School of Forest Resources and Conservation
Subtopics
Publications
- 4-H Forestry Project: Record Book
- Addressing Misconceptions about Wildland-Urban Interface Issues
- Addressing Sunshine State Standards in Elementary School Teacher Professional Development Workshops
- Adopt a Tree
- Agroforestry: Options for Landowners
- Air Pollution Removal and Temperature Reduction by Gainesville's Urban Forest
- Alley-Cropping Combinations for the Southeastern USA
- Forest Management in the Interface: Amenity Resources
- Assessing the Economic Feasibility of Short-Rotation Woody Crops in Florida
- Assessment and Management of Hurricane Damaged Timberland
- The Benefits of Windbreaks for Florida Growers
- Benefits of Prescribed Burning
- Biology and Control of Japanese Climbing Fern (Lygodium japonicum)
- Biology and Management of Chinese Privet
- Biology and Management of Chinese Tallow Tree
- Biology and Management of Cogongrass
- Carbon Sequestration and Storage by Gainesville's Urban Forest
- Chapter 1: Introduction to the Wildland Fire Education Handbook
- Capítulo 1 - Limpieza Después de un Huracán:¡La Seguridad es Primordial!
- Chapter 1: Restoring the Urban Forest Ecosystem: An Introduction
- Chapter 2: Basic Ecological Principles for Restoration
- Capítulo 2 - Limpieza Después de un Huracán: Consiga el profesional Correcto para el Cuidado de los Árboles
- Chapter 2: Publications on Wildland Fire
- Chapter 3: Audio-Visual Resources on Wildland Fire
- Chapter 3 - Assessing Hurricane-Damaged Trees and Deciding What to Do
- Chapter 3: Biodiversity and the Restoration of the Urban Forest Ecosystem
- Capítulo 3 - Evaluación de los árboles dañados durante un huracán y toma de decisiones
- Chapter 4: Plant Succession and Disturbances in the Urban Forest Ecosystem
- Chapter 4: Press Kit for Wildland Fire
- Chapter 5: Developing a Restoration Plan That Works
- Chapter 5: Wildland Fire Demonstration Areas
- Chapter 6: Restoring the Hydrological Cycle in the Urban Forest Ecosystem
- Chapter 7: Site Assessment and Soil Improvement
- Chapter 7: Wildland Fire Appendices and Acknowledgements
- Chapter 8: Enriching and Managing Urban Forests for Wildlife
- Chapter 9: Invasive Plants and the Restoration of the Urban Forest Ecosystem
- Chapter 10: Glossary of Terms for Restoring the Urban Forest Ecosystem
- Chapter 1 - Cleaning Up After a Hurricane: Safety Comes First!
- City of Tampa Urban Ecological Analysis
- Common Oaks of Florida
- Common Pines of Florida
- Communication Basics in the Wildland-Urban Interface
- A Community Guide to Urban Forest Inventories
- Community Leaders' Perceptions of Urban Forests in Hillsborough County, Florida
- Comparing Fall Food Plot Blends for Deer: 2006 Update
- Comparing Values of Timber Production to Agricultural Crop Production
- Comparison of Urban Forest Tree Inventory and Management Software Systems
- Conservation Easements: Options for Preserving Current Land Uses
- Controlling Hardwoods in Longleaf Pine Restoration
- Controlling Invasive Exotic Plants in North Florida Forests
- The Costs of Managing an Urban Forest
- Cypress: Florida's Majestic and Beneficial Wetlands Tree
- Dale una Mano a los Bosques: Guía de Acción Juvenil
- Dale una Mano a los Bosques: Guía para Jefe de Proyecto
- Designing a Prescribed Fire Demonstration Area
- Chapter 14 - Developing an Urban Forest Management Plan for Hurricane-Prone Communities
- Developing Land in Florida with Fire in Mind: Recommendations for Designers, Developers, and Decision Makers
- Dogwood Anthracnose: A Threat to Flowering Dogwood
- Ecosystem Management (EM) as a Basis for Forest Stewardship on Private Lands
- English Creek Native Tree and Plant Tour
- Enhancing Natural Resource Programs: Designing Effective Brochures
- Enhancing Natural Resource Programs with Field Trips
- Enhancing Natural Resources Programs with Service Learning
- Environmental Education Resources from Federal and State Agencies
- Environmental Services Provided by Tampa's Urban Forest
- Environmentally Sound Forest Harvesting
- Establishing and Maintaining Wildlife Food Sources
- Establishment of Silvopasture in Existing Pastures
- Evaluation and Use of Improved Choctawhatchee Sand Pine for Christmas Trees
- Expanding Florida's Farming Business to Incorporate Tourism
- Farming in the Forests of Florida
- Fire in the Wildland-Urban Interface: Considering Fire in Florida's Ecosystems
- Fire in the Wildland-Urban Interface: Preparing a Firewise Plant List for WUI Residents
- Fire in the Wildland-Urban Interface: Selecting and Maintaining Firewise Plants for Landscaping
- Fire in the Wildland-Urban Interface: Understanding Fire Behavior
- Florida's Fabulous Forests
- Florida's Renewable Forest Resources
- Forest Management in the Interface: Forest Cooperatives
- Forest Management in the Interface: Forest Health
- Forest Management in the Interface: Generating Income from Interface Forests
- Mechanical Vegetative Management
- Forest Management in the Interface: Practicing Visible Stewardship
- Forest Management in the Interface: Reducing Fire Risk
- Forest Management in the Interface: Water Management
- Forest Management in the Interface: Who Are Interface Landowners
- Forest Management in the Interface: Wildlife
- Forest Regeneration Methods: Natural Regeneration, Direct Seeding and Planting
- Forest Resources Leader Guide for Florida 4H Project Books
- Forest Terminology for Multiple-Use Management
- Forested Wetlands: Regulations Affecting Management
- Gainesville's Urban Forest Canopy Cover
- Gainesville's Urban Forest Structure and Composition
- Chapter 2 - Cleaning Up after a Hurricane: Get the Right Tree Care Professional
- Give Forests a Hand Leader Guide
- Give Forests a Hand Youth Action Guide
- Got Invasives? Get Help!
- Herbicides Registered for Pine Management in Florida – 2008
- How Much Wood Is In Your Woods? A quick and simple method for pine timber volume estimation
- How Trees Grow in the Urban Environment
- Nature-based Tourism in Florida: Letting Nature Work for You
- Important Species in Tampa's Urban Forest
- Improving Inservice Teacher Workshops in Florida
- Improving, Restoring, and Managing Natural Resources on Rural Properties in Florida: Sources of Financial Assistance
- Improving Student Achievement with Environmental Education
- Integrated Timber, Forage and Livestock Production - Benefits of Silvopasture
- Just Say YES to Youth Environmental Stewardship
- Kids in the Woods
- Land Use in the Wildland-Urban Interface: Land Conservation Tools and Zoning
- Policies and Programs that Affect Ecosystem Health in the Wildland-Urban Interface
- Land Use in the Wildland-Urban Interface: Urban Sprawl and Smart Growth
- Land Use in the Rural-Urban Interface: Subdivision Design
- Landscape Mulches: How Long Do They Retain Their Color?
- Landscape Mulches: How Quickly Do They Settle?
- Landscape Mulches: What Are The Choices in Florida?
- Landscape Mulches: Will Subterranean Termites Consume Them?
- Landscaping in Florida with Fire in Mind
- Longleaf Pine Regeneration
- Management of Field Windbreaks
- Management Practices to Support Increased Biodiversity in Managed Loblolly Pine Plantations
- Managing Native Vegetation for Wildlife
- Measuring the Effectiveness of Lagoon Quest: A Case Study in Environmental Education Program Evaluation
- A Native Growing Season Forage for Wildlife - Teaweed, Sida acuta Burm. f.
- A New Twist in Managing Cogongrass
- Opportunities for Uneven-Aged Management in Second Growth Longleaf Pine Stands in Florida
- Overview of Pine Straw Production in North Florida: Potential Revenues, Fertilization Practices, and Vegetation Management Recommendations
- Ownership Succession: Plan Now for the Future of Your Land
- Pine Straw Management in Florida's Forests
- Planning a Wildland-Urban Interface Communication Program
- Planting Cypress
- Potential Woody Species and Species Attributes for Windbreaks in Florida
- The Practice and Potential of Agroforestry in the Southeastern United States
- Prescribed Burning Regulations in Florida
- Primer on Chemical Vegetation Management in Florida Pine Plantations
- Providing Wildlife Cover
- Reducing Conflict in the Wildland-Urban Interface
- Safe Home Use of Firewood
- Scholarship in Extension Program Development: The Role of the State Specialist
- Selecting a Consulting Forester
- Chapter 8: Selecting Coastal Plain Species for Wind Resistance
- Chapter 9. Selecting Tropical and Subtropical Tree Species for Wind Resistance
- Social Marketing in the Wildland-Urban Interface
- Starting an Informal Presentation in the Wildland-Urban Interface
- Steps to Marketing Timber
- The Structure and Composition of Tampa's Urban Forest
- Ten Tips for Organizing a Videoconference at Multiple Sites Using the Polycom® System
- Thinning Southern Pines - A Key to Greater Returns
- Tree Walk
- Trees and Me
- Trees in Your Life
- Ten Tips for Organizing a Videoconference at Multiple Sites Using the Polycom® System
- Understanding County Forest Property Value Assessments
- Urban Forest Educational Resources for Teaching Youth
- Urban Forests in Florida: Do They Reduce Air Pollution?
- Urban Forests in Florida: Trees Control Stormwater Runoff and Improve Water Quality
- Urban Trees and Allergies in North Florida
- Using Soils to Guide Fertilizer Recommendations for Southern Pines
- What is in a Natural Resource Management Plan?
- What to Expect in a Forest Inventory
- Where There's Fire, There's Smoke: Air Quality and Prescribed Burning in Florida
- Wildland-Urban Interface: Key Issues
- Wildland Urban Interface: Varied Definitions
- Why Invest in Timber Production
- Chapter 5 - Wind and Trees: Lessons Learned from Hurricanes
- Wind and Trees: Surveys of Tree Damage in the Florida Panhandle after Hurricanes Erin and Opal
- Windbreak Designs and Planting for Florida Agricultural Fields
- Wood to Energy: Alabama Community Economic Profile - Lee and Shelby Counties
- Wood to Energy: An Invitation to Explore Possibilities
- Wood to Energy: Arkansas Community Economic Profile - Saline and Union Counties
- Wood to Energy: Burning Sawdust for Heat and Power
- Wood to Energy: Challenges of Obtaining a Wood Supply
- Wood to Energy: Climate Change and Carbon
- Wood to Energy: Co-Firing with Wood and Sugarcane Waste
- Wood to Energy: Co-Firing with Wood and Switchgrass
- Wood to Energy: Common Concerns
- Wood to Energy: Comparing Wood and Fossil Fuels
- Wood to Energy: Converting from Natural Gas to Waste Wood
- Wood to Energy: Environmental Impacts
- Wood to Energy: Financing Woody Biomass Facilities
- Wood to Energy: Florida Community Economic Profile - Alachua, Clay, Leon, Nassau, and Santa Rosa Counties
- Wood to Energy: Forest Industry Creates Its Own Power
- Wood to Energy: Georgia Community Economic Profile - Coweta, Douglas, Murray, and Union Counties
- Wood to Energy: Heat and Power Applications
- Wood to Energy: Impacts on Air Quality
- Wood to Energy: Innovative Fuel Sources Generate Success
- Wood to Energy: Kentucky Community Economic Profile - Laurel and Trimble Counties
- Wood to Energy: Louisiana Community Economic Profile - Livingston Parish
- Wood to Energy: Mississippi Community Economic Profile - DeSoto and Warren Counties
- Wood to Energy: North Carolina Community Economic Profile - Buncombe and Orange Counties
- Wood to Energy: Oklahoma Community Economic Profile - LeFlore County
- Wood to Energy: Power to the People
- Wood to Energy: Powering the Grid with Waste
- Wood to Energy: Sources and Supply
- Wood to Energy: South Carolina Community Economic Profile - Oconee County
- Wood to Energy: Sustainable Forest Management
- Wood to Energy: Systems That Convert Wood into Energy
- Wood to Energy: Tennessee Community Economic Profile - Anderson, Blount, and Sevier Counties
- Wood to Energy: Texas Community Economic Profile - Montgomery County
- Wood to Energy: Using a Mix of Fuels to Produce Heat and Power
- Wood to Energy: Using Wood Fuels in Existing Coal-Fired Power Plants
- Wood to Energy: Use of the Forest Biomass for Wood Pellets
- Wood to Energy: Virginia Community Economic Profile - Chesterfield and Fluvanna Counties
- Wood to Energy: Waste-to-Energy Program
- Wood to Energy: Wood and Paper Trim the Energy Bill
- Wood to Energy: Wood Power Heats a Public School
- Wood to Energy: Wood-Powered Whiskey
- Wood to Energy: Woody Biomass Basics
- Wood to Energy: Woody Biomass Conversion Technologies
- Working with African American and Latino Communities in the Wildland-Urban Interface
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