jones, R., 68Jordan III. W.R., pp. 3-4, 16, 115Joumet, A.R.P., 14Jurena, P., 12Kaye, T., 137.1Keane, M.T., 66Kent, R., 13King, S.L., 113Kitajima, K., 8Klauke Minato, A., p. 183Kline, A., 40

Knapp, A., 103Knott, D.M., 128Kress, S.W., 124Ksander, G.G., 122Kujawski, J.L., 135Kutka, F.J., 158Lambdin, P., 61Laurence, W., 108Leach, M., 9Ledbetter, W., 73Lee, V.J., 120Lesica, P., 62Lockwood, J.L., pp. 45-50Longnecker, M.T., 129Lym, R., 149Magill, A., 79.1Mansfield, B., pp. 138-146Martin, C.O., 154Martin, D.W., 130Masters, R.A., 63May, J., 7Mayfield, A.E., 156McBride, J., 30McGinnis, M.V., pp. 74-77Mclninch, S., 114McLain, J.E.T., 156McLeod, K.W., 37McMahan, L., 175.1Means, D.B., pp. 52-55Meinke, R., 168Menges, E., 45, 75Mesta, R., 76Metcalfe, B., 72Meyer, G., 111.1Miller, D., 129Millett, P., 15Miner, J.J., pp. 156-160Mistretta, O., 47Mitsch, W.J., 119Molnar, G., 27Muir, T., 179Mulholland, R., 150Munro, J., 181Nellis, D., 11Northrup, K., 31Noss, R., 84O’Keefe, M., 100Oelschlaeger, M., 88Omi, P., 71.2Osmund, D., 144Palermo, M.R., 25Parker, G., 109Patten, D.T., 123Patterson, D.R., 131Pena, G., 43.1Peters, J.R., 1Pezeshki, S.R., 127Pierce, E., 46Portier, K., 118Pritchett, D.A., p. 51Prybyla, D., 180Reed, M.R., 37Reiley, J., 72Reinartz, J.A., 90, 151

RESTORATION & MANAGEMENT NOTES 15:2 Winter 1997 217

Page 2: Volume 15 Author Indexer.uwpress.org/content/15/2/local/back-matter.pdfAn Introduction to the Tallgrass Prairie of the Upper Midwest: Its History, Ecology, Pres-ervation and Reconstruction

Resh, V.H., 112Rheinhardt, R.D., 115Rhodes, R., 107Rice, C., 155Richter, K.O., pp. 60-63Rideout, D., 71.2Rodgers, T., 46Rosentreter, R., 132.1Ross, L.M., pp. 17-24Ross, P.R., 69, 80Rusmore, J.T., 54.5Samway, M., 87Scarletelli, K.R., 24Schlobohm, P., 71.1Schwartz, M., 65Scott, M.L., 120Scott, So, 141Seims, F.E., 129Shaw, P., 41Shaw, R., 49Shelly, J., 62Shore, D., pp. 25-31, 174Shore, E., 180Simon, S.D., pp. 156-160Simpson, D., pp. 179-182Smith, D., 2Sobata, M., 116Spencer, D.F., 122Spetich, M., 109St. John, T., 50Stanton, B., 161Stassforth, M., 134Stauffer, A.L., 117Stevens, N., 81Stevens, W., 170Stevenson, M., 165Stone, S.L., 52, 104Stoynoff, N., 30Streever, W., 118Stromberg, J.T., pp. 161-167, 123, 182Strong, D., 28.1Swengel, S., 10Taylor, S.H., 14Tenebaum, D., 64Thompson, A., 15;2Thuesen, K., 164Tilman, D., 8, 105Titre, J.P., 26Tolliver, K.S., 130Towne, E., 103Towns, D., pp. 138-146Trame, A.M., 154Tran, H., 107Travis, C., 69Trent Vaselaar, R., pp. 119-125Van Auken, O., 12Vivian-Smith, G., 33Waldron, G., 13Wayne, L., 28.3Webb, J.W., 129Wedin, D., 105Weitzenberg, J., 5;3Wells, E., 77Wendt, P.H., 128Wenner, E.L., 128Wester, A., 106Whitaker, G., 32

Whitney, B., pp. 6-15, 126-137Whittey, A., pp. 67-73Whytemare, A., 167.1Wilder, T., 171Williams, A.H., pp. 116-118Williams, T., 153Wilson, E., 39Wilson, M.V., 3Wilson, R.F., 119Windhager, S., 184Winkler, P., 99Winn, J., 110Wolden, L.G., pp. 161-167Wolff, R., 142Woolley, J.T., pp. 74-77Woolston, D., 135Wuerthner, G., 23Young, D.R., 130Young, T. P., 106Youtie, B., 147.1Yozzo, D.J., 26Zentner, J., pp. 56-59, 5;3

Volume 15 Subject IndexA Century of Dishonor, p. 40A Guide to Using Native Plants on Dis-

turbed Land 198A Restoration of an Urban Salt Marsh: An In-

terdisciplinary Approach 187Abram, David, p. 71Abutilon parvulum, p. 165Acacia greggii, p. 120Acer-Tilia forest, earthworms effect on 143Achillea millefolium var. alpicola, propagation

of 137.1acorns, harvest/storage/propagation of 20Acourtia wrightii, p. 165adaptive management 26, 176Agalinis acuta, propagation of 48Aldrich, Richard J. 185Alien Invaders: The Continuing Threat of Ex.

otic Species 188all-terrain vehicles, fire-fighting and 157Allen, William, biocultural restoration and,

p. 152Alliance to Let Nature Take Its Course, pp.

26, 29Alliaria petiolata, prescribed burning and 64allogenic succession, community assembly

rules and, pp. 47-48Alnus rhombifolia, p. 56Amaranthus palmeri, p. 165Ambrosia dumosa 131Ammodramus henslowi, management of prai-

ries for 10ammodramus savannarum, management of

prairies for 10Amsinckia intermedia, p. 165An Introduction to the Tallgrass Prairie of the

Upper Midwest: Its History, Ecology, Pres-ervation and Reconstruction 194

Anderson, Kat, pp. 69, 176

Anderson, Roger, pp. 64-65Andow, David A. 197Apfelbaum, Steven 186Appellplatz, p. 115Arabis fecunda, effect of Centaurea maculosa

on 62arid-land restoration 131arid-land riparian ecosystems, pp. 119-125,

161-167, 182Aristida beyrichiana, pp. 52-55, 6Aristida stricta, pp. 52-55

Aristolochia watsonii, p. 166Arizona Game and Fish Department, p. 123Armstrong, Pat, p. 7Art, Henry W. 91assembly theory, restoration-related projects

and, pp. 47-48, 51Association of Wetland Managers 98Aster furcatus 139Astragulus cottonii, propagation of 137.1Australia 93autogenic succession, community assembly

rules and, pp. 47-48Avicennia germinans 125Babbitt, Bruce, p. 119, 46Baccharis halimifolia, effect of flooding on 130Bader Memorial Park, p. 10Balaban, Jane, p. 27Balaban, John, p. 29Balsam, Jan, p. 123Baptisia spp., effect of burning on germina-

tion of 136Bateson, Gregorg, p. 71Bay Area Action Habitat Restoration Project

98Ben Meadows Company 98Bennett, Lynne 187Bernard, Ted 92Berry, Thomas, p. 69Betz, Robert, pp. 19, 29, 43Bierregaard, Jr., Richard O. 197Big Oak Tree Park (Missouri) 14Billy Budd, p. 4biocontrol 167.1, 195biocultural restoration, p. 152Bioengineering Group 198Birch, Paul 89birds, use of restored mangrove wetland and

125bison grazing 11Black Hawk County Landfill 2Blowing Rocks Preserve, p. 28, 195Bond, Will 69, 80Bontrager, Orvin, p. 133Botkin, Daniel, p. 68bottomland hardwood forests 22, 113Boutetoua aristidoides, p. 165Bouteloua barbata, p. 165Bowlesia incana, p. 165Bowling Green State University 77Boyce, Mark S. 186Bragg, Tom, p. 11Briggs, Mark A. 182Bromus carinatus, p. 165Bromus inermis 7Bronny, Chris, pp. 117-118Brooklyn Botanic Garden 91

218 RESTORATION ~ MANAGEMENT NOTES 15:2 Winter 1997

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Brown, Bryan T., p. 125Brown, Tom C. 195Buffalo Commons, pp. 14-15, 95, 193Building Bridges Workshop 180California Coastal Conservancy 86California Exotic Pest Plant Council 198California gnatcatcher, use of recently-burned

areas and 43.1California Native Plant Society 98Campbell, Andrew 93Campbell, Joseph, p. 4Capotosto, Paul M. 190Cardus nutans, biocontrol of 61Carex phaeocephala, propagation of 137.1Carlos Williams, William, p. 68Carothers, Steven W., p 125.Casagrande, David G. 187cattle grazing, prairies and pp. 116-118, 5Celtis reticulata, p. 120Centaurea maculosa, effect of on Arabis fe-cunda 62

Centaurea solstitialis, control of 54.5Center for Plant Conservation 90, 198certification, restorationists and, p. 5Chansnoh, Pisit 126chaparral vegetation, effect of prescribed

burns on 134Chapin, Theodore 170Chapman, Kim Alan 186Chicago Biodiversity Council, pp. 22-24Chicago Botanic Garden 40Chicago Wilderness, pp. 17-24Clematis drummondi, p. 165Clements, Frederick, p. 7coal mine spoils, reclamation of 72Coastal Plains Institute and Land Conser-

vancy, p. 53coastal sage scrub 46Coenocrorypha aucklandica, p. 142Coffey, Ray, anti-restoration columns of, pp.

26Collard III, Sneed B. 188Colorado River, pp. 119-125combine seed collector, pp. 128-129common murre 138community assembly rules or patterns, pp.

45-51Community Forest Enterprises, pp. 150-152Community Forest movement (Mexico), pp.

150community-based woodland restoration 13compost, use of as soil amendment 164computer modelling, community assembly

and, p. 47Connecticut of Environmental Protection

190conservation of large natural areas, develop-

ment rights and 46conservation biology 84, 85conservation biology, ecological restoration

and 186Conservation Reserve Program, pp. 11-12Conservation Through Cultural Survival: Indige.

nous Peoples and Protected Areas 196Cook County Forest Preserve District, con-

troversy over restoration activities in, pp.25-27, 29-31, 32-37, 174

Craig’s Juicy Gossip 98

CRC Press/St. Lucie Press 198created and natural wetlands, comparison of

118Cucurbita digitata, p. 165Curtis, John T., p. 41, 9Cuscuta eropaea 166cut-stump technique, time delay and 144Cuvier Island (New Zealand), p. 141Cynodon dactylon, p. 162Cynoramphus forbesi, p. 142Cytisus scoparius 56Dahir, Sally 21Daigle, Jean-Marc 94Dalea leporina, pp. 135-136debris fans, high-volume flows and, p. 122deciduous forests, monitoring the condition

of 17deer herbivory 106Defenders of Wildlife, wolf reintroduction

and 170deforestation, causes of in Mexico, pp. 150-

152Des Plaines River Wetland Demonstration

Project 34Deschampsia atropurpurea var. Iatifolia, propa-

gation of 137.1Deschampsia cespitosa var. cespitosa, propaga-

tion of 137.1development rights, conservation of large

natural areas and 46di Berenger, Adolfo, pp. 176-177Dicoria canescens, p. 165Dioscorea bulbifera, control of 150Distichlis spicata, p. 162Dittmer, Laura 189Dodecahema Ieptoceras, germination and prop-

agation of 47Don River Restoration Project 98donor soils, wetlands and, pp. 168-172Drake, Jim, pp. 45, 47Dreyer, Glenn D. 190Drucker, Peter, p. 69earthworms, deleterious effects of 143Eastern Egg Rock (Maine) 124Ecological Interactions and Biological Control

197ecological restoration, call for a redefinition

of, p. 154ecological restoration, conservation biology

and 186ecological restoration, perceptions of 175.1,

178Ecological Program at the JFK Space Center

98Ecological Restoration of Southwestern For-

ests 98Ecology and Economics of the Great Plains 193economics, restoration and, pp. 147-153ecosystem management 176, 177Ecosystem Management: Applications for Sus-

tainable Forest and Wildlife Resources 186educational workshop (Ohio) 77Effects of Fire on Threatened and Endangered

Plants: An Annotated Bibliography 191Elaeagnus angustifolia, control of 146Elliptio dilitata 38Elliot, John, p. 122

Elymus glaucus var. glaucus, propagation of137.1

Elymus pycnanthus 41Emerson, Ralph W., p. 3endangered species, effects of fire on 191English rivers, rehabilitation of 39Environmental Partners Fund grant 13Environmental Ethics 98Environmental Pragmatism 97, 184Epilobium alpinum var. alpinum, propagation

of 137.1Erigeron surinervis var. conspicuus, propagation

of 137.1Etude sur les Torrents des Hautes-Alpes, p. 175Euphorbia esula, biocontrol of 59Euphorbia esula, effect of PLATEAU herbi-

cide on 63Everglades National Park 27, 195exotic species, publications about 188, 192,

195EZJECT, control of Rhamnus cathartica and

70Falk, Don A. 90Fallugia paradoxa, p. 120farm subsidies, Great Plains ecosystems and

193Fell, George B., p. 44fen, effect of dormant-season fires on 30Fenn, Denis, p. 124Fermi National Laboratory, p. 19, 98Fern Ridge Natural Area 3Ferren, Wayne, p. 51Festuca idahoensis var. oregana, propagation of

137.1Fire Effects Info 198fire management planning, public participa-

tion and 83.1fire-retardant foam 157Florida 195Florida Institute of Phosphate Research 163Florida scrubland communities 44, 45Floristic Quality Assessment 99Floristic Quality Index 99foam surfactants, prescribed burns and 71.1forest fragmentation 108forestry, economics of, pp. 151-152Forestry Suppliers 198Form, Substance and Difference, p. 71Fort McCoy (Wisconsin) 171Franklin, Jerry 186Fremont cottonwood-Goodding’s willow for-

est, pp. 162-165Fremont-Kramer Desert Tortoise Critical

Habitat Unit 131freshwater mussels, effect of relocation on 38Galeano, Eduardo, p. 69Galerucella nymphaeae, biocontrol of purple

loosestrife and 51Garkovich, Lorraine, p. 71Genista monspessulana, effect of basal bark

treatment on 54.4Genista monspessulana, effect of cut-and-burn

strategy on 54.3Gerloff, Gerald, p. 10Gerloff, Robert, p. 10Glen Canyon Dam, pp. 119-125Glen Canyon Dam Experiment, archeologi-

cal artifacts and, pp. 123

RESTORATION & MANAGEMENT NOTES 15:2 Winter 1997 219

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Glen Canyon Dam Experiment, aquatic sys-tems and, pp. 123

Glen Canyon Environmental Studies Group,pp. 120-124

global warming, prairies and 105glyphosate, persistence in soil of 156Godschalk, Clarence, pp. 41-42Golden Gate National Recreation Area 98Gopherus agassi~di, habitat creation for 131Grand Canyon, pp. 119-125Grand Canyon Protection Act of 1992, p.

120Grand Canyon, A Century of Change: Repho-

tography of the 1889-1890 Stanton Expedi-tion, p. 125

grassland fauna, grazing and, pp. 116-118Grasslands of the Great Plains, p. 7grazing management, prairies and, pp. 116-

118grazing, prairie grasses and 102Great Plains 95,193Greene, Henry, p. 41greentree reservoirs 113Greider, Thomas, p. 71Griffiths, P.G., p. 122Groundworks ’94 98Guara parviflora, p. 136Guerrant, Jr., Edward 90Guide to the Wild Flowering Plants of the Chi-

cago Region, p. 43Guild for Ecological Salvage 80Gymnogyps californianus 76Habitat Restoration Group 98Hackensack Meadowlands Development

Commission 24Hamilton, Bob 159Haney, Alan 186Harris, James A. 89Harrison, Daniel 170Hassayampa River Reserve, pp. 161-167Havinga, Donna 94Hawthorne, Nathaniel, p. 3hay-seeding, prairies and, p. 137healing and restoration, the distinction be-

tween, p. 115Hedysarum occidentale, propagation of 137.1Henderson, Hazel, p. 68Hessl, Amy 191Hewitt, Chad, p. 47Hibiscus dascalyx, propagation of 141high-volume releases from dams, pp. 119-

125, 35, 120, 123HilIaria rigida 131Hoffman, Randy 192Hole-in-the-Donut 27Hordeum murinum 41

House, Freeman, pp. 69-70Hualapai Tribe, p. 123human alienation from nature, pp. 68-73Human Nature, p. 182humpback chub, p. 123Hydrilla verticillata, effect of anaerobic condi-

tions on 122hydrogeomorphic assessment (HGM) 115hydroseeding, seaweed gels and 65Hypericum perforatum, biocontrol of 60ideas of nature, shame and, pp. 3-4Idraulica Fisica e Spermimentale, p. 175IES 900: Restoring Nature 98

Illinois Natural History Survey--TallgrassPrairie 98

imported wetland soils, wetland restorationand 33

Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore 133indigenous knowledge, respect for, p. 70indigenous peoples, conservation initiatives

and, pp. 123, 144-146, 196Innovation and Entrepreneurship, p. 69Institute of Pacific Island Forestry 16interior strand, pp. 162-166invasion biology 195Invasive Plants: Weeds of the Global Garden 91Ion Exchange Native Seed and Plant Nursery

98Island Press 98Italian land managers, 19th century restora-

tion activities of, pp. 176-177Iva frutescens, effect of flooding on 130Jackson, Laura 189Jackson, Wes, p. 50James, Henry, p. 4Jensen, Jens, p. 174John U. Lloyd State Park (Florida) 125Jordan, William 183Juniperus virginiana, effect of flooding on 130Kanab ambersnait, p. 123Kapiti Island (New Zealand), p. 145Katz, Eric 184Kaupapa Atawhai Network, p. 146Kearns, Kelly 192keystone species, community assembly rules

and, p. 46Kirt, Russell 101Kissimmee River 195Klataske, Ron 5Kline, Virginia, p. 7Knopf, Fritz L. 95Kogi mamas, p. 74Konza Prairie 98Kremer, Robert J. 185Kropp, David, pp. 38, 42, 43Krutch, Joseph Wood, p. 120Laguncularia racemosa 125Lagurus ovatus 41Lake Superior Binational Program: Habitat

Projects 98Lampa, Wayne 99land imprinting 131Land Restoration and Reclamation: Principles

and Practice 89land trusts 179Landcare: Communities Shaping the Land and

the Future 93landscape, definitions of, pp. 68-69Landscape and Memory, p. 68Landscapes: The Social Construction of Nature

and the Environment, p. 71Lapiner, Jane, p. 180Larix laricina 116Larrea tridentata 131

Laurance, William F. 197Leopold, Aldo, pp. 173-175Lespedeza cuneata, control of 148

Lewis, R.W.B., pp. 3-4lichens, conservation and management of

132.1Licht, Daniel 193Light, Andrew 184Ligustrum japonicum, control of 52Lincoln Creek (Aurora, Nebraska), pp. 8-11,

130Little Wittenham Nature Preserve (England)

166Longleaf Ecology and Forestry Society 110Lorimar, Craig 21Los Angeles County Fire Department, burn

policy of 134Lotus purschianus, p. 136low-level radioactive materials 37low-tech, do-less management approach, pp.

131-133Lupinus latifolius var. subalpinus, propagation

of 137.1Lupinus perennis 171Lycaeides melissa samuelis, 171Lythrum salicaria, biocontrol of with native

insect 51macroinvertebrates, effects of fire and mow-

ing on 112macrophytes, effects of reduced carp forage

on 34Man and Nature, p. 175Mangere Island (New Zealand), pp. 141-142mangroves 125, 126Maori, pp. 138, 143,146, 188Marah gilensis, p. 165Marapa (New Zealand), pp. 144-145Margolin, Malcom, p. 71Marinelli, Janet 91Marsh, George Perkins, pp. 175-177Marsh, Lindell L. 181Martin, Paul S., p. 125Martinez, Dennis, p. 70Masters, Linda 99Matsil, Mark, p. 28Mattole Salmon Group, pp. 179-182, 92McCloskey, David, p. 70McDonald, Charles 90mechanical seed stripper, report on use of

158Medley, Kimberley, p. 152Melilotus alba, p. 165Melis, Theodore, p. 122Melville, Herman, p.3Mendelson, John, p. 29Mengotti, Francesco, p. 175Merleau-Ponty, Maurice, p. 71Meseta Purepecha, pp. 147-153Mexican Method, pp. 151,153Mexico, community forests of, pp. 149-150Michoacan (Mexico), pp. 147-153Microcosm of the Platte--A Guide to Bader

Memorial Park Natural Area, p. 10microinvertebrates, effects of fire and mowing

on 112mid-Atlantic native grasses, propagation of

111.1Midwest Oak Savanna Proceedings 198military bases, habitat restoration and 154,

155, 171

220 RESTORATION & MANAGEMENT NOTES 15:2 Winter 1997

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Millar, Constance A. 90Minnesota Department of Natural Resources

157Minnesota Wanner Company 157Miracle Under the Oaks, pp. 19, 25-26,29Mirk, Walter 194Missouri Department of Conservation 4, 14Mitigation Banking: Theory and Practice 97,

181Mokoia Island (New Zealand), p. 143Morton Arboretum, pp. 6-7, 19, 41-43mowing, new prairie restorations and 1OOMuick, Pam, p. 28mulch, effects of woodland seed germination

15Munro, John 69Mutel, Cornelia F. 183mycorrizha 50Myrica cerifera, effect of flooding on 130Myriophyllum spicatum, biocontrol of 58Nabhan, Gary Paul, p. 69National Estuaries Program 98National Interagency Fire Center 71.2National Park Service/Integrated Pest Man-

agement 198National Plants Database 98National Resource Conservation Service

Wetlands Science Institute 111.1National Wetlands Research Center (Louisi-

ana) 136Native American Fish and Wildlife Society

180Native American Seed 198Native Americans and conservation 180Native Ecosystems Act 186Native Prairie Restoration Incentive Program

(Missouri) 4native seed availability, limiting factor in res-

torations 163native understory, arid-land riparian ecosys-

tems and, pp. 161-167Natural Areas Journal 98natural flooding, restorative power of, p. 167Natural Habitat Restoration Program (Essex

County, Ont.) 13Natural Resources Conservation Service 145,

146Nebraska, pp. 6-13New Academy, p. 5New Tribe 198New York City parks, controversy over resto-

ration in, p. 28New Zealand archipelago, island restoration

and, pp. 138-146New Zealand Department of Conservation,

pp. 139-146nexus species, community assembly rules and,

p. 46Niering, William, p. 64, 190non-timber forest products, p. 153Nordine, Roy, p. 41North American Free Trade Agreement, pp.

151, 153North American Prairie, p. 7North Branch Prairie Project, p. 27, 92North Carolina State University Forestry

Restoration Ecology Homepage 98

Northern Prairie Science Center 98Noss, Reed, pp. 64-65, 186Nyssa aquatica, fly ash-amended soil and 140Nyvall, Robert F. 197Oakton Community College 99Odocoileus virginianus 106Oenothera biennis, p. 136old-growth forests 21,109Olwell, Margaret 90On-Site Restoration Methods for Mountainous

Regions of the West 78Onosmodium molle, pp. 116-118Opuntia spp. 131orchids (Florida) 169order of colonization, community assembly

rules and, pp. 46-47Oregon Department of Agriculture 168organic amendments, riparian restoration

and, p. 58organic soil amendments 125Orthocarpus imbricatus 137.1Oxytropis viscida, propagation of 137.1Pacific Estuarine Research Laboratory 96, 98Packard, Steve, pp. 27, 29, 48-49, 132, 183Page, Christina 187Palmer, John 89Palmetto 198park planning 94Park Science 198Party of Hope, p. 3Party of Irony, p. 3Paspulum distichum, p. 162Paspulum pIicatulum, effect of phosphate on

12Patten, Duncan, pp. 120,Pedicularis bracteosa var. atrosanguinea 137.1Pennypack Ecological Restoration Trust 179Penstemon grandiflorus, pocket gopher mounds

and 107Petroica traversi, reintroduction of, p. 142Pfeiffer, Kent, p. 137Phalaris arundinacea, control of 145, 152phenomenology, p. 71philosophy 184Phleum alpinum, propagation of 137.1Phlox diffusa var. lon~stytis, propagation of

137.1Phlox nivalis ssp. texensis 73Picoides borealis, Habitat Conservation Plan

for 74Pimm, Stuart, pp. 45, 47Pinney, Christopher, p. 68Pinus australis 110Pinus palustris ecosystems, pp. 52-55Pinus ponderosa, suggestions for restoration of

23Pinus taeda, effect of flooding on 130pipeline construction, salt marsh and 128Pitfalls on the Way to Lasting Restoration, p. 71pitting, arid-land restoration and 131Plagiobothrys hirsutus 168plains killfish, p. 123planning 187Planning and Evaluating Restoration of Aquatic

Habitats from an Ecological Perspective 26plant salvage 80plant salvage equipment 69

Plants of the Chicago Region, development of,p. 43

PLATEAU herbicide, Euphorbia esula and63, 149

Platte River, natural history of, pp. 126-127Platte River, restoration projects along, pp.

127-128Platte River Whooping Crane Critical Habi-

tat Maintenance Trust, pp. 127, 133,136-137

Poa incurva, propagation of 137.1pocket gopher mounds, Penstemon grandiflorus

and 107Pontheua britttoniae 169Popper, Deborah 95Popper, Frank 95Populus deltoides 120Populus fremontii, p. 161Porter, Douglas R. 181Potamogeton gramineus, effect of anaerobic

conditions on 122Potamogeton pectinatus, effect of anaerobic

conditions on 122pragmatism, the Chicago controversy and 184Prairie Conservation: Preserving North Amer-

ica’s Most Endangered Ecosystem 95prairie grasses, effect of grazing on 102Prairie Habitats 98, 158prairie legumes, effect of annual fires and to-

pography on 103prairie nurse crops, pp. 135-136Prairie Plains Journal, p. 9Prairie/Plains Resource Institute, pp. 9-13,

126-127, 98, 179prairie restoration, effects of sewage sludge

on 2prairie restoration, frequent mowing and 1OOprairie seed collecting, pp. 128-130prairie seed-sowing techniques, pp. 129-130Prairie Seedlings Illustrated: An Identification

Guide 189prairies, global warming and 105prairies, grazing and, pp. 116-118prescribed burning 45, 64, 67, 68, 71.1,

71.2, 73, 83.1, 159, 161prescribed burning, endangered species and

191prescribed burning, excessive dependence on,

pp. 116-118prescribed burning, Florida sand scrub and 44prescribed burning, prairie legumes and 103prescribed burning, use of ATV-mounted

foam units and 157prescribed burning, wiregrass restoration and,

pp. 53-55Primack, Richard 90Principles in Weed Management 185Pritchett, David, p. 49private landowners, wetland restoration deci-

sions and 32Proceedings of the 1993 Conference of the Soci-

ety of Wetland Scientists, Western Chapter,p. 78

Proceedings of the 1994 Conference of the Soci-ety of Wetland Scientists, Western Chapter,p. 78

Proceedings of the Briswell Symposium: Fire Is-sues and Solutions in Urban Interface andWildland Ecosystems, p. 78

RESTORATION ~�. I~NAGEMENT NOTES 15:2 Winter 1997 221

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Proceedings of the California Exotic Pest PlantCouncil, Symposium ’95, p. 78

Proceedings of the Native Grasses for the East-ern United States Symposium, p. 184

Proceedings of the Native Plant Society of Ore-gon: Conservation and Management of Na-tive Plants and Fungi, p. 184

Proceedings of the Tenth Annual North Ameri-can Prairie Conference 103

Prosopis glandulosa, p. 120Prosopis veluntina, p. 162public participation, fire management plan-

ning and 83.1pulverized fly ash 41, 140Puntenney, Pamela J., p. 71Pyramid Lake Paiute Indian tribe 35Quadrula pustulosa 38Queen Salmon, pp. 179-181Quercus lyrata 14Quercus macrocarpa 14R.S. Domey Ecology Garden 98Ragsdale, David W. 197rainbow trout, p. 123Ramas Ecological Software 98Randall, John M. 91rare plants, reintroduction of 90rare plant monitoring, hierarchical approach

to 75Ratzlaff Prairie, p. 10razorback sucker, p. 123Reference List for Plant Re-introductions,

Recovery Plans, and Restoration Pro-grammes 98

remnant prairies, species loss in 9Renda, Mike, p. 28rephotography, advantages and disadvantages

of, p. 125Resource Management International, Inc. 27respirators, prescribed burning and 159Restauration des Terrains en Montagne, p. 175restaurazione, p. 177restoration concourse, definition of, p. 70restoration discourses, pp. 76-77Restoration Ecology 98restoration ecology, critique of 87restoration forestry, definitions of, pp. 147-

149restoration science and practice, perceptions

of, pp. 75-77restoration theater, pp. 179-182restoration and healing, distinction between,

p. 115Restoration & Reclamation Review 198restorationists, beliefs and experiences of, pp.

67-73Restore America’s Estuaries 81, 98Restoring Diversity: Strategies for Reintroduction

of Endangered Plants 90Restoring Nature’s Place: A Guide to Naturaliz-

ing Ontario’s Parks and Greenspaces 94Reveg Edge: A Division of Redwood City

Seed Co. 98Rhamnus cathartica 144Rhamnus frangula, control of 151Rhizophora mangle 125Riparian Ecosystem Recovery in Arid Lands:

Strategies and Reference 97, 182

riparian restoration, organic amendmentsand, p. 58

riparian restoration, soils and, pp. 56-59Risser, Paul 95ritual, p. 4Robinia pseudoacacia, control of 53rodent control (New Zealand), pp. 140-141Rolanka International 198Rosen, W., p. 3Roy E. Larsen Sandyland Sanctuary 73Rozsa, Ron 190RXCOST computer program, cost of pre-

scribed bums and 71.2Saint Croix National Scenic Riverway 38saline sprays, control of weeds and 55Salix gooddingii, p. 161salt marsh restoration 28.3, 29, 128Salvesen, David A. 181Sampson, Arthur W., pp. 173-175, 177Samson, Fred B. 95Samuels, Corey, p. 47San Joacquin Freshwater Marsh Reserve 198sand dune plants, pulverized fly ash and 41sand scrub (Florida), prescribed burns and 44Sapium sebiferum 142Sarcostemma cynanchoides, p. 165Savanna River Site 37Schaefer, Mark, p. 120Schama, Simon, p. 68Schimtz, Don C. 195Schinus terebinthefolius 27Schizachyrium scoparium, effect of phosphate

on 12Schulenberg, Ray, pp. 7, 19, 38-44Scirpus americanus, effect of snow goose herbi-

vory on 129Scirpus pugens, establishment of 114Scott, J. Michael 186seaweed extracts, hydroseeding and 65seed banks, seedling establishment and 8seed bank studies, pp. 168-172Senecio jacobacea, b iocontrol of 167.1Senecio mikanioides, control of 54.2sewage sludge 2, 72, 164shame, ideas of nature and, pp. 3-4Shorecrest High School (Washington), eco-

logical restoration at 78Sida hermaphrodita, propagation of 135Sidalcea hirtipes 167.1Siepen, Greg 93Sigg, Jake, p. 69Silene lanceolata, germination requirements of

49Silvestri, Peter, p. 26Simberloff, Daniel 195simulation models, visual programming lan-

guages and 160Singer, Matt 21Sinkyone Intertribal Wilderness Park 86Sitanion hys~x var. hystrix, propagation of

137.1Skokie River (Illinois) 40social change 92Society for Ecological Restoration, pp. 5,

140, 80, 98Society for Wetland Scientists 98sociological studies 187

sod removal, restoration of native vegetationand 133

soil amendments, p. 166, 117Soil Ecology and Restoration Group 98soil impoverishment 3soil microarthorpods, prairie recovery and 1soil, riparian restoration and, pp. 56-59soil removal, effectiveness of as restoration

technique 27Solano County Farmlands and Open Space

Foundation, p. 28South Florida Ecological Restoration Task

Force 198Southern Paiute Tribe, p. 123Southern Rockies Restoration Project 98southwestern willow flycatcher, pp. 123, 125Spackman, Susan 191Spartina alterniflora 28.1Spartina foliosa 28.1species loss, remnant prairies and 9speckled dace, p. 123Spira americana, management of prairies for

10Spirit of Place: The Making of the American

Literary Landscape, p. 68Sporobolus cryptandrus, p. 165Stanton, Robert Brewster, p. 125Stephen Fuller Austin Arboretum 141Sterna hirundo, habitat creation for 124Stevens, Larry, p. 123Stevens, Stan 196Stevens, William, pp. 19, 25-26,29Stipa occidentalis var. minor, propagation of

137.1Strangers in Paradise: Impact and Management

of Nonindigenous Species in Florida 195Stuhr Museum of the Prairie Pioneer, p. 6successional planting, p. 132Surell, Alexandre, p. 175sustainable land use 92, 93, 126Sutherland, David, p. 11Sutter, Robert 90Swan, James, pp. 71-72Swink, Floyd, p. 43Symposium on the Spring 1996 Glen Can-

yon Dam Beach/Habitat-Building Flow, p.121

taconite mine, reclamation of 165Tall Timbers Research Station 98Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve 5tallgrass prairies 194Tallgrass Restoration Handbook for Prairies,

Savannas and Woodlands 183Tamarix spp., pp. 120, 123, 125, 161Tamarix chinensis 54.1Tamarix ramosissima 54.1Taxodium distichium, effect of salinity on 127Taxodium distichium, fly ash-amended soil and

140Tetramicra spp. 169Texas Society for Ecological Restoration 198Thailand 126Thalictrum occidentale 137.1

The American Adam: Innocence, Tragedy andTradition in the Nineteenth Century, p. 3

The Colorado River Survey, p. 125The Culture of Nature: North American Land-

scape from Disney to the Exxon Valdez, p.68

222 RESTORATION & MANAGEMENT NOTES 15:2 Winter 1997

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The Ecologists Union, p. 40The Ecology of Hope: Communities Collaborate

for Sustainability 92The Land Institute, p. 50The Marble Fawn, p. 4The Nature Conservancy, pp. 28, 29, 40,

127-128, 133, 136-137, 35, 73, 98, 159The Perceptual Implications of Gaia, p. 71The Prairie Enthusiasts 194The Wildlands Project 186Thoreau, Henry D., p. 3Tidal Marshes of Long Island Sound: Ecology,

History and Restoration 190Tidal Wetland Restoration: A Scientific Perspec-

tive and Southern California Focus 96tidal wetlands 96Tiritiri Matangi Island (New Zealand), pp.

143-144topsoiling, advantages and disadvantages of,

pp. 57-59Tree of Life Nursery 98Tree Pros 98Trisetum spicatum, propagation of 137.1Tropical Rainforest Remnants: Ecology, Man-

agement and Conservation of FragmentedCommunities 197

Tropidia polystachya 169Truckee River (Nevada) 35Turner, Frederick, p. 68U.S. Army Corps of Engineers 25, 26, 98U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, p. 120U.S. Department of Agriculture National

Plant Materials Center (Maryland) 135U.S. Department of Agriculture Farm Pro-

gram, critique of 193U.S. Department of Defense 154, 155U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service 168, 171U.S. Geological Survey, p. 122U.S. National Park Service, prescribed burn-

ing policy of 68U.S. Naval Post-Graduate School, dune res-

toration at 42Udziela, Matthew 187

University of Arizona Water Resources Re-search Center 98

University of California Hardwood RangeManagement Program 198

University of East London Restoration Ecol-ogy program 173

University of Florida Center for AquaticPlants 98

University of Guelph Mycorrhiza ResearchLinks 98

University of Idaho Restoration EcologyCourse 98

University of Michigan Colloquium on Res-toration, pp. 64-66

University of Victoria (British Columbia)restoration program 172

University of Wisconsin-Madison Arbore-tum, pp. 6-7

urban woodlands, creation of 19Valdez, Richard, p. 123vegetation assessment methodologies 99Vegetation Management Guidelines 198velvet mesquite woodland, pp. 162-166vernal pools, design and construction of 28.2vertical mulching 131visual programming languages, simulation

models and 160volunteers, economic benefits of 57Walnut Creek Restoration Project 98water levels, measuring tool for, pp. 60-63watershed planning (California) 36Watts, May, p. 41Waugh, Frank, p. 174Weaver, John E., p. 7Webb, Robert H., pp. 122, 125weed, definitions of 185, 188weed control, saline sprays and 55weed science 185weedy vegetation, do-less management ap-

proach and, pp. 132-133Wegner, Dave, pp. 120, 124Weston, Anthony 184wetland hydrogeology, measuring device for,

pp. 156-160

wetland mitigation 31wetland mitigation banking 181wetland permitting process, critique of 119wetland plant establishment, soil amend-

ments and 117wetland prairies, creation and planting of, pp.

133-134wetland restoration, design sequence for 25wetland restoration, imported soils and 33wetlands, donor soils and, pp. 168-172White, Peter 90Whitman, Walt, p. 3Whitney, Jan, pp. 6-13Wildflower (Canada) 98Wildlands Restoration Team of the Semperi-

vens Fund 98Wilhelm, Jerry, pp. 43, 65, 101Wilson, Alexander, p. 68Window on a Successful Man, p. 69Wisconsin Milfoil Weevil Study 58Wisconsin Manual of Control Recommendations

for Ecologically Invasive Plants 192Wolf at the Door, pp. 181-182wolves, reintroduction of 170woodland seed germination, effect of mulch

on 15World Resources Institute 98World Wide Web 98, 198World Wildlife Fund 180Xanthium strumarium, p. 165Yad Fon (Rain Drop) Association 126Yates, Sydney, pp. 21, 23Young, Jora 92Yucca brevifolia 131Zedler, Joy B. 96Zuckerman, Seth, p. 71

Plain type indicates page numbersBold type indicate note numbers

RESTORATION ~ MANAGEMENT NOTES 15:2 Winter 1997 223

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Instructions to Contributors

SubmissionsWe welcome queries and contributions to Restoration & Man-agement Notes. Please direct them to: Associate Editor, R&MN,1207 Seminole Highway, Madison, WI 53711; phone 608/262-9591. Material may deal with any aspect of the restoration ofnatural or historic ecological communities or landscapes, in-cluding techniques and tools for planning, site preparation, spe-cies introduction, and pest species control; human involve-ment, use, and influence; political, economic, legal, andregulatory considerations; and other subjects related to ecolog-ical restoration for scientific, practical, or aesthetic purposes.We will accept contributions dealing with plant and/or animalcommunity composition or general ecology only when they re-late explicitly to restoration. Similarly, we will not accept ma-terial dealing with reclamation or rehabilitation in a broadersense, or with economic restoration--economic forestry, rangemanagement, waste disposal, for example~unless it relates ex-plicitly to the restoration of native plant and animal commu-nities.

The editor welcomes articles and notes about ecological resto-ration from any part of the world, in particular those dealingwith:1. Basic and applied research, including notices of new, on-

going, and completed research studies or projects.2. New, on-going, or completed restoration projects.3. Questions, problems, and suggestions related to any aspect

of ecological restoration.4.Publications (including books and journals), legislation, and

other events related to ecological restoration.5.Comments on articles appearing in the journal or on other

matters pertaining to ecological restoration generally.

Manuscript SpecificationsContributors should send two copies of their manuscripts writ-ten in English. Manuscripts should be typed and double-spaced,with 1.5-in. (4 cm) right-hand margins, on good quality, whitebond paper (8.5 x 11 in. or 21.5 x 28 cm).

All manuscripts should include a brief but appropriate title,followed by the author’s or authors’ name(s), current mailingaddress(es), telephone number(s), and FAX number(s). Refer-ences should be in alphabetical order by author. If differentworks by the same author are referenced, references should bein chronological order. Contributors of notes should keep ref-erences to a few key items. Avoid footnotes in both articles andnotes. Use metric measurements unless English units are clearlymore appropriate, in which case metric equivalents must appearin parentheses. Give scientific names for all species and presentthem after the species’ common name as follows: Culver’s root(Veronicastrum virginicum). Write out numbers under 10, exceptin measurements and percentage signs. Statistical terms andother measures should conform with the Council of Biology Ed-itors Style Manual.

Tables and IllustrationsTables must be double-spaced, without vertical roles, and ofcamera-ready quality. In addition, tables must have completebut brief headings, which should be typed on separate sheets ofpaper. Number and title multiple tables.

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We will not accept computer-generated figures unless theyare of camera-ready (laser-printer) quality, with sharp glossylines suitable for reproduction.

Unless the contributor requests their return upon submis-sion of the manuscript, we will not return tables, photos, orother illustrations.

StyleSince this publication reaches readers with a wide variety ofbackgrounds and interests, the editor strongly encourages con-tributors to use a plain, straightforward style, free of unnecessarytechnical terms and jargon. Contributors should strive to writein the active voice whenever possible.

Electronic SubmissionsContributors of first-draft manuscripts for articles need not include files oncomputer disks. Contributors of notes, however, should submit computerfiles, preferably in IBM WordPerfect 5.1, along with their hard copy. Fornon-WordPerfect and/or Maclntosh files, please indicate the software used.You may submit manuscripts on either 3V2" or 5¼" floppy disks, or send themto our E-mail address: [email protected].

Sample Typescript

We used a modified sodding technique to determine the necessary seeding

rates to produce satisfactory prairie forb sods from seeds. Initially,

we spread seeds onto the surface of a soilless substrate (internally lay-

ered with cheesecloth as a root binder) and allowed them to germinate

under an intermittent mist.

After i0 weeks, we evaluated sod stability and determined that the

seed rates required to establish satisfactory sods were as follows: but~

terfly weed (Asclepias tuberosa) [88 kg/ha], purple coneflower (Echin-

aceapurpurea)[lO7kg/ha],denseblazingstar(Liatrisspicata)[214kg/

ha], prairie coneflower (Ratibida columnifera) [27 kg/ha), and

black-eyed Susan (Ratibidahirta) [4 kg/ha].

Airhart, D.L. and K.M. Falls. 1983. Developing wildflower sods. Hort-

science 18(1):89-91.

Airhart, D.L. and K.M. Falls. 1984. Sodding roadside slopes with wild÷

flowers. Landscape Architecture 55(4):96-97.