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.
351 - 400 of 4522 articles | 50 per page | page 8
Article | Year |
---|---|
A Proposal For The Management Of Reservoirs For Fisheries A fisheries management plan for reservoirs is proposed which is dependent upon having a fish management pool and provision for drainage incorporated into the basic design. Justification is given to support the cost of having a cleared management pool in the bottom of the reservoir as well as drainage facilities. A plan is also proposed for selective clearing of reservoir basins.
Pages 132-143 |
1958 |
A pattern of high original reservoir productivity followed by gradual decline (in terms of angling success and desirable fish production) has been evidenced in a chain of lakes, of different ages, on the Ouachita River, Arkansas. Lake Catherine, formed in 1923, consists of 3,000 acres; Lake Hamilton, created in 1931, consists of 7,200 acres, and Lake Ouachita, impounded in 1953, covers 40,000 acres. A comprehensive fishery study was conducted during the summers of 1955, 1956 and 1957 to investigate and compare the fishery resources of these lakes and formulate management plans.
Pages 183-198 |
1958 |
In order to test the relative success of various stocking rates of largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides (Lacepede)-bluegill, Lepomis macrochirus Rafinesque, combinations and largemouth bass-shellcracker, Lepomis microlophus (Gunther), in farm ponds in Kentucky, 574 ponds.
Pages 91-116 |
1958 |
History Of The Imported Fire Ant In The Southeast
Pages 227-233 |
1958 |
Opportunities For Fish And Wildlife Enhancement Through Wetland And Water Use Studies
Pages 309-325 |
1958 |
Preliminary Report On The Effects Of The Removal Of Rough Fishes On The Clear Lake Sport Fishery
Pages 36-56 |
1958 |
Progress Report On Golden Channel Catfish In June, 1956, albino channel catfish (Ictalurus Lacustris) were observed to occur in possibly two spawns from wild colored parents. These albino channel catfish have been named "Golden Channel Catfish." By stocking the golden channel catfish fingerlings in large water areas, sufficient growth was obtained so that several of the fish became sexually mature at the age of two years and a weight of about two pounds. Three spawns were obtained from these two-year-old golden channel catfish in the spring of 1958, and all the young were golden (albino) in color.
Pages 75-78 |
1958 |
Management of some form is mandatory for the continuance or restoration of successful fishing in the majority of reservoirs in the Southern States. The selective killing of gizzard shad and some species of rough fish with rotenone shows promise as a management tool for some reservoirs. The use of rotenone as a selective toxicant in four Kentucky reservoirs is discussed. The total poundage of gizzard shad was drastically reduced in three reservoirs and this species was eliminated from a fourth reservoir.
Pages 143-147 |
1958 |
The Black And White Crappies Of The Santee-Cooper Reservoir The reservoir has a surface acreage of 160,500 and contains two rather dissimilar lakes; namely, Lake Moultrie and Lake Marion. A four-year continuous creel census indicated that three-fourths of the catch of crappies was made in Lake Marion. Four distinct growth rates were encountered in a growth study of each species in each lake. A food habit study of 149 full crappie stomachs showed insects to occur 77.1% of the time and fish 55.7% of the time. A world record black crappie (Pomoxis nigro-maculatus) was caught in Lake Moultrie on March 15, 1957.
Pages 158-168 |
1958 |
The Practical Prosecution Of Game Law Violations
Pages 22-25 |
1958 |
Uniform Game Laws, Interpretations And Enforcement
Pages 20-22 |
1958 |
Pages 280-285 |
1958 |
A Commentary On The Fire Ant Problem
Pages 257-260 |
1958 |
Pages 206-208 |
1958 |
Address Of Welcome To Kentucky
Pages 3-5 |
1958 |
Pages 128-132 |
1958 |
Experiments On Growing Fingerling Channel Catfish To Marketable Size In Ponds
Pages 63-72 |
1958 |
Further Experiments On Feeds For Fathead Minnows Fathead minnows averaging 1.74 pounds per thousand were stocked into ponds January 21 at rates of 100,000 per acre, and fed 6 days a week until the ponds were drained April 1. The feeds were 3 forms of Auburn NO.2 fish feed, namely, dry mix, crumbles, %-inch diameter pellets, and a commercial trout pellet. The ingredients of the Auburn No.2 fish feed were: 35 Percent Soybean Oil Meal . . . . . (44 percent protein) 35 Percent Ground Peanut Cake . . . . . (53 percent protein) 15 Percent Fish Meal . . . . . (60 percent protein) 15 Percent Distillers Dried Solubles . . . . .
Pages 176-178 |
1958 |
History Of Fish And Fishing In Norris A TVA Tributary Reservoir Norris Reservoir, the first TVA tributary reservoir, completed in 1936, has a spillway surface area of 34,200 acres. Earliest fish inventory records in the basin indicate 17 indigenous families of fishes represented by 40 genera and 65 species. Four families, Petromyzonidae, Anguillidae, Cyprinodontidae, and Cottidae, were unable to cope with the reservoir environment. Several genera and species of Cyprinidae and Percidae likewise did not survive. Game and commercial species generally have prospered in the reservoir.
Pages 116-127 |
1958 |
Observations Of Effects Of An Application Of Heptachlor Or Dieldrin On Wildlife
Pages 244-247 |
1958 |
On The Status Of "Wildlife Management" As A Scientific Profession
Pages 275-279 |
1958 |
Predator And Rodent Control--Southeastern States
Pages 301-303 |
1958 |
Problems Of Conservation Education In The New Age
Pages 30-35 |
1958 |
Progress Report On Alabama Bobwhite Quail Wing Study
Pages 260-269 |
1958 |
Reservoir Operation For Statutory Purposes The Corps of Engineers of the Department of the Army plans and constructs authorized flood control and multiple-purpose reservoirs under the general provisions of the Flood Control Acts of 1936 and 1944 and other legislation authorizing specific reservoir projects. The 1944 Act delegates to the Secretary of the Army responsibility for prescribing regulations for the use of flood control or navigation storage at all reservoirs, except those of the TVA, constructed wholly or in part with Federal funds.
Pages 147-155 |
1958 |
Studies On The Effect Of The Imported Fire Ant Control Program On Wildlife In Louisiana
Pages 250-255 |
1958 |
The Aerial Drop Method Of Releasing Wild Trapped Turkeys For Restocking Purposes
Pages 212- |
1958 |
The Evaluation Of Chemical Aquatic Weed Control In Georgia Farm Ponds Aquatic weed control has in recent years developed into one of the most important phases of farm pond management in Georgia. Properly constructed ponds with adequate fertilization which were chemically treated four years ago show no reinfestation at this time. On the other hand, in experimental ponds which were not properly fertilized the results of chemical weed control were of extremely short duration.
Pages 56-63 |
1958 |
The Toxicity Of Some Organic Insecticides To Fishes
Pages 233-239 |
1958 |
The Value Of Cooperation Of State And Federal Conservation Officers
Pages 17-19 |
1958 |
Pages 5-8 |
1958 |
Creel Census Methods Used On Clear Lake Richland Parish, Louisiana
Pages 169-175 |
1958 |
Fire Ant Eradication And Wildlife
Pages 248-250 |
1958 |
Pages 325-326 |
1958 |
Planning For Wildlife On Watershed Projects
Pages 291-294 |
1958 |
Pages 1-2 |
1958 |
Some Observations On The Recovery Of Diving Ducks Banded In The Maryland Portion Of Chesapeake Bay During the six years 1952 to 1957, a total of 13,269 waterfowl of three species (lesser scaup, redhead and canvasback) were banded in Maryland. From these, 1,125 band recoveries had been reported to June, 1958. Bands recovered through hunters (shot) made up the great majority of all reported, ranging from 91.9 percent of all recovered for lesser scaup to 96.5 percent for redheads. Waterfowl of the three species investigated were reported from 33 states, six Canadian provinces and the Bahamas.
Pages 285-291 |
1958 |
Pages 269-274 |
1958 |
Pages 213-224 |
1958 |
Pages 240-244 |
1958 |
Aerial Treatment of Pest Plants With Herbicides on National Wildlife Refuges in the Southeast
Pages 259-267 |
1959 |
Address by Governor J. Millard Tawes
Pages 3-4 |
1959 |
Acorns in the Diet of Wildlife
Pages 54-61 |
1959 |
A Review of Virginia's Conservation Workshops For Teachers and Wildlife Essay Contest
Pages 255-257 |
1959 |
A Portrait of River Basin Studies in the Southeast
Pages 181-192 |
1959 |
Pages 253-255 |
1959 |
A Commentary on the Behavior of Free-Running Gray Squirrels
Pages 382-387 |
1959 |
A Laboratory Study of an Arkansas Duck Die-Off
Pages 161-164 |
1959 |
Richard F. Harlow, Edwin L. Tyson
Pages 62-69 |
1959 |
An Evaluation of Farm Game Management Practices in Kentucky
Pages 73-79 |
1959 |