Resource Catalog
Document
Type: Book Chapter
Editor(s): L. M. Smith; R. L. Pederson; R. M. Kaminski
Publication Date: 1989
[no description entered]
Citation: Gordon, D. H., B. T. Gray, R. D. Perry, M. B. Prevost, T. H. Strange, and R. K. Williams. 1989. South Atlantic coastal wetlands, in LM Smith, RL Pederson, and RM Kaminski eds., Habitat management for migrating and wintering waterfowl in North America. Lubbock, TX, Texas Tech University Press, p. 57-92.
Cataloging Information
Regions:
Keywords:
- aesthetics
- agriculture
- Aneilema keisak
- arthropods
- coastal plain
- community ecology
- decay
- distribution
- disturbance
- dominance (ecology)
- ecosystem dynamics
- European settlement
- game birds
- geography
- geology
- Georgia
- grasses
- grasslike plants
- habitat conversion
- habitat types
- habits and behavior
- Heleocharis
- herbicides
- histories
- hunting
- hydrology
- insects
- land management
- land use
- logging
- marshes
- moisture
- multiple resource management
- nongame birds
- Nyssa
- openings
- Oryza sativa
- plant communities
- plant growth
- plant nutrients
- plantations
- Polygonum
- population ecology
- recreation
- rivers
- Ruppia maritima
- season of fire
- seasonal activities
- sedimentation
- seed germination
- seeds
- site treatments
- soil moisture
- South Carolina
- species diversity (animals)
- species diversity (plants)
- storms
- succession
- swamps
- Taxodium
- trees
- vegetation surveys
- water
- waterfowl
- wetlands
- wildlife food habits
- wildlife food plants
- wildlife habitat management
Tall Timbers Record Number: 6516 • Location Status: Not in file • Call Number: Fire File • Abstract Status: Okay, Fair use, Reproduced by permission
Record Last Modified:
Record Maintained By: FRAMES Staff (https://www.frames.gov/contact)
FRAMES Record Number: 32426
This bibliographic record was either created or modified by Tall Timbers and is provided without charge to promote research and education in Fire Ecology. The E.V. Komarek Fire Ecology Database is the intellectual property of Tall Timbers.