Thank You to
Our Sponsors:
Fisheries and Wildlife Poster Presentations
Hawks Nest Room, 1st Floor
3:00 p.m. Monday - 7:00 p.m. Tuesday
Printer-Friendly Version
Wildlife
1. Response of Vertebrate Populations to the Eradication of Morrow's Honeysuckle (Lonicera morrowii) in an Upland Meadow at Fort Necessity National Battlefield, Farmington, Pennsylvania
Holly M. McChesney, West Virginia University; James T. Anderson, West Virginia University; Constance A. Ranson
2. Effects of Habitat Change along Breeding Bird Survey Routes in the Central Appalachians on Cerulean Warbler Population
Patrick McElhone, West Virginia University; Petra Bohall Wood, Deanna Dawson
3. The Appalachian Regional Reforestation Initiative
Patrick Angel, Office of Surface Mining, U.S.D.I.; James Burger, Scott Eggerud, Chris Barton, Kevin Quick, Jeff Skousen, Molly Sager
4. Engaging Youth in Wildlife Research: Using Coverboards to Inventory and Monitor Salamanders in Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Jason P. Love, Great Smoky Mountains Institute at Tremont
5. Evaluating habitat value for red-cockaded woodpeckers using individual-based modeling
Ken M. Convery, Conservation Management Institute; Jeffrey R. Walters, Paige M. Baldassaro, Larry B. Crowder, Jeffery Priddy
6. Pentosidine Level Comparison of Breast and Patagial Skin in Monk Parakeets (Myiopsitta monachus) and Double-crested Cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus)
Crissa Kaye Cooey, West Virginia University
7. Avifauna as Indicators of Ecological Integrity in Streamside Mahagement Zones Impacted by Forestry Best Management Practices
Keenan J. Adams, Clemson University; J. Drew Lanham, PhD
8. Canada Warbler Habitat Suitability in an Active Industrial Forest in West Virginia
Douglas Becker, West Virginia University; Petra Bohall Wood
9. Natural Resource Enterprises Educational Center in Mississippi: A Tangible Wildlife Management Tool Available for Mississippi Private Landowners
Adam T. Rohnke, Mississippi State University; W. Daryl Jones, Jeanne C. Jones, Dwayne L. Wheeler, Bruce D. Leopold, Katherine M. Jacobs, Billy B. Johnson
10. Assessing Bash Risk Potential of Migrating and Breeding Osprey in the Mid-Atlantic Chesapeake Bay Region
Thomas J. Olexa, USDA Wildlife Services; Brian E. Washburn, Brian S. Dorr
11. Coastal Marsh Restoration Using Terraces Generally Increases Waterbird Diversity and Abundance In Louisiana's Chenier Plain
J.L. O'Connell, J.A. Nyman, Louisiana State University
12. Larval amphibian assemblages of constructed temporary wetlands and streamconnected floodplain pools on public forested lands in north-central Mississippi
Katherine E. Edwards, Mississippi State University; Jeanne C. Jones
13. Integration of natural resource enterprises and the economic potential for Ames Plantation
T. Adam Tullos, Mississippi State University; W. Daryl Jones, Bruce D. Leopold, Allan E. Houston, M. Shelton Whittington, Adam T. Rohnke, Kathy M. Jacobs
14. Seasonal Home Range and Site Fidelity Patterns of Symaptric Fox Squirrels and Gray Squirrels in Central Georgia
John W. Edwards, Shawn M. Crimmins, West Virginia University
15. The White-tailed Deer Population on Stennis Space Center, a Growing Problem
Jarrod H. Fogarty, West Virginia University; Jeanne C. Jones, Tyler S. Harris, Jon D. Prevost
16. A.Willis Robertson Electronic Wildlife Library Project
Virginia Shepard, Jefferson Waldon, Scott Klopfer, Michael Fies, Conservation Management Institute - Virginia Tech
17. Spatial Characteristics of Black Bears and Bear Hunters in Garrett County, Maryland
Edward Arrow, West Virginia University; John Edwards, Harry Spiker
18. Mammalian Herbivory of Seedlings Planted For Hardwood Reforestation In the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley
Tyler S. Harris, Mississippi State University; Jeanne C. Jones, Katherine E. Edwards
19. Plant communities and prairie plant augmentation in restored and remnant blackland prairies of Mississippi
Andrew C. Dailey, Mississippi State University; Jeanne C. Jones, Sam Riffell
20. Camera Trapping Carnivores: Trap Success Across Species and Habitat Selectivity of Carnivores on Salt Pond Mountain, Virginia
Edward B. Owens, Virginia Tech; Marcella J. Kelly
21. Use of Habitat and Landowner Suitability Models as Tools for Selecting Large-scale Quail Habitat Restoration Areas on Private Land in Missouri
T.V. Dailey, R.A. Reitz, C.D. Scroggins, H.J. Scroggins, T.B. Treiman, R.A. Pierce II, and W.B. Kurtz, Missouri Department of Conservation
22. Opinions of North Carolina Hunters Regarding Hunting on Sunday
M.K. Hooper, John Marshall Soil and Water Conservation District; S.L. McMullin, J.A. Parkhurst
Fisheries
23. Predictive Modeling of Freshwater Mussel Distributions in the Appalachians
Alison R. Mynsberge, West Virginia University; Jacquelyn M. Strager, Michael P. Strager, Patricia M. Mazik
24. Quantifying the value of a nursery habitat using the spotted seatrout (Cynocion nebulosus) in an estuarine system
Stacy Beharry, Old Dominion University
25. Establishing Regional Restoration Priorities for Brook Trout Populations Based on Reach and Subwatershed-Scale Connectivity
Jason Clingerman, West Virginia University; J.T. Petty; Patricia M. Mazik
26. Temporal variation in trace element chemistry of fish otoliths: implications for identifying natal origins in river systems.
Brett M. Carpenter, Virginia Military Institute; Brant M. Priest, Robert Humston
27. Length-weight, Age and Growth of Sheepshead, Archosargus probatocephalus (Pisces: Sparidae), from Chesapeake Bay, Virginia using Otoliths
Joseph C. Ballenger, Old Dominion University; Hongsheng Liao, Cynthia Jones
28. An update on West Virginia Fish distributions
Dan A. Cincotta, Stuart A. Welsh, USGS, West Virginia Coop Unit
29. Pathogens Associated with Native and Exotic Trout Populations in Shenandoah National Park and the Relationships to Fish Stocking Practices
Frank M. Panek, U.S. Geological Survey; James Atkinson, U.S. National Park Service; John Coll, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
30. Movement of Pallid Sturgeon in the Atchafalaya River
Trey Dunn, Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, Mississippi State University
Website Design & Management by Delaney Meeting and Event Management