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.

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3801 - 3850 of 4522 articles | 50 per page | page 77

 

Article Year

Parasite Epidemics Affecting Channel Catfish

The prevalence of parasitic epidemics is dependant, to a large extent, upon the density of the host population. Through the application of recent research, up to 2,400 pounds of channel catfish can be produced per acre of water, thus placing their commercial culture on a basis comparable to production of other farm animals. Since fish are confined to a limited environment in ponds without flowing water, they are surrounded by their own metabolic wastes throughout the production period. Such an environment is ideal for the propagation and development of parasitic populations.

Ray Allison

Pages 346-347

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1963

An Evaluation of Fishery Management Techniques Utilizing Winter Drawdowns

Data is presented on 15 small impoundments ranging from two acres to 500 acres in size where different fishery management techniques l This work was undertaken with Federal Aid to Fish Restoration Funds under Dlngell. fohnson Project F-I1-R, Pond Management Evaluations. 347 were utilized in conjunction with winter drawdowns. All ponds were lowered for approximately 80 days between October 1 and January 15.

Phillip C. Pierce, Henry M. Yawn

Pages 347-363

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1963

Selection of Animal Forage to be Used in the Culture of Channel Catfish

William M. Lewis, Mark Anthony, Don R. Helms

Pages 364-367

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1963

Two-Year Study of a Bass, Sunfish, Channel Catfish Population Exposed to Flooding and Angling

Bradford E. Brown

Pages 367-372

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1963

Cooperation Between Enforcement Agencies

Carl L. Miller

Pages 372-374

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1963

Preparation for Undercover Work in Purchasing Game and Fish

Ralph Harris

Pages 374-377

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1963

Cooperation Between Fishery Biologists and Enforcement Officers

Bill Mathis

Pages 377-379

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1963

F. B. I. Services Available to Game and Fish Agencies

Ed Brown

Pages 379-382

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1963

Methods of Apprehending Illegal Scuba Divers

Andrew G. Pursley

Pages 382-384

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1963

The Role of Law Enforcement in State Game and Fish Management

Clyde P. Patton

Pages 384-387

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1963

Wildlife Law Enforcement - Concept and Cost

James L. Bailey

Pages 387-391

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1963

Suits Against Officers

Ed Ashbaugh

Pages 391-393

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1963

Preparation of Game and Fish Cases

Jim Gallman

Pages 394-397

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1963

Development of Tennessee Fish Protection Surveillance System

Increased population and industrial pressures have focused attention on the need for an accelerated and effective program to prevent and control pollution-caused fish kills in Tennessee waters. A training program to facilitate more rapid and accurate determination of the extent, severity, and probable cause or causes has been developed by the Tennessee Game and Fish Commission. Game and Fish Officers are located in each of Tennessee's 95 counties, and they comprise a readily available source of manpower to implement the program.

John M. Stubbs

Pages 397-400

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1963

Radio in Missouri

Herschel Bledsoe

Pages 400-404

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1963

How and Why Of TV in Kentucky Game and Fish Program

Harry Towles

Pages 405-407

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1963

How and Why We Publish a Departmental Magazine

Rod Admundson

Pages 407-409

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1963

News Releases in Alabama How and Why

Frank L. Haynes

Pages 410-411

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1963

“How and Why” A Survey Of Information and Education Activities in the Southeastern States

Gus Albright

Pages 412-418

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1963

Inter-Department Coordination of Information and Education

L. D. Young, Jr.

Pages 419-421

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1963

Planning and Design of Small Lakes for Fish and Wildlife Management

Charles E. Hooker, Jr.

Pages 421-423

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1963

Small Watershed Hydrology

Dean Snider

Pages 423-434

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1963

Drop Inlet Spillways

G. R. Holladay

Pages 435-438

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1963

Spiral Fish Rearing Raceway

Donald C. Hayes

Pages 439-440

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1963

Construction of Levees for Impoundments in Louisiana Marshes

Allan B. Ensminger

Pages 440-446

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1963

“Contracting vs. Use of Owned Equipment”

John E. Buxton

Pages 446-449

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1963

The Use of Available Material and its Influence on Embankment Design

Hal C. Normand

Pages 449-452

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1963

Use of Aircraft in the Wildlife Management Program

Joseph W. Perroux

Pages 463-465

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1963

Welcome Address

James W. Webb

Pages 1-2

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1962

The Role Of The Department Of The Navy In Resident Fish And Game Management

Ross Leonard

Pages 2-4

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1962

Remarks

A. Heaton Underhill

Pages 5-7

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1962

Remarks

D. H. Janzen

Pages 7-12

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1962

Opportunities And Challenges An Industrial Forester Sees In Wildlife Management On Industrial Lands

W. N. Haynes

Pages 13-17

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1962

The First Twenty-Five Years Of Federal Aid In The Southeast

C. W. Watson

Pages 18-20

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1962

Trapping And Handling European Wild Hogs

George H. Matschke

Pages 21-24

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1962

Preliminary X-Ray Studies Of Deer Productivity Near Crossville, Tennessee

Handling techniques for x-raying trapped doe deer are described. Myothesia was used as an anaesthetic at the rate of 1.5 cc. per 5 pounds body weight. A portable x-ray machine with maximum output of 30 MA and 80 KV was used to x-ray eight dead and forty-eight live deer. Pictures were made of yearling deer (12-14 cm. width) at 0.5 second exposure time, 36-inch focal-film distance, 25 milliamps and 65 kilovolts. Machine settings were the same for older deer, except kilovoltage, which increased 2 kilovolts per cm. of deer width.

James C. Lewis

Pages 24-28

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1962

A Test Of Track Counts As A Measurement Of Deer Population Size

Three 160 acre deer enclosures were stocked with 2, 4, and 8 deer respectively. Track counts were made simultaneously on prepared surfaces in the enclosures. It was found that the track counts were not directly proportional to population size. Thus it appears that track counts are not a valid measurement of population size, if a linear relationship through the origin between population size and number of tracks is assumed. The track counts were able to detect that there were differences in population size, but it did not tell us the magnitude of this difference.

Louis E. Brunett

Pages 29-31

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1962

Observations On The Growth And Wildlife Utilization Of Autumn Olive (Elaeagnus Umbellata) On The George Washington National Forest, Virginia

James W. Engle, Jr.

Pages 32-34

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1962

Game Food Plants In Slash-Longleaf Flatwoods

Thomas H. Ripley

Pages 35-44

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1962

Crop Damage Caused By Maryland Deer

Vagn Flyger

Pages 45-52

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1962

The Populations, Breeding Biology, And Environmental Relations Of The Black Duck, Gadwall, And Blue-Winged Teal At Pea And Bodie Islands, North Carolina

A two-year study was made of the nesting ecology of the black duck (Anas rubripes Brewster), the gadwall (Anas strepera Linnaeus), and the blue-winged teal (Anas discors orphna Stewart and Aldrich), at their southern nesting limits along the Atlantic coast. Approximate production at Pea Island was: 1959-black duck 230, gadwall 348, blue-winged teal 105; 1960-black duck 144, gadwall 457, blue-winged teal 97. Production at Bodie Island, estimated only for 1960, was: black duck 111, gadwall 28, and blue-winged teal 48.

James F. Parnell

Pages 53-67

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1962

Survival, Renesting, And Return Of Adult Wood Ducks To Previously Used Nest Boxes

During 1961 adult female wood ducks (Aix sponsa) were removed from nest boxes on three ponds near Raleigh and banded with U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service leg bands. During the 1962 nesting season ducks were again removed from nests for banding and a large percentage of them were found to be ducks returning from the previous year.

F. Eugene Hester

Pages 67-70

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1962

Movements Of Juvenile Wood Ducks As Measured By Web-Tagging

John P. Hardister, Jr.

Pages 70-75

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1962

A Note On The Use Of Path Analysis In Analyzing And Interpreting Observational Data, With Reference To The Analysis Of Goose Kill Around Lake Mattamuskeet, North Carolina, 1960-1961

By W. Scott Overton

Pages 76-85

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1962

Results Of Design Tests Of Methods Of Estimating Dove Harvest

Herbert Stern, Jr.

Pages 85-103

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1962

The Use Of Weirs In Coastal Marsh Management In Louisiana

Robert H. Chabreck

Pages 103-112

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1962

The Development Of An Efficient Squirrel Trapping And Marking Technique In Louisiana

J. B. Kidd

Pages 113-119

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1962

A Pattern To Population Oscillations Of The Bobwhite Quail In The Lower Plains Grazing Ranges Of Northwest Texas

A. S. Jackson

Pages 120-126

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1962

Coturnix Quail Investigations In Kentucky

Chester H. Stephens

Pages 126-137

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1962

Evaluation Of Management Techniques By Means Of A Three-Year Quail Census

Ellis A. Carter

Pages 137-140

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1962