ЗаГРИБные истории. Тайны подземного царства - Грег Марли
152
Arthur H. Howell, U. S. Biological Survey: North American Fauna, no. 44, Revision of the American Flying Squirrels, June 13, 1918.
153
Daniel K. Rosenberg and Robert G. Anthony, “Characteristics of Northern Flying Squirrel Populations in Young Second– and Old Growth Forests in Western Oregon,” Canadian Journal of Botany 70 (1991), pp. 161—66.
154
R. S. Currah, E. A. Smreciu, T. Lehesvirta, M. Neimi, and K. W. Larsen, “Fungi in the Winter Diets of Northern Flying Squirrels and Red Squirrels in the Boreal Forest of Northeastern Alberta,” Canadian Journal of Botany 78 (2000), pp. 1514—20.
155
Daniel K. Rosenberg and Robert G. Anthony, “Characteristics of Northern Flying Squirrel Populations in Young Second– and Old Growth Forests in Western Oregon,” Canadian Journal of Botany 70 (1991), pp. 161—66.
156
Andrew Carey, W. Colgan, J. M. Trappe, and R. Molina, “Effects of Forest Management on Truffle Abundance and Squirrel Diet,” Northwest Science 76, no. 2 (2002), pp. 148—57.
157
Chris Masser, A. W. Claridge, and J. M. Trappe, Trees, Truffles, and Beasts: How Forests Function (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 2008).
158
Karen Hansen, “Ascomycota Truffles: Cup Fungi Go Underground,” Newsletter of the Friends of the Farlow, no. 47 (2006).
159
Chris Masser, A. W. Claridge, and J. M. Trappe, Trees, Truffles, and Beasts: How Forests Function (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 2008).
160
J. M. Trappe and D. L. Luomo, “The Ties that Bind: Fungi in the Ecosystem,” in The Fungal Community: Its Organization and Role in the Ecosystem, G. C. Carrol and D. T. Wicklow, eds. (New York: Marcel Decker, 1992).
161
Chris Masser, A. W. Claridge, and J. M. Trappe, Trees, Truffles, and Beasts: How Forests Function (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 2008).
162
David Lonsdale, M. Pautasso, and O. Holdenrieder, “Wood-Decaying Fungi in the Forest: Conservation Needs and Management Options,” European Journal of Forest Research 127 (2008), pp. 1—22.
163
J. H. Hart and D. L. Hart, “Heartrot Fungi’s Role in Creating Picid Nesting Sites in Living Aspen,” USDA Forest Service Proceedings, RMRS-P-18 (2001).
164
K. B. Aubry and C. M. Raley, “The Pileated Woodpecker as a Keystone Habitat Modifier in the Pacific Northwest,” USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. PSW-GTR-181 (2002)
165
J. H. Hart and D. L. Hart, “Heartrot Fungi’s Role in Creating Picid Nesting Sites in Living Aspen,” USDA Forest Service Proceedings, RMRS-P-18 (2001).
166
David Lonsdale, M. Pautasso, and O. Holdenrieder, “Wood-Decaying Fungi in the Forest: Conservation Needs and Management Options,” European Journal of Forest Research 127 (2008), pp. 1—22.
167
M. C. Kalcounis and R. M. Brigham, “Secondary Use of Aspen Cavities by Tree-Roosting Big Brown Bats,” The Journal of Wildlife Management (1998); M. J. Vonhof and J. C. Gwilliam, “A Summary of Bat Research in the Pend D’Oreille Valley in Southern British Colombia” (2000), Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Compensation Program. Accessed online at www.cbfishwildlife.org.
168
Там же.
169
G. M. Filip, C. G. Parks, F. A. Baker, and S. E. Daniels, “Artificial Inoculation of Decay Fungi into Douglas-Fir with Rifle or Shotgun to Produce Wildlife Trees in Western Oregon,” Western Journal of Applied Forestry 19 (2004), pp. 211—15.
170
S. B. Jack, C. G. Parks, J. M. Stober, and R. T. Engstrom, “Inoculating Red Heart Fungus (Phellinus pini) to Create Nesting Habitat for the Red-Cockaded Woodpecker,” in Proceedings of the Red-Cockaded Woodpecker Symposium (2003), pp. 1—18.
171
J. Huss, J. Martin, J. C. Bednarz, D. M. Juliano, and D. E. Varland 2002. “The Efficacy of Inoculating Fungi into Conifer Trees to Promote Cavity Excavation by Woodpeckers in Managed Forests in Western Washington,” USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep. PSW-GTR-181 (2002).