Publications
These publications showcase the significant science conducted in our Science Centers.
Filter Total Items: 16783
Parasites of freshwater fish: I Fungi: Fungi (Saprolegnia and relatives) of fish and fish eggs
No abstract available at this time
Authors
G. L. Hoffman
Lymphosarcoma of possible thymic origin in salmonid fishes
No abstract available at this time
Authors
C.E. Dunbar
Oxytetracyline efficacy as a pretreatment against columnaris and furunculosis in coho salmon
No abstract available at this time
Authors
D. Curran, R. L. Herman
Structural control of wind gaps and water gaps and of stream capture in the Stroudsburg area
No abstract available.
Authors
Jack B. Epstein
Progress report on in vitro culture of cyclostome and elasmobranch cells and tissues
No abstract available.
Authors
K. Wolf, M. C. Quimby
[Book review] Wagstaffe, R. and J. H. Fidler. The Preservation of Natural History Specimens. Vol. 2, Philosophical Library. 1968. 404 pp
No abstract available.
Authors
R.C. Banks
[Book review] Life histories of North American cardinals, grosbeaks, buntings, towhees, finches, sparrows, and allies
The completion of an ornithological series as important as the Bent Life Histories is an exciting event. Here is a series of 21 volumes, spanning a history of nearly 60 years from inception to completion, containing over 9,500 text pages of information about North American birds, largely the work of one man – who was not professionally an ornithologist. One cannot well review the final number of s
Authors
R.C. Banks
[Book review] Ornithology: an Introduction, by Austin L. Rand
No abstract available.
Authors
C.S. Robbins
Residues in two bald eagles suspected of pesticide poisoning
No abstract available.
Authors
W. L. Reichel, T. G. Lamont, E. Cromartie, L. N. Locke
[Book review] A field guide to the birds of New Zealand and outlying islands
This field guide is so closely patterned after the familiar Peterson style that it may best be described in terms of its departures from that style. Color plates are disappointingly few. They depict: Penguin heads, parrots and kingfisher, eight species of ducks, a pigeon and seven species of native songbirds, eight other passerines and two cuckoos, and nine introduced songbirds (eight of which hav
Authors
Chandler S. Robbins