Wildlife, Animals, and Plants
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REFERENCES
SPECIES: Smilax laurifolia | Laurelleaf Greenbrier
REFERENCES :
1. Allen, Charles M.; Stagg, Charles H.; Parris, Stephen D. 1988. Analysis
of the vegetation in pitcher plant bogs in two baygalls at Ft. Polk in
west central Louisiana. The Proceedings of the Louisiana Academy of
Sciences. 50: 1-6. [12118]
2. Bramlett, David L. 1990. Pinus serotina Michx. pond pine. In: Burns,
Russell M.; Honkala, Barbara H., technical coordinators. Silvics of
North America. Volume 1. Conifers. Agric. Handb. 654. Washington, DC:
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service: 470-475. [13407]
3. Buell, Murray F.; Cain, Robert L. 1943. The successional role of
southern white cedar, Chamaecyparis thyoides, in southeastern North
Carolina. Ecology. 24(1): 85-93. [14091]
4. Cypert, Eugene. 1961. The effects of fires in the Okefenokee Swamp in
1954 and 1955. American Midland Naturalist. 66(2): 485-503. [11018]
5. Cypert, Eugene. 1973. Plant succession on burned areas in Okefenokee
Swamp following the fires of 1954 and 1955. In: Proceedings, annual Tall
Timbers fire ecology conference; 1972 June 8-9; Lubbock, TX. Number 12.
Tallahassee, FL: Tall Timbers Research Station: 199-217. [8467]
6. Duncan, Wilbur H.; Duncan, Marion B. 1987. The Smithsonian guide to
seaside plants of the Gulf and Atlantic Coasts from Louisiana to
Massachusetts, exclusive of lower peninsular Florida. Washington, DC:
Smithsonian Institution Press. 409 p. [12906]
7. Egler, Frank E. 1952. Southeast saline Everglades vegetation, Florida,
and its management. Vegetatio. 3: 213-265. [11479]
8. Eyre, F. H., ed. 1980. Forest cover types of the United States and
Canada. Washington, DC: Society of American Foresters. 148 p. [905]
9. Fernald, Merritt Lyndon. 1950. Gray's manual of botany. [Corrections
supplied by R. C. Rollins]. Portland, OR: Dioscorides Press. 1632 p.
(Dudley, Theodore R., gen. ed.; Biosystematics, Floristic & Phylogeny
Series; vol. 2). [14935]
10. Garrison, George A.; Bjugstad, Ardell J.; Duncan, Don A.; [and others].
1977. Vegetation and environmental features of forest and range
ecosystems. Agric. Handb. 475. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Forest Service. 68 p. [998]
11. Godfrey, Robert K. 1988. Trees, shrubs, and woody vines of northern
Florida and adjacent Georgia and Alabama. Athens, GA: The University of
Georgia Press. 734 p. [10239]
12. Hough, Walter A. 1969. Caloric value of some forest fuels of the
southern United States. Res. Note SE-120. Asheville, NC: U.S. Department
of Agriculture, Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station.
6 p. [10517]
13. Johnson, A. Sydney; Landers, J. Larry. 1978. Fruit production in slash
pine plantations in Georgia. Journal of Wildlife Management. 42(3):
606-613. [9855]
14. Kartesz, John T.; Kartesz, Rosemarie. 1980. A synonymized checklist of
the vascular flora of the United States, Canada, and Greenland. Volume
II: The biota of North America. Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North
Carolina Press; in confederation with Anne H. Lindsey and C. Richie
Bell, North Carolina Botanical Garden. 500 p. [6954]
15. Kuchler, A. W. 1964. Manual to accompany the map of potential vegetation
of the conterminous United States. Special Publication No. 36. New York:
American Geographical Society. 77 p. [1384]
16. Loveless, Charles M. 1959. A study of the vegetation in the Florida
Everglades. Ecology. 40(1): 1-9. [11478]
17. Lyon, L. Jack; Stickney, Peter F. 1976. Early vegetal succession
following large northern Rocky Mountain wildfires. In: Proceedings, Tall
Timbers fire ecology conference and Intermountain Fire Research Council
fire and land management symposium; 1974 October 8-10; Missoula, MT. No.
14. Tallahassee, FL: Tall Timbers Research Station: 355-373. [1496]
18. MacRoberts, B. R.; MacRoberts, M. H. 1988. Floristic composition of two
west Louisiana pitcher plant pogs. Phytologia. 65(3): 184-190. [10128]
19. Martin, Ben F.; Tucker, S. C. 1985. Developmental studies in Smilax
(Liliaceae). I. Organography and the shoot apex. American Journal of
Botany. 72(1): 66-74. [15086]
20. McKinley, Carol E.; Day, Frank P., Jr. 1979. Herb. prod. in cut-burned,
uncut-burned & contl areas of a Chamaecyparis thyoides (L.) BSP
(Cupressaceae) stand in the Great Dismal Swamp. Bulletin of the Torrey
Botanical Club. 106(1): 20-28. [14089]
21. Monk, Carl D.; Brown, Timothy W. 1965. Ecological consideration of
cypress heads in north-central Florida. American Midland Naturalist. 74:
126-140. [10848]
22. Raunkiaer, C. 1934. The life forms of plants and statistical plant
geography. Oxford: Clarendon Press. 632 p. [2843]
23. Richardson, Curtis J. 1983. Pocosins: vanishing wastelands or valuable
wetlands?. Bioscience. 33(10): 626-633. [13818]
24. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service. 1982.
National list of scientific plant names. Vol. 1. List of plant names.
SCS-TP-159. Washington, DC. 416 p. [11573]
25. Van Dersal, William R. 1938. Native woody plants of the United States,
their erosion-control and wildlife values. Washington, DC: U.S.
Department of Agriculture. 362 p. [4240]
26. Walker, Joan; Peet, Robert K. 1983. Composition and species diversity of
pine-wiregrass savannas of the Green Swamp, North Carolina. Vegetatio.
55: 163-179. [10132]
27. Wells, B. W. 1928. Plant communities of the Coastal Plain of North
Carolina and their successional relations. Ecology. 9(2): 230-242.
[9307]
28. Whitehead, Donald R. 1972. Developmental and environmental history of
the Dismal Swamp. Ecological Monographs. 42(3): 301-315. [15097]
29. Wofford, B. Eugene. 1989. Guide to the vascular plants of the Blue
Ridge. Athens, GA: The University of Georgia Press. 384 p. [12908]
30. Stickney, Peter F. 1989. Seral origin of species originating in northern
Rocky Mountain forests. Unpublished draft on file at: U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Forest Service, Intermountain Research Station, Fire
Sciences Laboratory, Missoula, MT; RWU 4403 files. 7 p. [20090]
Related categories for Species: Smilax laurifolia
| Laurelleaf Greenbrier
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