Poster Session II: Riparian, Ecosystem Cycles, and Inventory
2. GENETIC POPULATION STRUCTURE OF EASTERN WHITE PINE IN MINNESOTA
Paul D. Anderson
3. REDUCED GROWTH OF ALASKA BIRCH IN CENTRAL ALASKA FROM CLIMATE
WARMING
Valerie A. Barber
4. INFLUENCE OF ATMOSPHERIC VAPOR PRESSURE DEFICIT AND DROUGHT
ON NET ECOSYSTEM CARBON EXCHANGE, SAP FLUX, CARBON DIOXIDE UPTAKE,
AND TRANSPIRATION OF EASTERN COTTONWOODS AT LEAF AND STAND LEVEL
Greg A. Barron-Gafford
6. SAPWOOD WATER CONTENT IS INSENSITIVE TO CHANGES IN SOIL MOISTURE
Peter Beedlow
10. DOES ISOTOPIC ANALYSIS OF NOCTURNAL AIR DRAINAGE REVEAL ECOSYSTEM
FUNCTION AT THE WATERSHED-SCALE?
Barbara J. Bond
18. NITROGEN FLUX FROM WEST CASCADE RANGE HEADWATER STREAMS DRAINING
FORESTS ALONG A SUCCESSIONAL GRADIENT
Michael A. Cairns
19. A DENDROECOLOGICAL STUDY OF DOUGLAS-FIR AND LODGEPOLE PINE
ALONG ALTITUDINAL GRADIENTS WITHIN THE NORTH CASCADES NATIONAL
PARK, WASHINGTON
Michael J. Case
22. MONITORING HOUSING DEVELOPMENT IN FORESTED AREAS WITH REMOTELY
SENSED DATA
Patrick D. Culbert
27. VEGETATION COMPOSITIONAL CHANGE IN FORESTS OF THE KENAI MOUNTAINS,
ALASKA
Robert L. DeVelice
34. INTERACTION OF INSECT DEFOLIATION AND WILDFIRE AT LANDSCAPE
SCALES IN CENTRAL CANADAS BOREAL FORESTS AND THE IMPLICATIONS
FOR GLOBAL WARMING
Richard A. Fleming
37. INFLUENCE OF LANDSCAPE PROPERTIES ON THE GEOCHEMISTRY OF
SURFACE WATERS IN A BENCHMARK OLD-GROWTH NORTHERN HARDWOOD WATERSHED
P. Charles Goebel
38. PHOTO MONITORING
Frederick C. Hall
47. MAPPING THE ABUNDANCE AND ACTIVITY OF TWO SYMBIOTIC NITROGEN
FIXERS IN WESTERN OREGON
William T. Hicks
49. SENSITIVITY OF FOREST GROWTH PATTERNS IN THE OLYMPIC MOUNTAINS,
WASHINGTON
Melisa L. Holman
50. VEGETATION-ENVIRONMENT RELATIONSHIPS OF CANOPY AND GROUND-FLORA
SPECIES IN RIPARIAN FORESTS OF UNGLACIATED OHIO
Kathryn L. Holmes
51. FROM SOILS TO ECOSYSTEMS: USING SOILS TO PREDICT MAXIMUM
ECOSYSTEM C STORES ACROSS THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST REGION
Peter S. Homann
54. FOLIAR NITROGEN ALLOCATION IN COASTAL OREGON DOUGLAS-FIR
Kathryn N. James
56. VEGETATION WATER USE AND BASEFLOW RESPONSE IN SMALL, FORESTED,
EXPERIMENTAL WATERSHEDS OF THE WESTERN CASCADE RANGE, OREGON
Julia A. Jones
57. PROBABLE DEMISE OF CERTAIN INTERIOR ALASKA BLACK SPRUCE POPULATIONS
UNDER CLIMATE WARMING
Glenn P. Juday
71. MODELING RESPONSES OF RIPARIAN SYSTEMS TO ALTERNATIVE FOREST
MANAGEMENT SCENARIOS IN WESTERN OREGON
Judith L. Li
74. CARBON SEQUESTRATION IN THE PORTUGUESE FOREST - PRELIMINARY
RESULTS
Domingos Lopes
79. CURRENT PERSPECTIVES ON LARGE WOOD IN STREAM RESTORATION:
LITERATURE, LEGISLATION, AND THE PRACTITIONER
Arthur E. L. Morris
81. THE INTENSIVE FORESTRY MESOCOSM AT BIOSPHERE2 CENTER - A
LARGE SCALE CONTROLLED ENVIRONMENT FACILITY FOR EXPERIMENTAL SCIENCE
Ramesh Murthy
82. RIPARIAN VEGETATION COMPOSITION AND ORGANIC MATTER INPUTS
TO HEADWATER STREAMS OF THE SIERRA NEVADA
Dana K. Nagy
92. ARE HEADWATER STREAMS IMPORTANT TO FOREST ECOSYSTEMS?: ADULT
AQUATIC INSECT COMMUNITIES IN TEMPORARY AND PERENNIAL HEADWATER
STREAMS IN WESTERN OREGON
Robert Progar
94. SEED GERMINATION AND GROWTH OF FOUR WETLAND TREE SPECIES
IN RESPONSE TO ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS IN TREE ISLANDS OF NORTHERN
SHARK SLOUGH, EVERGLADES NATIONAL PARK
David L. Reed
95. EFFECT OF HARVEST INTENSITY ON SOIL CHEMISTRY AND MINERAL
NUTRITION OF RED SPRUCE
Andrew B. Reinmann
96. ALTERNATIVE CONIFER RELEASE TREATMENTS AFFECT SPECIES COMPOSITION,
FOREST FLOOR LEAF LITTER DEPOSITION, LEAF LITTER DECOMPOSITION,
AND NUTRIENT CYCLING THROUGH FIVE POST-TREATMENT GROWING SEASONS
Phillip Reynolds
102. SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL TRENDS IN FOREST COMPOSITION AND STRUCTURE
LANDCAPE METRICS FOR MONITORING LARGE FOREST CONSERVATION
EASEMENTS
Steven A. Sader
105. STABLE ISOTOPE VARIATION IN RIPARIAN OVERSTORY VEGETATION
IN THE OREGON COAST RANGE
Emily E. Scott
106. ESTABLISHING REFERENCE CONDITIONS: SPECIES COMPOSITION AND
FOREST STRUCTURE ALONG HEADWATER STREAMS OF WESTERN OREGON
Jeff P. Shatford
107. INTERNAL NITROGEN CYCLING IN WESTERN OREGON FORESTS WITH
DIFFERING NITROGEN STATUS
Emily R. Shipley
109. USE OF FIA AND OTHER INVENTORY DATA TO PARAMETERIZE A LANDSCAPE
LEVEL MODEL OF LONG-TERM ECOLOGICAL BEHAVIOR
Neal Sullivan
110. THE LAND-WATER INTERFACE: CHARACTERISTICS OF RIPARIAN BUFFERS
IN AN OREGON COAST RANGE SYSTEM
Mayumi Takahashi
112. RESULTS OF THE 2002 RPA FOREST RESOURCES ASSESSMENT
John S. Vissage
115. FIRE IN A CHEATGRASS (Bromus tectorum L.) INFESTED SIERRA
NEVADA YELLOW PINE FOREST: EFFECTS ON NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS
SOIL FRACTIONS
Nathan J. Wojcik
116. THE DOWN WOODY MATERIALS INDICATOR OF THE FOREST INVENTORY
AND ANALYSIS PROGRAM
Christopher W. Woodall
118. EARLY FOREST SUCCESSION PATTERNS IN WESTERN OREGON
Zhiqiang Yang
121. RESOURCE CHANGE MONITORING USING A CHANGE DETECTION SUPPLEMENTED
WITH OBJECT-ORIENTED IMAGE SEGMENTATION AND CLASSIFICATION OF
LANDSAT 5/7 TM IMAGERY
Xiaoping Yuan