
Listing of Useful Plants of the World
NOTICE: Information on the background to this Listing is available. The analysis of numbers of papers/mentions over time was completed in 1997, using the Agricola database (1970-1996). Hard copies of the Listing (553 pages; over 4200 new crops listed with the analyses of numbers of papers over time included) are available from the publisher, Dr Rob Fletcher; see Advice on Publications Available.
The references listed below are from the Biological Abstracts database (1988-2000) and are courtesy of SilverPlatter Information. For more information re Silverplatter, go to www.silverplatter.com.
Pinus albicaulis
Analysis of numbers of papers/mentions over time
(Agricola database 1970-1996):|
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Source: AGRICOLA database (1970-1996)
Common Name(s):
white bark pineReferences
(Biological Abstracts 1988-2000):[These references are from the Biological Abstracts database and are courtesy of SilverPlatter Information. For more information re SilverPlatter, go to
www.silverplatter.com. References are listed alphabetically by author within years, with most recent references first; addresses of author(s) have been included when available. To search within this page, we suggest using Find in Page, within the Edit menu of the Web Browser.]Campbell, E. M. and J. A. Antos (2000). Distribution and severity of white pine blister rust and mountain pine beetle on whitebark pine in British Columbia. Canadian Journal of Forest Research. [print] July 30(7): 1051-1059. {a} Groupe de Recherche en Ecologie Forestiere, Universite du Quebec a Montreal, Succursale Centre-ville, Montreal, PQ, H3C 3P8, Canada
Smith, J. P., J. T. Hoffman, et al. (2000). First report of white pine blister rust in Nevada. Plant Disease. May 84(5): 594. {a} School of Forestry, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ, 86011, USA
Pease, C. M. and D. J. Mattson (1999). Demography of the yellowstone grizzly bears. Ecology Washington D C. April 80(3): 957-975. {a} Vermont Law School, South Royalton, VT, 05068, USA
Rogers, D. L., C. I. Millar, et al. (1999). Fine-scale genetic structure of whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis): Associations with watershed and growth form. Evolution 53(1): 74-90. {a} Genetic Resouces Conservation Program, Univ. Calif., One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA
Taylor, J. E. and J. A. Walla (1999). First report of Dothistroma septospora on native limber and whitebark pine in Montana. Plant Disease. June 83(6): 590. {a} Forest Health Protection, USDA Forest Service, Missoula, MT, 59807, USA
Bruederle, L. P., D. F. Tomback, et al. (1998). Population genetic structure in a bird-dispersed pine, Pinus albicaulis (Pinaceae). Canadian Journal of Botany 76(1): 83-90. {a} Dep. Biol., Campus Box 171, Univ. Colorado at Denver, PO Box 173364, Denver, CO 80217-3364, USA
Callaway, R. M. (1998). Competition and facilitation on elevation gradients in subalpine forests of the northern Rocky Mountains, USA. Oikos 82(3): 561-573. {a} Div. Biol. Sci., Univ. Mont., Missoula, MT 59812, USA
Mathiasen, R. L. (1998). Comparative susceptibility of conifers to larch dwarf mistletoe in the Pacific Northwest. Forest Science 44(4): 559-568. {a} Sch. For., Box 15018, North. Ariz. Univ., Flagstaff, AZ 86011, USA
Vujanovic, V., A. M. St, et al. (1998). New hosts for Choanatiara lunata. Canadian Journal of Plant Pathology. Sept. 20(3): 319-323. {a} Departement de sciences biologiques, Institute de recherche en biologie vegetale, Universite de Montreal, 4101 est, rue Sherbrooke, Montreal, PQ, H1X 2B2, Canada
Jorgensen, S. M. and J. L. Hamrick (1997). Biogeography and population genetics of whitebark pine, Pinus albicaulis. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 27(10): 1574-1585. {a} Dep. Bot., Univ. Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA
Luckman, B. H. (1997). Developing a proxy climate record for the last 300 years in the Canadian Rockies-some problems and opportunities. Climatic Change 36(3-4): 455-476. Dep. Geography, Univ. Western Ontario, London, ON N6A 5C2, Canada
Mattson, D. J. (1997). Use of ungulates by Yellowstone grizzly bears Ursus arctos. Biological Conservation 81(1-2): 161-177. Natl. Biological Service, Dep. Fish and Wildlife Resources, Univ. Idaho, Moscow, ID 83844-1136, USA
Mattson, D. J. and D. P. Reinhart (1997). Excavation of red squirrel middens by grizzly bears in the whitebark pine zone. Journal of Applied Ecology 34(4): 926-940. USGS, Forest Rangeland Ecosystem Sci. Centre, Dep. Fish Wildife Resources, Univ. Idaho, Moscow, ID 83844-1136, USA
Mattson, D. J. and D. P. Reinhart (1996). Indicators of red squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) abundance in the whitebark pine zone. Great Basin Naturalist 56(3): 272-275. {a} Natl. Biol. Serv., Dep. Fish Wildlife Resour., Univ. Idaho, Moscow, ID 83843, USA
Perkins, D. L. and T. W. Swetnam (1996). A dendroecological assessment of whitebark pine in the Sawtooth - Salmon River region, Idaho. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 26(12): 2123-2133. {a} Forestry Sci. Lab., USDA Forest Service, 860 North 1200 East, Logan, UT 84321, USA
Crawford, M. (1995). Nut pines. WANATCA Yearbook 19: 56-66. Agroforestry Res. Trust, 46 Hunters Moon, Dartington, Totnes, Devon TQ9 6JT, UK
Fall, P. L., P. T. Davis, et al. (1995). Late quaternary vegetation and climate of the Wind River range, Wyoming. Quaternary Research Orlando 43(3): 393-404. {a} Dep. Geography, Ariz. State Univ., Tempe, AZ 85287-0104, USA
Tomback, D. F., J. K. Clary, et al. (1995). The effects of blister rust on post-fire regeneration of whitebark pine: The sundance burn of northern Idaho (U.S.A.). Conservation Biology 9(3): 654-664. {a} Dep. Biol., Univ. Colo. Denver, Denver, CO 80217, USA
Barrett, S. W. (1994). Fire regimes on Andesitic Mountain terrain in northeastern Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming. International Journal of Wildland Fire 4(2): 65-76. Systems Environmental Management, 995 Ranch Lane, Kalispell, MT 59807, USA
Butler, D. R., G. P. Malanson, et al. (1994). Stability of alpine treeline in Glacier National Park, Montana, U.S.A. Phytocoenologia 22(4): 485-500. {a} Dep. Geography, Univ. North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3220, USA
Fall, P. L. (1994). Modern pollen spectra and vegetation in the Wind River Range, Wyoming USA. Arctic and Alpine Research 26(4): 383-392. Dep. Geography, Arizona State Univ., Tempe, Arizona 85287-0104, USA
Keane, R. E., P. Morgan, et al. (1994). Landscape assessment of the decline of Whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis) in the Bob Marshall Wilderness Complex, Montana, USA. Northwest Science 68(3): 213-229. {a} USDA Forest Serv., Intermountain Res. Stn., Intermountain Fire Sci. Lab., P.O. Box 8089, Missoula, MT 59807, USA
Marshall, J. D. and J. Zhang (1994). Carbon isotope discrimination and water-use efficiency in native plants of the north-central Rockies. Ecology Tempe 75(7): 1887-1895. Dep. Forest Resources, Univ. Idaho, Moscow, ID 83843, USA
Tomback, D. F., F. K. Holtmeier, et al. (1993). Tree clusters and growth form distribution in Pinus cembra, a bird-dispersed pine. Arctic and Alpine Research 25(4): 374-381. {a} Dep. Biology, Centre Environmental Sciences, Univ. Colo., Denver, CO, USA
Tomback, D. F., S. K. Sund, et al. (1993). Post-fire regeneration of Pinus albicaulis: Height-age relationships, age structure, and microsite characteristics. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 23(2): 113-119. {a} Dep. Biol. and Cent. Environmental Sci., Univ. Colorado at Denver, Denver, CO 80217-3364, USA
Whitlock, C. (1993). Postglacial vegetation and climate of Grand Teton and southern Yellowstone National Parks. Ecological Monographs 63(2): 173-198. Dep. Geography, Univ. Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403, USA
Bytnerowicz, A., P. J. Dawson, et al. (1992). Atmospheric dry deposition of pines in the Eastern Brook Lake Watershed Sierra Nevada, California. Atmospheric Environment Part A General Topics 26(17): 3195-3201. {a} Statewide Air Pollution Res. Center, Univ. Calif., Riverside, Calif. 92521, USA
Mattson, D. J., B. M. Blanchard, et al. (1992). Yellowstone grizzly bear mortality, human habituation, and whitebark pine seed crops. Journal Of Wildlife Management 56(3): 432-442.
Blanchard, B. M. and R. R. Knight (1991). Movements of Yellowstone grizzly bears. Biological Conservation 58(1): 41-68.
Zavarin, E., Z. Rafii, et al. (1991). Geographic monoterpene variability of Pinus albicaulis. Biochemical Systematics And Ecology 19(2): 147-156.
Keane, R. E., S. F. Arno, et al. (1990). Modelling stand dynamics in whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis) forests. Ecological Modelling 51(1-2): 73-96.
Parker, A. J. (1989). Forest/environment relationships in Yosemite National Park, California, USA. Vegetatio 82(1): 41-54.
Peterson, D. L., M. J. Arbaugh, et al. (1989). Leaf area of lodgepole pine and whitebark pine in a subalpine Sierra Nevada (California, USA) forest. Canadian Journal Of Forest Research 19(3): 401-403.
Reasoner, M. A. and M. Hickman (1989). Late Quaternary environmental change in the Lake O'Hara region, Yoho National Park, British Columbia (Canada). Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 72(3-4): 291-316.
Armstrong, J. K., K. Williams, et al. (1988). Topographic position effects on growth depression of California (USA) Sierra Nevada pines during the 1982-1983 El Nino. Arctic And Alpine Research 20(3): 352-357.
Mathiasen, R. L. and F. G. Hawksworth (1988). Dwarf mistletoes on western white pine and whitebark pine in northern California and southern Oregon (USA). Forest Science 34(2): 429-440.
Eversman, S., C. Johnson, et al. (1987). Vertical distribution of epiphytic lichens on three tree species in Yellowstone National Park (Wyoming, USA). Bryologist 90(3): 212-216.
Furnier, G. R., P. Knowles, et al. (1987). Effects of avian seed dispersal on the genetic structure of whitebark pine populations. Evolution 41(3): 607-612.
Furnier, G. R., P. Knowles, et al. (1986). Inheritance and linkage of allozymes in seed tissue of whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis). Canadian Journal Of Genetics And Cytology 28(4): 601-604.
Gennett, J. A. and R. G. Baker (1986). A late Quaternary pollen sequence from Blacktail Pond, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA. Palynology 10: 61-72.
Goward, T. (1985). Ahtiana, new genus in the Parmeliaceae. Bryologist 88(4): 367-371.
Linhart, Y. B. and D. F. Tomback (1985). Seed dispersal by nutcrackers (Nucifraga columbiana) causes multi-trunk growth form in pines. Oecologia 67(1): 107-110.
Luckman, B. H., L. A. Jozsa, et al. (1984). Living 700-year-old Picea engelmanni and Pinus albicaulis in the Canadian Rockies. Arctic And Alpine Research 16(4): 419-422.
Gifford, D. J. (1808). An electrophoretic analysis of the seed proteins from Pinus monticola and eight other species of pine. Canadian Journal Of Botany 66(9): 1808-1812.
Agee, J. K. and J. Kertis (1520). Forest types of the North Cascades National Park Service Complex (Washington, USA). Canadian Journal Of Botany 65(7): 1520-1530.
Carr, M. E., M. O. Bagby, et al. (1460). High oil-producing and polyphenol-producing species of the northwest (USA). Journal Of The American Oil Chemists' Society 63(11): 1460-1464.
Strauss, S. H. and A. H. Doerksen (1081). Restriction fragment analysis of pine phylogeny. Evolution 44(4): 1081-1096.
Parker, A. J. (1047). Stand structure in subalpine forests of Yosemite National Park, California (USA). Forest Science 34(4): 1047-1058.
Index of botanical names:
Index of common names:
All information is included in good faith but The University of Queensland does not warrant or guarantee the accuracy of any information on these pages, nor does it accept responsibilities for any loss arising from the use of this information. Views and opinions do not represent those of the University of Queensland.
Contact: Dr Rob Fletcher, School of Agriculture and Horticulture, The University of Queensland, Gatton 4343; Telephone: 07 5460 1311 or 07 5460 1301; Facsimile: 07 5460 1112; International facsimile: 61 7 5460 1112; Email:
r.fletcher@mailbox.uq.edu.au[
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