text
stringlengths
0
6.44k
Flynn, L. 1998. Telephone communication. April 13, 1998.
Folk, M.L. 1991. Habitat of the Key deer. Ph.D. Dissertation, Southern Illinois
University, Carbondale.
Folk, M.L., W.D. Klimstra, and C.R. Cruer. 1991. Habitat evaluation: National Key
Deer range. Final report, under review. Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish
Commission Nongame Wildlife Program; Tallahassee, Florida.
Gunderson, L., L.L. Loope, and W.R. Maynard. 1982. An inventory of the plant
communities of the Turner River area, Big Cypress National Preserve, Florida.
South Florida Research Center report T-648.
Gunderson, L., D. Taylor, and Jim Craig. 1983. Fire effects on flowering and fruiting
patterns of understory plants in pinelands of Everglades National Park. South
Florida Research Center Report 83/04.
Hammer, R. 1997. Rescuing pine rockland plants. Tillandsia; September, 1997. pp. 3-
4.
Hare, R.C. 1965. Contributions of bark to fire resistance in southern trees. Journal of
Forestry. 63:248-251.
Hofstetter, R.H. 1973. Effects of fire in the ecosystem. Part 1, Appendix K in South
Florida Environmental Project. University of Miami; Coral Gables, Florida.
Jameson, M., and R. Moyroud, eds. 1991. Xeric landscaping with Florida native plants.
Association of Florida Native Nurseries, Inc.; San Antonio, Florida.
Kernan, C. 1997. Final Report to the United States Fish and Wildlife Service. Project
title: pine rockland endangered species recovery. Grant # 1448-0004-94-974.
Ketcham, D.E. and J.E. Bethune. 1963. Fire resistance of South Florida slash pine.
Journal of Forestry 61:529-530.
Klein, J. 1998. Telephone communication. April 7, 1998.
Klukas, R.W. 1973. Control burn activities in Everglades National Park. Proceeding of the
Tall Timbers fire ecology conference. 12:397-425.
Koptur, S. 1998. Telephone communication. April 13, 1998.
Kruer, C.R. 1998. E-mail communication. March 12, 1998.
Page 3-188
PINE ROCKLANDS Multi-Species Recovery Plan for South Florida
Langdon, O.G. 1963. Growth patterns of Pinus elliottii var. densa. Ecology 44:825-827.
Long, R.W., and Lakela, O. 1971. A flora of tropical Florida. University of Miami Press,
Coral Gables, Florida.
Loope, L.L., D.W. Black, S. Black, and G.N. Avery. 1979. Distribution and abundance of
flora in limestone rockland pine forests of southeastern Florida. Report T-547.
Everglades National Park: South Florida Research Center.
Loope, L.L. and V.L. Dunevitz. 1981. Impact of fire exclusion and invasion of Schinus
terebinthifolius on limestone rockland pine forests of southeastern Florida. South
Florida Research Center report T-645.
McCartney, C. 1997. Mrs. Britton’s shadow witch. The Palmetto: Spring, 1997. pp. 10-11.
McDonald, L. 1998. Telephone communication. April 16, 1998.
McMinn, J.W. 1970. Optimum depth and season for direct seeding slash pine in South
Florida. U.S. Forest Service Note SE-117.
Minno, M.C. and T.C. Emmel. 1993. Butterflies of the Florida Keys. Scientific Publishers,
Gainesville.
Minno, M.C. and T.C. Emmel. 1994. Florida leafwing. Pages 649-651 in M. Deyrup and
R Franz eds. Rare and endangered biota of Florida. Volume IV. Invertebrates.
University presses of Florida; Gainesville, Florida.
Moody, M.E. and R.N. Mack. 1988. Controlling the spread of plant invasions: the
importance of nascent foci. Journal of Applied Ecology 25:1009-1021.
Oberbauer, S.F., Kariyawasam, P.S., and J. N. Burch. 1997. Comparative analysis of
growth, nutrition, carbon isotope ratios, and hurricane-related mortality of slash pines
in south Florida. Florida Scientist 60(4):210-222.
Olmstead, I., and L. L. Loope. 1984. Plant communities of Everglades National Park.
Pages 167-184 in P.J. Gleason, ed. Environments of south Florida, past and present
II. Miami Geological Society; Coral Gables, Florida.
Olmsted, I., W.B. Robertson, Jr., J. Johnson, and O.R. Bass, Jr. 1983. The vegetation of
Long Pine Key, Everglades National Park. Report SFRC 83/05, South Florida
Research Center, Everglades National Park; Homestead, Florida.
Patterson, G.A., W.B. Robertson Jr., D.E. Minsky. 1980. Slash pine-cypress mosaic.
American Birds 34, 61-62.
Robertson, W.B., Jr. 1953. A survey of the effects of fire in Everglades National Park.
Robertson, W.B., Jr. 1955. An analysis of the breeding bird populations of tropical Florida
in relation to the vegetation. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Illinois; Urbana,
Illinois.
Robertson, W.B. and J. Kushlan. 1984. The Southern Florida avifauna. Pages 219-257 in
Environments of South Florida present and past II. Miami Geological Society, Coral
Gables.
Ross, M. L. , J. J. O’Brien, and L.D.S. Sternberg. 1994. Sea-level rise and the reduction in
pine forests in the Florida Keys. Ecological Applications 4(1):144-156.
Ross, M.S. and P.L. Ruiz. 1996. A study of the distribution of several south Florida
endemic plants in the Florida Keys. Unpublished report to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service. Southeast Environmental Research Program, Florida International
University; Miami, Florida.
Page 3-189
PINE ROCKLANDS Multi-Species Recovery Plan for South Florida
Ross, M.S., J.F. Meeder, J.P. Sah, A. Herndon, P.L. Ruiz, and G. Telesnicki. 1997.
Windthrow in south Florida pine rocklands: pit-and-mound features and plant
microhabitat associations following Hurricane Andrew. Unpublished report to
Everglades National Park. Southeast Environmental Research Program, Florida
International University; Miami, Florida.
Ross, M. 1998. Telephone communication. April 13, 1998. Sanders, R.W. 1987. Identity
of Lantana depressa and L. ovatifolia (Verbenaceae) of Florida and the Bahamas.
Systematic Botany 12(1):44-60.
Shaw, C. 1975. The pine and hammock forest lands of Dade County. Florida Division of
Forestry.
Snyder, J.R. 1986. The impact of wet and dry season prescribed fire on Miami Rock Ridge
pineland. Report SFRC 86/06. Everglades National Park: South Florida Research
Center.
Snyder, J.R., A. Herndon, and W.B. Robertson, Jr. 1990. South Florida rocklands. Pages
230-277 in R.L. Myers and J.J. Ewel, eds. Ecosystems of Florida. University of
Central Florida Press; Orlando, Florida.
Soil and Water Conservation Service. 1989. Twenty-six ecological communities of
Florida. Florida Chapter of Soil and Water Conservation Society; Gainesville,
Florida.
Sylvia, D.M. Mycorrhizal Symbioses. 1997.
http://www.ifas.ufl.edu/~dmsa/mycorrhiza.htm. Downloaded 15 April, 1998.
Updated July 10, 1997.
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service. 1947. Soil Survey: Dade