# | Title | Author(s) | Pages |
1 | MISSING DOCUMENT | | 0 - 57 |
2 | Changing Roles for Wildlife Professionals - Where We've Been and Where We're Headed | Hal Salwasser | 1 - 6 |
3 | Use of GIS in Determining Development Effects on Wildlife in Oak Woodlands | William Tietje, Walter Bremer, Timothy Craig, Charmaine M. Gallagher | 7 - 11 |
4 | Developing Wildlife Management Objectives Having a Sound Ecological Basis: A Case Study | Don C. DeLong, Jr. | 12 - 18 |
5 | Past Climates, Forests, and Disturbaces of the Sierra Nevada, California: Understanding the Past to Manage For the Future | William F. Laudenslayer, Carl N. Skinner | 19 - 26 |
6 | A Forest Manager's Experience of the Evolution and Role of Fire in Widllife Management in the Mixed-Conifer Forests of the Central Sierra Nevada | John R. Mount | 27 - 28 |
7 | Introduction of Non-Native Red Foxes in California: Implications for the Sierra Nevada Red Fox | Jeffrey C. Lewis, Richard T. Golightly, Ronald M. Jurek | 29 - 32 |
8 | Waterfowl Blinds in the San Joaquin Valley: Death Traps for Endangered Species | David J. Germano | 33 - 35 |
9 | Sex Ratios of Fledgling and Recaptured Subadult Spotted Owls in the Southern Sierra Nevada | George N. Steger | 36 - 39 |
10 | Characteristics of Kanagroo Rat Burrows in Fallow Fields of the Southern San Joaquin Valley | David J. Germano, Westley M. Rhodehamel | 40 - 44 |
11 | MISSING DOCUMENT | | 45 - 0 |
12 | Morphological Differences Between Two White-Footed Mice, Peromyscus boylii and Peromyscus californicus, in Oak Woodlands of Fresno County, California | Roberta J. Fargo, William F. Laudenslayer | 58 - 62 |