Access this chapter
Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout
Purchases are for personal use only
Preview
Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.
References
Bailey, R. G. (1998). Ecoregions. Springer. NY.
Bartuska. A. M. (1999). Cross-boundary issues to manage for healthy forest ecosystems. In Klopatek, J and Gardner, R. (Eds.), Landscape Ecological Analysis. Springer-Verlag. NY.
Cherrett, J. M. (1988). Ecological concepts: a survey of the views of the members of the British Ecological Society. Biologist, 35: 64-66.
Coleman, D. C. and P. F. Hendrix (Eds.) (2000). Invertebrates as Webmasters of Ecosystems. CAB International. Wallingford, UK.
Coleman, D. G. and D. A. Crossley, Jr. (1996). Fundamentals of Soil Ecology. Academic Press. NY.
Costanza, R. (1992). Toward an operational definition of ecosystem health. In Costanza, R., B. G. Norton, and B. D. Haskell (Eds.), Ecosystem Health. Island Press. Washington, D.C.
Coulson, R. N. and D. A. Crossley Jr. (1987). What is insect ecology: a commentary. Bulletin of the. Entomological Society of America, 33:64-68.
Coulson, R. N. and J. A. Witter. (1984). Forest Entomology. John Wiley and Sons, NY.
Coulson, R. N. and K. A. Schneider. (1992). Archaeology as a component of tropical forest landscape management. In Pantel, A. G., K. A. Schneider, and L. Loyola-Black (Eds.) Archaeology and Environment. Proceedings of the. New World Conference on Rescue Archaeology. San Juan, Puerto Rico, Dec 12, 1992.
Coulson, R. N., McFadden, B. A., Pulley, P. E., Lovelady, C. N., Fitzgerald, J. W., and Jack, S. B. (1999). Heterogeneity of forest landscapes and the distribution and abundance of the southern pine beetle. Forest Ecology and Managementm, 114: 471-85.
Coulson, R. N. and W. F. Wunneburger. (2000). Impact of insects on human-dominated and natural forest landscapes. In Coleman, D. C. and P. F. Hendrix (Eds.). Invertebrates as Webmasters of Ecosystems. CAB International, Wallingford, UK.
Coulson, R. N., M. A. Pinto, M. D. Tchakerian, K. A. Baum, W. L. Rubink, and J. S. Johnston.(2005). Feral honey bees in pine forest landscapes of east Texas. Forest Ecology and Management, 215: 91- 102.
Dale, V. H. S. Brown, R. A. Haeuber, N. T. Hobbs, N. Huntly, R. J. Naiman, W. E. Riebsame, M. G. Turner, and J. T. Valone. (2000). Ecological principles and guidelines for managing the use of land. Ecoological Applications, 10: 639-70.
Fierke, M.K., D.L. Kinney, V.B. Salisbury, D.J. Crook, F.M. Stephen. (2005). Development and comparison of intensive and extensive sampling methods and preliminary within-tree population estimates of red oak borer (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) in the Ozark Mountains of Arkansas. Environmental Entomology 34, 184-192.
Forman, R. T. T. (1995). Land Mosaics. Cambridge Univ. Press. NY.
Guldin, James M.; Heitzman, Eric; Poole, Edward; Kabrick, John; and Muzika, Rose-Marie. (2005). Ground truth assessments of oak decline and red oak borer infestation in the Interior Highlands of Arkansas, Oklahoma and Missouri—preliminary results from overstory analysis, p. xx-xx. In: Connor, Christine, tech. comp. Proceedings of the Thirteenth Biennial Southern Silvicultural Research Conference, 28 February-3 March 2005, Memphis TN. Gen. Tech. Rep. SRS-XXX. Asheville, NC: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Southern Research Station. In press.
Harper, J. L. (1977). Population Biology of Plants. Academic Press. NY.
Harper, J. L., B. R. Rosen, and J. White. (Eds.). (1986). The Growth and Form of Modular Organisms. The Royal Society, London, UK.
Haskell, B. D., B. G. Norton, and R. Costanza. (1992). What is ecosystem health and why should we worry about it? In Costanza, R., B. D. Norton, and D. D. Haskell (Eds.), Ecosystem Health. Island Press. Washington, D. C.
Hay, C. J. (1974). Survival and mortality of red oak borer larvae on black, scarlet, and northern red oak in eastern Kentucky. Annals of the. Entomological. Society of. America, 67, 981-986.
Heitzman, E. R.M. Muzika, J. Kabrick and J.M Guldin. (2004). Assessment of oak decline in Missouri, Arkansas, and Oklahoma. Proc. 14th Cent. Hardwood Forest Conf. GTR-NE 316. p. 510.
Holling, C. S. (Ed.). (1978). Adaptive Environmental Assessment and Management. John Wiley and Sons. NY.
Holling, C. S. (1986). Resilience of ecosystems: local surprise and global change. In W. C. Clark, R. E. Mimm (Eds.), Sustainable Development of the Biosphere. Cambridge University Press. NY.
Holling, C. S. (1991). The role of insects in structuring the boreal landscape. In H. H. Shugart, R. Leemans, and G. B. Bonan (Eds.), A Systems Analysis of Global Boreal Forests. Cambridge University Press. NY.
Holling, C. S. (1992). Cross-scale morphology, geometry, and dynamics of ecosystems. Ecological Monographs, 62, 447-502.
Holling, C. S. (1995). What barriers? What Bridges? In Gunderson, L. H., C. S. Holling, and S. S. Light (Eds.), Barriers and Bridges. Columbia University Press. NY.
Johnson, B. R. and K. Hill. (2002). Ecology and Design. Island Press. Washington, D.C.
Karr, J. R. (2002). What from ecology is relevant to design and planning. In Johnson, B. R. and K. Hill. Ecology and Design. Island Press. Washington, D.C.
Landers, P. B., P. Morgan, and F. J. Swanson. (1999). Overview of the use of natural variability concepts in managing ecological systems. Ecological Applications, 9, 1179-1188.
Manion, P.D. (1991). Tree Disease Concepts, 2nd Ed. Prentice-Hall, Inc. Englewood Cliffs, NJ. 416 p.
Mueller-Dombois, D., J.E. Canfield, RA. Holt, ad G.P. Buelow. (1983). Tree-group death in North American ad Hawiian forest: a pathological problem or a new problem for vegetation ecology. Phytocoenologia, 11,117-137.
Mueller-Dombois, D. (1986). Perspectives for an etiology of stand-level dieback. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 17, 221-243.
Mueller-Dombois, D. (1992). A natural dieback theory, cohort senescence as an alternative to the decline disease theory. In Manion, P.D. and D. Lachance (Eds.), Forest Decline Concepts. American Phytopathological Society Press, St. Paul, MN. pp. 26-37.
National Research Council. (1998). Forested Landscapes in Perspective. National Academy of Sciences. National Academy Press. Washington, D. C.
Odum, E. P. (1992). Great ideals in ecology for the 1990s. BioScience, 42: 542-45.
Odum, E. P. (1997). Ecology. Sinauer Associates, Inc. Sunderland, MA.
Paine, T. D., F. M. Stephen, and H. A. Taha. (1984). Conceptual model of infestation probability based on bark beetle abundance and host tree susceptibility. Environmental Entomology 13, 619-624.
Pimentel, D. L. Westra, and R. F. Noss (Eds.). (2000). Ecological Integrity. Island Press. Washington, DC.
Schowalter, T. D., Coulson, R. N. and Crossley, D. A. Jr. (1981). The role of southern pine beetle and fire in the maintenance of structure and function of the southeastern coniferous forest. Environmental Entomology, 10, 821-825.
Sinclair, W.A. (1965). Comparisons of recent declines of white ash, oak, and sugar maple in northeastern woodlands. Cornell Plant, 20, 63-67.
Smardon, R. C. and J. P. Karp. (1993). The Legal Landscape. Van Nostrand Reinhold, NY.
Stephen, F. M., V. B. Salisbury, and F. L. Oliveria. (2001). Red oak borer, Enaphalodes rufulus (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae), in the Ozark Mountains of Arkansas, U.S.A.: an unexpected and remarkable forest disturbance. Integrated. Pest Management Reviews, 6, 247-252.
Woodley, S., J. Kay, and G. Francis. (1993). Ecological Integrity and the Management of Ecosystems. St. Lucie Press. Boca Raton, FL.
Yaffee, S. L. (1999). Three faces of ecosystem management. Conservation Biology, 13, 713-725.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2008 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Coulson, R.N., Stephen, F.M. (2008). Impacts of Insects in Forest Landscapes: Implications for Forest Health Management. In: Invasive Forest Insects, Introduced Forest Trees, and Altered Ecosystems. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-5162-X_6
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-5162-X_6
Publisher Name: Springer, Dordrecht
Print ISBN: 978-1-4020-5161-6
Online ISBN: 978-1-4020-5162-3
eBook Packages: Biomedical and Life SciencesBiomedical and Life Sciences (R0)