Other references
References for MLRA 120C Provisional Ecological Site Development.
Abrams, M.D. 1992. Fire and the development of oak forests. BioScience, 42: 346–353.
Abrams, M.D. and G.J. Nowacki. 2008. Native Americans as active and passive promoters of mast and fruit trees in the eastern USA. The Holocene 18.7. pp. 1123-1137.
Alexander, H.D. and M.A. Arthur, D.L. Loftis, and S.R. Green. 2008. Survival and growth of upland oak and co-occurring competitor seedlings following single and repeated prescribed fires. Forest Ecology and Management 256: 1021–1030.
Anderson, Michelle D. 2003. Juniperus virginiana. In: Fire Effects Information System, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, and Fire Sciences Laboratory.
Auten, J,T. 1941. Notes on old-growth forests in Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. USDA Forest Service Tech. Note 49. Columbus, OH. pp. 1-8.
Barbour, M.G., J.H. Burk, W.D. Pitts, F.S. Gilliam, and M.W. Schwartz. 1999. Terrestrial Plant Ecology (ed. 3). Benjamin/Cummings, Inc., Menlo Park, California.
Black, B.A., Abrams, M.D. 2001. Influence of Native Americans and surveyor biases on metes and bounds witness tree distribution. Ecology. 82:2574-2586.
Braun, E.L. 1950. Deciduous forests of Eastern North America. Blakinston Co., Pennsylvania. Reprinted in 2001 by Blackburn Press, Caldwell, New Jersey.
Campbell, J.J.N.1987. Gradients of tree species composition in the Central Hardwood Region. R.L. Hay, F.W. Woods and H. DeSelm (eds.). Proceedings of the Central Hardwood Forest Conference VI, p. 325-346.
Carmean. W.H. 1970. Site quality for eastern hardwoods. The silviculture of oaks and associated species. USDA Forest Service Research paper, Northeast. Forest Exp. Sta., Upper Darby, PA, NE-144: 36-56.
Carmean, W.H. 1971. Soil-site relationships of the upland oaks. Oak Symp. Proc. USDA Forest Service Research Paper. Northeast. Forest Exp. Sta., Upper Darby, PA. p. 23-29.
Carmean, Willard H.; Hahn, Jerold T.; Jacobs, Rodney D. 1989. Site index curves for forest species in the eastern United States. Gen. Tech. Rep. NC-128. St. Paul, MN: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, North Central Forest Experiment Station.
Cho, D.S. and R. Boerner. 1991. Canopy disturbance patterns and regeneration of Quercus species in two Ohio Old-growth forests. Vegetation 93:9-13.
Cleland, D. T., J. A. Freeouf, J. E. Keys, Jr., G. J. Nowacki, C. A. Carpenter, and W. H. McNab. 2007. Ecological Subregions: Sections and Subsections of the Conterminous United States.
GTR-WO-76C-1. http://fsgeodata.fs.fed.us/other_resources/ecosubregions.html.
Comer, P., D. Faber-Langendoen, R. Evans, S. Gawler, C. Josse, G. Kittel, S. Menard, M. Pyne,
M. Reid, K. Schulz, K. Snow, and J. Teague. 2003. Ecological Systems of the United States: A Working Classification of U.S. Terrestrial Systems. NatureServe, Arlington, Virginia.
Curtis, J. T., 1959. Ecological Systems of the United States: A Working Classification of U.S. Terrestrial Systems. NatureServe, Virginia. .
Denevan, W.M. 1992. The pristine myth: the landscape of the Americas in 1492. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 82 (3), 369–385.
Delcourt, P.A. and H.R Delcourt. 1998. The influence of prehistoric human-set fires on oak- chestnut forests in the southern Appalachians. Castanea 63:337-345.
Ebinger, J.E. 1997. Forest Communities of the Midwestern United States. Springer eBook.
Environmental Protection Agnecy (EPA), Environmental Mapping and Assessment Program (EMAP). 2004. Washington DC., USA. http://www.epa.gov/docs/emap/
Faber-Langendoen, D., editor. 2001. Plant communities of the Midwest: Classification in an ecological
context. Association for Biodiversity Information, Arlington, VA. 61 pp. + appendix (705 pp.).
Fenneman, N.M. 1917. Physiographic subdivisions of the United States. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. Vol. 3(1). pp. 17 -22.
Fenneman, N.M. 1938. Physiography of Eastern United States. McGraw-Hill Book Co., New York.
Gingrich, S.F. 1967. Measuring and evaluating stocking and stand density in upland hardwood forests in the Central States. Forest Science. 13(1): 38-53.
Gleason, H.A. and A. Cronquist. Manual of Vascular Plants of Northeastern United States and Adjacent Canada. 2nd edition. The New York Botanical Garden, Bronx.
Guyette, R.P., Muzika, R.M. & Dey, D.C. 2002. Dynamics of an anthropogenic fire regime. Ecosystems, 5:472–486.
Guyette, R.P. and D.C. Dey. 2000. Humans, topography, and wildland fire: the ingredients for long-term patterns in ecosystems. Pp. 28-35 in D.A. Yaussy (ed.). Proceedings of the workshop on fire, people, and the central hardwoods landscape. General Technical Report NE-274.
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northeastern Forest Experimentation Station. Radnor, Pennsylvania.
Guyette, R.P., M.C. Stambaugh, D.C. Dey and R. Muzika. 2011. Predicting fire frequency with chemistry and climate. Ecosystems Published online: DOI: 10.1007/s10021-011-9512-0.
Jennings, M.D., Faber-Langedoen, D., Loucks, O.L., Peet, R.K. and Roberts, D. 2009. Standards for associations and alliances of the U.S. National Vegetation Classification. Ecological Monographs, 79(2), 2009, pp. 173–199.
Johnson, Paul S. 1992. Oak overstory/reproduction relations in two xeric ecosystems in Michigan. Forest Ecology and Management. 48: 233-248.
Kartesz, J.T., The Biota of North America Program (BONAP). 2011. North American Plant Atlas (http://www.bonap.org/MapSwitchboard.html). Chapel Hill, N.C. [maps generated from Kartesz,
J.T. 2010. Floristic Synthesis of North America, Version 1.0. Biota of North America Program (BONAP). (in press)].
Keever, C. 1978. A study of the mixed mesophytic, western mesophytic, and oak chestnut regions of the eastern deciduous forest including a review of the vegetation and sites recommended as potential natural landmarks. Millersville State College, Pennsylvania.
Kentucky State Nature Preserves Commission. 2009. Natural communities of Kentucky. Frankfort, KY
Illinois Wildflower. Accessed January to October, 2015-2016. http://www.illinoiswildflowers.info
Johnson, E.A. & Gutsell, S.L. 1994. Fire frequency models, methods and interpretations. Advances in Ecological Research, 25:239–287.
Johnson, P.S.; Shifley, S.R.; Rogers, R. 2002. The Ecology and Silviculture of Oaks. New York, CABI Publishing.
Kipfmueller, K.F. & Swetnam, T.W. 2001. Using dendrochronology to reconstruct the history of forest and woodland ecosystems. The historical ecology handbook. Island Press, Washington, DC. 199–228.
Kuchler, A.W. 1964. Potential natural vegetation of the conterminous United States. Spec. Publ. 36 New York, NY: American Geographical society.
Land Resource Regions and Major Land Resource Areas of the United States. United States Department of Agriculture Soil Conservation Service Handbook 296. Dec. 1981. 87-88.
Lawless, P. J., Baskin, J. M. and C. C. Baskin. 2006. Xeric Limestone Prairies of Eastern United States: Review and Synthesis. The Botanical Review 73(4): 303–325. The New York Botanical Garden.
Lindsey, A.A., W.B. Crankshaw, and S.A. Qadir. 1965. Soil relations and distribution map of the vegetation of presettlement Indiana. Botan. Gaz. 126(3): 155-163..
Lunt, I.D. & Spooner, P.G. 2005. Using historical ecology to understand patterns of biodiversity in fragmented agricultural landscapes. Journal of Biogeography, 32:1859–1873.
McNab, W.H. and P.E. Avers. 1994. Ecological subregions of the United States. U.S. Forest Service. Prepared in cooperation with Regional Compilers and the ECOMAP Team of the Forest Service.
McNab, W.H, D. T. Cleland, J. A. Freeouf, J. E. Keys, Jr., G. J. Nowacki, and C. A. Carpenter. 1997. Description of “Ecological Subregions: Sections of the Conterminous United States”.
McEwan, R.W., Hutchinson, T.F., Ford, R.D. & McCarthy, B.C. 2007. An experimental evaluation of fire history reconstruction using dendrochronology in white oak. Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 37: 806–816.
McGee, C.E. 1986. Loss of Quercus spp. dominance in an undisturbed old-growth forest. The L of the Elisha Mitchell Sci. Soc. 102(1): 10-15.
McGee, L.E. 1984. Heavy mortality & succession in a virgin mixed mesophytic forest. USDA Forest Service Res. Pap. SO-209: 1-9.
McQuilkin, Robert A. 1974. Site index prediction tables for black, scarlet and white oaks in southeastern Missouri. USDA Forest Service Research paper, NC-108.
McQuilkin, Robert A., and Robert Rogers. 1978. A method for determining the precision of site index estimates made from site index predictions functions. Forestry Science 24:289-296.
Miller, J.H., Chambliss, E.B. and Loewenstein, N.J. 2010. A field guide for the Identification of Invasive Plants in Southern Forests. US Forest Service Southern Research Station, General Technical Report SRS-119.
NatureServe Explorer (The Nature Conservancy). http://www.natureserve.org/explorer.
NatureServe. 2006. International Ecological Classification Standard: Terrestrial Ecological Classifications. NatureServe Central Databases. Arlington, VA USA
NatureServe. 2014. NatureServe Explorer: An online encyclopedia of life [web application]. Version 7.1. NatureServe, Arlington, Virginia. Available http://www.natureserve.org/explorer.
Noss, R. F. 1983. A regional landscape approach to maintain biodiversity. BioScience 33(11): 700-706.
Parker, G.R. 1989. Old-growth forests of the Central Hardwood Region. Nat. Areas J. 9(1): 5-11.
Pickett, S.T.A. and P.S. White. 1985. Patch dynamics: a synthesis. In: S.T.A. Pickett and P.S. White. The ecology of natural disturbance and patch dynamics. New York: Academic Press: 371-384.
Pyne, S.J. 1982. Fire in America: a cultural history of wildland and rural fire. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
Quarterman, E. and R.L. Powell. 1978. Potential ecological/geological natural landmarks on the Interior Low Plateaus. pp. 7-73. U.S. Department of the Interior, Washington, D.C. Quarterman,
Rooney, T.P., S.M. Wiegmann, D.A. Rogers and D.M. Waller. 2004. Biotic impoverishment and homogenization in unfragmented forest understory communities. Conservation Biology (in press).
Shotola, S.J., G.T. Weaver, EA. Robertson, and W.C. Ashby. 1992. Sugar maple invasion of an old-growth oak hickory forest in southwestern Illinois. Am. Midl. Nat. 127: 125-138.
Smalley, Glendon W. 1990. Carya glabra (Mill.) Sweet pignut hickory. Silvics of North America. Vol. 2. Hardwoods. Agric. Handbook 654. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service: 198-204.
Stambaugh, M.C. and R.P. Guyette. 2008. Predicting spatio-temporal variability in fire return intervals with a topographic roughness index. Forest Ecology and Management 254:463-473.
Stritch, L.R. 1990. Landscape-scale restoration of barrens-woodland within the oak-hickory forest mosaic. Restoration & Management Notes 8: 73-77.
Sweeney, J.M., ed. 1990. Management of dynamic ecosystems. North Cent. Sect., The Wildl. Soc., West Lafayette, Ind.
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), Natural Resources Conservation Service.
Soil surveys of the following counties: Breckinridge, Butler, Caldwell, Christian, Crittenden, Daviess, Edmonson, Grayson, Hancock, Livingston, Logan, and Todd.
U.S. Department of Agriculture-Forest Service, Agriculture Handbook 654, Silvics of North America.
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service. 1994. Ecosystem classification of the United States; Ecological Subregions of the United States. Compiled by W. Henry McNab, Peter E. Avers, et al., Washington, DC. http://www.fs.fed.us/land/pubs/ecoregions.
U.S. Department of the Interior. 2004. Vegetation Mapping Program, National Vegetation Classification Standard. http://biology.usgs.gov/npsveg.
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), Center for Biological Informatics (CBI) 2004. U.S. Department of the Interior. http://biology.usgs.gov/cbi
Vegetation Classification Standard, Vegetation Subcommittee, Federal Geographic Data Conservation Assessment for Cliff Communities. Accessed July 2013. U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey. Reston, Virginia. http://www.fgdc.gov/standards/projects/FGDC-standards-projects/vegetation.
Whitaker, J.O. and C. J. Amlaner. 2012. Habitats and Ecological Communities of Indiana - Presettlement to Present. Indiana Natural Science.
Zhalnin, A. V. and G. R. Parker. 2007. Land Type Association Delineation and Spatial Anlysis for the Hoosier National Forest in Southern Indiana. Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science (116): 158-172.
Zollner, D., M.H. MacRoberts, B.R. MacRoberts, & D. Ladd. 2005. Endemic vascular plants of the Interior Highlands, U.S.A. Sida 21:1781-1791.
Websites:
Ecosystem classification of the United States; Ecological Subregions of the United States.1994. Compiled by W. Henry McNab, Peter E. Avers, et al. Forest Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture [USDA], Washington, DC., USA: http://www.fs.fed.us/land/pubs/ecoregions
Environmental Mapping and Assessment Program (EMAP). 2004. Washington, DC., USA: http://www.epa.gov/docs/emap/
Geospatial Data Gateways: https://gdg.sc.egov.usda.gov/
Hoosier National Forests: http://www.fs.usda.gov/hoosier/
Illinois Wildflowers: http://www.illinoiswildflowers.info
Indiana Department of Natural Resources – Nature Preserves: http://www.in.gov/dnr/naturepreserve/
Landfire: http://www.landfire.gov
Missouri Plants: http://www.missouriplants.com/
NatureServe Explorer: http://www.natureserve.org/explorer
Natural Communities of Brown County Hills. The Nature Conservancy: http://www.nature.org/ourinitiatives/regions/northamerica/unitedstates/indiana/placesweprotect/brown-county-hills-management-and-stewardship.xml
Official Soil Series Descriptions, USDA-NRCS: https://soilseries.sc.egov.usda.gov/osdname.asp
Silvics of North America, US Forest Service. http://www.na.fs.fed.us/spfo/pubs/silvics_manual/table_of_contents.htm
USDA Plants: http://plants.usda.gov/java/
U.S. Department of the Interior: http://biology.usgs.gov/npsveg
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), Center for Biological Informatics (CBI) 2004. U.S. Department of the Interior: http://biology.usgs.gov/cbi
Vascular Plant Image Library: http://botany.csdl.tamu.edu/FLORA/imaxxara.htm
Vegetation Mapping Program, National Vegetation Classification Standard. 2004.
Vegetation Classification Standard, Vegetation Subcommittee, U.S. Geological Survey [USGS; U.S. Department of the Interior], Reston, Virginia, USA. http://www.fgdc.gov/standards/projects/FGDC-standards-projects/vegetation
Vegbank: www.vegbank.org
Wildland Fire Management RD&A: https://www.frames.gov/partner-sites/wfmrda-ffe/home/
Web Soil Survey, USDA-NRCS: http://websoilsurvey.nrcs.usda.gov/app/
Woodland Wildflowers of Illinois: http://www.illinoiswildflowers.info/woodland/woodland_index.htm