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.
4051 - 4100 of 4522 articles | 50 per page | page 82
Article | Year |
---|---|
Canadian Waterfowl Banding Program
Pages 266-269 |
1960 |
Public Relations--Its Value As A Tool Of Enforcement
Pages 269-271 |
1960 |
Maintenance Of Cooperative Relations With Courts And Other Agencies
Pages 271-274 |
1960 |
Pages 275-276 |
1960 |
Value Of The Handbook To Conservation Officers In The Southeast
Pages 276-278 |
1960 |
Pages 278-281 |
1960 |
Pages 281-284 |
1960 |
Pages 1-3 |
1959 |
Address by Governor J. Millard Tawes
Pages 3-4 |
1959 |
Remarks of Mayor J. Harold Grady
Pages 3- |
1959 |
Pages 4-7 |
1959 |
The Uncontrolled Use of Pesticides in the Southeast
Pages 9-18 |
1959 |
Mourning Dove Management in Eastern United States
Pages 19-21 |
1959 |
Choccowcco Deer Range Analysis and Management Implications
Pages 21-34 |
1959 |
Techniques Involved in the Use of Chemicals for Establishing Wildlife Clearings
Pages 34-38 |
1959 |
Wildlife Habitat Management In Florida National Forests Donald D. Strode, E. B. Chamberlain, Jr.
Pages 38-50 |
1959 |
Public Recreation on Private Lands in the Southeast
Pages 50-54 |
1959 |
Acorns in the Diet of Wildlife
Pages 54-61 |
1959 |
Richard F. Harlow, Edwin L. Tyson
Pages 62-69 |
1959 |
Virginia's Foreign Game Programa Progress Report
Pages 70-73 |
1959 |
An Evaluation of Farm Game Management Practices in Kentucky
Pages 73-79 |
1959 |
Intense interest in commercial fish farming in Arkansas, due to crop acreage controls and other factors, stimulated experiments in buffalo fish propagation at the Joe Hogan State Fish Hatchery, Lonoke, Arkansas. A pond method of propagation was developed necessitating the use of overwintering or brood ponds, spawning ponds, nursery ponds and growing ponds. The culture procedures are set forth in a step by step “cook book” fashion.
Pages 80-90 |
1959 |
The Use of Hobbled Gill Nets in a Commercial Fishery of Lake Carl Blackwell, Oklahoma A modified gill net known as a hobbled gill net was utilized in a commercial fishery in 3,300-acre Lake Carl Blackwell in Central Oklahoma from September, 1957 through December, 1958. A total of 3,200 fish weighing 20,252 pounds was taken in 1,085 net days, a net day being 300 feet of net fished 24 hours. Non-game fishes represented 97 percent by weight of the total catch. Hobbled gill nets proved particularly effective in taking flathead catfish, which comprised 63.4 percent by weight of the total catch.
Pages 90-95 |
1959 |
Some Effects of Lime Applications To Warm-Water Hatchery Ponds The results of applying ground limestone (CaCO2) and quicklime (CaO) to hatchery ponds used for the culture of bluegills (Lepomis macrochirus, Raf.) are described. Effects appeared to be beneficial in the sample of ponds treated. Quicklime was difficult to apply because of caustic effects to skin of personnel handling it. Laboratory experiments indicated that hydrated lime (Ca[OH].) could be used to produce a pH as alkaline as that obtained from quicklime provided that an equivalent amount of calcium was used in the hydrated form.
Pages 95-101 |
1959 |
Experimental Use of Silvex and Other Aquatic Herbicides in Georgia Farm Ponds The results of two years experimental weed control in Georgia Farm Ponds using silvex,2 propylene glycol butyl ether ester, dalapon, sodium salt of 2,2dichloropropionic acid; 2, 4-D granules of iso-octyl ester of 2,4-dichlorophenoxy acetic acid. Residual control and overall effectiveness is evaluated over a twoyear period on acquatic weeds in approximately 100 ponds. Preliminary screening of Inverton, an invert emulsion of 2, 4, 5-trichlorophenoxy acetic acid; Carlon, a solution of dalapon and silvex; and simazine, 2-chloro-4, 6 bis( ethylamino) -S-trizaine are presented. W. W. Thomaston, Phillip C. Pierce, Herbert N. Wyatt
Pages 101-107 |
1959 |
Comments on Tile Need for Critical Fishery Research Planning and Electronic Data Processing
Pages 107-113 |
1959 |
Objectives, History and Organization of the Southeastern Cooperative Statistical Project
Pages 114-116 |
1959 |
Use of Machine Methods in Processing Fishery Data
Pages 116-120 |
1959 |
The Tolerance of Eight Species of Warm-Water Fishes to Certain Rotenone Formulations Laboratory tests were conducted in aquaria to determine the effectiveness of Sulfoxide as a synergist to rotenone for use as a fish poison. In order to compare the synergized product with standard formulations, Pro-Noxfish (2.5 percent rotenone, 2.5 percent Sulfoxide,S percent other cube extractives, and an emulsifier) was compared to Noxfish (5.0 percent rotenone, 10 percent other cube extractives, and an emulsifier), and to powdered cube (7.3 percent rotenone).
Pages 121-133 |
1959 |
Application of the Lacey and Black Bass Acts
Pages 133-139 |
1959 |
Wildlife Held in Captivity-Possession, Sale, Transportation, Diseases and Health Problems
Pages 140-144 |
1959 |
Pages 144-147 |
1959 |
Pages 149- |
1959 |
William W. Huber, Jay F. Grant
Pages 150-151 |
1959 |
Pages 151-153 |
1959 |
The Alabama Power Company and Conservation
Pages 154-157 |
1959 |
Conservation Agencies and the Chemicals Industry
Pages 157-161 |
1959 |
A Laboratory Study of an Arkansas Duck Die-Off
Pages 161-164 |
1959 |
The Occurrence of Tumors in Wild Animals
Pages 164-165 |
1959 |
The Ecology of Endoparasitism in Wildlife Populations
Pages 166-169 |
1959 |
Present Status of Knowledge on the Ecology of Eastern Encephalitis Virus in the United States
Pages 169-173 |
1959 |
Some Theoretical Implications of Poisonous Plants and Southeastern Deer Diseases Frank A. Hayes, James H. Jenkins
Pages 174-177 |
1959 |
The National Science Foundation and Research in Fisheries
Pages 177-180 |
1959 |
A Portrait of River Basin Studies in the Southeast
Pages 181-192 |
1959 |
An Evaluation of River Basin Studies in the Southeast
Pages 192-197 |
1959 |
Rough Fish Removal from Lake Catherine, Arkansas Following the recommendations of a three-year comparative fishery study of Lakes Ouachita, Hamilton and Catherine near Hot Springs, Arkansas, a rough fish removal project was carried out on 3,OOO-acre Lake Catherine, October 25, 1958. The chemical (Pro-Noxfish) was applied at varying concentrations over approximately three-fourths of the drawn-down area of the lake. The water level was manipulated so that the treated water infiltrated the untreated portions. As a result, a selective shad and drum kill was obtained over the entire area of the lake.
Pages 197-203 |
1959 |
The White and Channel Catfishes of the Santee-Cooper Reservoir and Tailrace Sanctuary The reservoir has a surface acreage of 160,500 and contains two rather dissimilar lakes, Lake Moultrie and Lake Marion. Channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus) are virtually unknown in Lake Marion, exist in relatively small numbers in Lake Moultrie, and are abundant in the tailrace sanctuary. White catfish (Ictalurus cattts) are present in large numbers in both lakes and the tailrace sanctuary. The channel catfish of Lake Moultrie and the tailrace sanctuary grow larger and faster, live longer and are in better condition than any channel catfish described in the literature.
Pages 203-219 |
1959 |
Comparison of Fish Populations in Polluted and Non-Polluted Arms of a Warm-Water Reservoir
Pages 220-228 |
1959 |
Historical Review of Tile Bull Shoals Dam and Norfork Dam Tailwater Trout Fishery Beginning with a stocking of 600 four- to six-inch rainbow trout in 1948 in the Norfork Dam tailwater located in North Central Arkansas, a fishery soon developed which was entirely new to the area. With the completion of Bull Shoals Dam in 1952, investigations began which soon showed that the native fishery was destroyed for many miles below the high dams.
Pages 229-236 |
1959 |
The Enforcement Officer's Place in the Technical Phases of Game Management
Pages 236-238 |
1959 |