Proceedings of Southeastern Fish and Wildlife Conference
Prior to 2013, SEAFWA published the Proceedings of annual conferences. In 2014, SEAFWA began publishing the peer-reviewed Journal of the Southeastern Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies.
251 - 300 of 4522 articles | 50 per page | page 6
Article | Year |
---|---|
Results Of Kentucky's Wildlife Plant And Seed Distribution Program From 1949 To 1956
Pages 197-209 |
1956 |
Climatic Influences On The Availability Of Shrub Lespedeza Seed For Quail
Pages 182-189 |
1956 |
Age And Growth Of The Gizzard Shad (Dorosoma Lacepedi) (Lesueur), In Lake Newnan, Florida
Pages 318-331 |
1957 |
Introduction And Success Of White Bass (Roccus Chrysops) In North Carolina Waters
Pages 185-192 |
1957 |
Politics In State Game And Fish Agencies
Pages 11-17 |
1957 |
A State Officer's Views Of The Game And Fish Laws
Pages 200-201 |
1957 |
Federal Officers' Views On Game And Fish Laws
Pages 201-202 |
1957 |
Influence Of Fishing Pressure On Bass Fishing Success
Pages 76-82 |
1957 |
Our Professional Neglect Of The Water Use Problem--And A Remedial Approach
Pages 60-61 |
1957 |
A Brief Appraisal Of Data Analysis Methods Employed In Determining Standing Crops Of Fish
Pages 98-103 |
1957 |
A Preliminary Report On The Comparative Testing Of Some Of The Newer Herbicides A simple method for the comparative testing of herbicides for emergent weeds was developed and used over a three-year period to compare the effect of recently introduced herbicides with that obtained from the use of a 2,4-D ester in a fuel oil carrier.
Pages 125-132 |
1957 |
Conservation Officers On And Off Duty
Pages 209-211 |
1957 |
Factors Affecting And Methods Used In Combating The Night Hunting Of Deer In Florida
Pages 380-381 |
1957 |
Gizzard Shad Removal In Deer Island Lake, Florida Results of four experiments on 5.5-acre Deer Island Lake demonstrated that selective poisoning was a practical method for reducing the gizzard shad population. Past haul seine efforts had effected only a temporary reduction in this lake. A concentration of 0.04 p.p.m. of 5 percent emulsified rotenone killed very few gizzard shad. A 0.1 p.p.m. concentration resulted in a conservatively calculated kill of 4,651 pounds or 846 pounds per surface acre. An application of 0.15 p.p.m. concentration killed larger shad as well as a few bass. A subsequent application of 0.1 p.p.m.
Pages 312-318 |
1957 |
Hurricane Damage To Rockefeller Refuge
Pages 52-56 |
1957 |
Pages 6-11 |
1957 |
A Pre-Impoundment Fishery Study Of North Bay And Associated Waters, Bay County, Florida
Pages 211-219 |
1957 |
A Preliminary Report From The Southeastern Cooperative Deer Disease Study
Pages 45-50 |
1957 |
Bobwhite Age-Weight Relationship And The Opening Date Of The Hunting Season
Pages 339-342 |
1957 |
Comparison Of The Age And Growth Of Four Fishes From Lower And Upper Spavinaw Lakes, Oklahoma
Pages 232-249 |
1957 |
Estimated Sizes Of Various Forage Fishes Largemouth Bass Can Swallow
Pages 220-225 |
1957 |
Experiments With Yellow Bass (Morone Interrupta) In Tennessee Farm Ponds
Pages 289-293 |
1957 |
Food Habits Of Wild Ducks In The Rice-Marsh Transition Area Of Louisiana
Pages 114-119 |
1957 |
Gathering And Presenting Evidence
Pages 372-374 |
1957 |
How To Create Better Working Relationships Between Conservation Officers And The Courts
Pages 192-195 |
1957 |
Mourning Dove Nesting Studies In Mississippi
Pages 38-45 |
1957 |
Nine Years Of Progress In Farm Game Management In North Carolina, 1948-1957
Pages 20-34 |
1957 |
A Five-Year State-Wide Quail Population Study In Kentucky
Pages 343-346 |
1957 |
A Method Of Determining The Sex Of The Striped Bass (Roccus Saxatilis) (Walbaum) A method is described for sexing striped bass through use of serrated jaw ear forceps. The instrument is used to extract gonads from dead fish in samples of commercial catches, without incurring damage to the fish which affects the market quality. The gonads are examined later in the laboratory and are identified as male or female. The technique has proven satisfactory in large scale sampling of commercial catches. This method also holds promise for use on other species of fish in which sex ratio studies are important.
Pages 271-272 |
1957 |
An Evaluation Of Some Of The Factors Affecting The Validity Of Rotenone Sampling Data
Pages 91-98 |
1957 |
Better Wildlife Ranger-Newspaper Relations
Pages 335-337 |
1957 |
Combating Night Hunting For Deer In South Carolina
Pages 389-391 |
1957 |
Pages 349-351 |
1957 |
Essentials Of An Effective Conservation Communications Program
Pages 332-335 |
1957 |
Experimental Use Of Explosives On The Aucilla River Seven charges of Nitromon Primer S were exploded at six stations on the Aucilla River. Results of three explosions, each consisting of ten pounds of explosive, at Station No. 1 killed at least 842 shortnose gar, 300 longnose gar and three channel catfish. The successive treatments at this station indicated a reduction of longnose gar in the area. More shortnose gar were destroyed in the third explosion than in the first and second. Variation occurred in the results at other stations. It was noted gar concentrations could be detected by their surfacing activity.
Pages 277-280 |
1957 |
Fish And Wildlife--Agricultural Slant
Pages 51-52 |
1957 |
Food Habits Of Three Centrarchidae In Lake George, Florida An investigation of the stomach contents of bluegill, black crappie, and redear sunfish was made from specimens collected during several months of 1948, 1949, and 1950, in Lake George, Florida. Major items found in stomachs of 432 large bluegills were: aquatic vegetation, crustacea, insecta, and fish eggs. Fifty-five stomachs from small bluegills contained, principally, Cladocera and Diptera larvae. Dorosoma petenensis vanhyningi (Weed) was the major food organism found in 145 black crappie.
Pages 293-302 |
1957 |
Further Experiments With Tilapia Mossambica As A Pondfish Ponds stocked April 30 with 80 Tilapia mossambica per acre and drained October 16 produced in the 170-day experiment 1,480.9 pounds tilapia per acre in a fertilized pond and 3,224 pounds per acre where feeding was added. Tilapia (1- to 2-inch) stocked into ponds June 13 reached 5 to 8 inches in size in 126 days. A 2.6-acre pond was stocked April 18-20 with 80 brood tilapia per acre. The pond was fertilized and the fish fed. Tilapia hatching in this pond grew large enough to provide fishing by August 1.
Pages 152-154 |
1957 |
How Should Population Surveys Be Made?
Pages 84-89 |
1957 |
Methods Used In Combating Night Deer Hunting In North Carolina
Pages 387-389 |
1957 |
Methods Used In Kentucky On Combating The Hunting Of Deer At Night
Pages 382-383 |
1957 |
Studies on twenty-one clear and twenty-three turbid ponds in Payne and Noble counties in Oklahoma were made during the 1956 late winter and spring waterfowl migration (February-May). A total of 5,402 waterfowl representing thirteen species was observed. Dabblers made up 84.6 percent of the total number observed. Waterfowl reached a peak during the first week of March and then declined sharply. This decline coincided with a decrease in available aquatic plants which were depleted by the feeding of large numbers of waterfowl.
Pages 364-372 |
1957 |
An Evaluation Of Fish Population Studies By Florida Haul Seine The technique of operation of the haul seine as traditionally used in the large fresh water bodies of Florida is discussed. Limiting factors inherent in the sampling device are enumerated and illustrated by seine catches from several lakes. Rotenone studies from some of these lakes are contrasted with the seine catches. The results of creel census studies in lakes extensively fished by sportsmen, by reflecting proportionate quantities of game fishes similar to quantities taken in the haul seine, are quoted as further validation for its use in qualitative population. sampling.
Pages 89-91 |
1957 |
Clipping Study Techniques In Marsh Ecology Investigations
Pages 119-124 |
1957 |
Coturnix Or Japanese Quail Investigations In The United States (A Progress Report--October, 1957)
Pages 56-59 |
1957 |
Final Report On Population Manipulation Studies In Three Kentucky Streams Perhaps the most universal problem in many of Kentucky's streams, from the angler's viewpoint, is that of excessive numbers of rough fish in proportion to the numbers of game fish. This paper presents the findings of a Dingell-Johnson project that has been concerned since 1952 with the manipulation of populations in 3 streams typical of types found in the state. The upper 46 miles of North Fork River in Mason County and 12 miles of Whippoorwill Creek in Logan County were treated with 5-percent powdered rotenone in 1952 to eradicate their entire fish populations.
Pages 155-185 |
1957 |
Foreign Game Introductions Into The Southeast
Pages 17-20 |
1957 |
How Fish Population Surveys Should Be Reported To facilitate the evaluation and use of population studies, reports should include: 1. A description of the area sampled, including the chemical classification and physical type of water, the type of bottom, depth of water, speed of movement and other information necessary to describe the environment from which the population came. 2. A description of the method of sampling employed in sufficient detail to enable the results to be evaluated and compared with results of other surveys. 3. Methods of measuring the results should be stated.
Pages 103-104 |
1957 |
Low-Cost Conservation Films For Television Copies of the specialized paper and information available from Information and Education Division, Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission, Tallahassee, Florida upon request.
Pages 332-332 |
1957 |
Kentucky's Junior Clubbers Go Camping
Pages 337-338 |
1957 |