Introduced Animals References


  1. Baber, D. W., 1982. Report on a survey of feral pigs on Santa Cruz Island, California: ecological implications and management recommendations. Prepared for The Nature Conservancy, 19 pp.
  2. Baber, D. W., 1985. Ecology of feral pigs on Santa Catalina Island. Ph.D. Dissertation, Oregon State University. 101 pp.
  3. Baber, D. W. and B. E. Coblentz, 1986. Density, home range, habitat use, and reproduction in feral pigs on Santa Catalina Island, California, USA. J. Mammal. 67(3):512-525.
  4. Baber, D. W. and B. E. Coblentz, 1987. Diet, nutrition, and conception in feral pigs on Santa Catalina Island, California, USA. J. Wildl. Manage. 51(2):306-317.
  5. Barrett, R., 1990. Pigs and oaks. Fremontia 18(3):82.
  6. Beauchamp, R. M., 1989. Plant community on San Clemente Island responds to control of feral goats and pigs (California). Restoration & Management Notes 7(2):101.
  7. Bronny, C., 1989. One-two punch: grazing history and the recovery potential of oak savannas. Restoration & Management Notes 7(2):73-76.
  8. Campbell, D. J. and M. R. Rudge, 1984. Vegetation changes induced over ten years by goats and pigs at Port Ross, Auckland Islands (subantarctic). New Zealand Jour. Ecol. 7:103-118.
  9. Coblentz, B. E., 1982. Reproduction of feral goats on Santa Catalina Island, California. Bull. South. Calif. Acad. Sci. 81(3):128-137.
  10. Coblentz, B. E., 1990. Exotic organisms: a dilemma for conservation biology. Conservation Biology 4(3):261-265.
  11. Coblentz, B. E. and D. W. Baber, 1987. Biology and control of feral pigs on Isla Santiago, Galapagos, Ecuador. J. Appl. Ecol. 24(2):403-418.
  12. Coblentz, B. E. and D. VanVuren, 1987. Effects of feral goats (Capra hircus) on Aldabra Atoll. Atoll Res. Bull. 306:1-6.
  13. Daly, K., 1989. Eradication of feral goats from small islands. Oryx 23(2):71-75.
  14. de Nevers, G., and B. Goatcher, 1990. Feral pigs kill knobcone pines. Fremontia 18(1):22-23.
  15. Dobson, A. P., 1988. Restoring island ecosystems: the potential of parasites to control introduced mammals. Conservation Biology 2(1):31-39.
  16. Dwire, K., 1984. What happens to native grasses when grazing stops? Restoration and Management Notes 2(2):93.
  17. Dwire, K., 1988. What happens to native grasses when grazing stops? Fremontia 12(2):23-25.
  18. Ferguson, H. L., 1979. The (feral) goats of San Clemente Island (threat to native flora). Fremontia 7(3):3-8.
  19. Hobbs, E. R. 1978. The effects of feral sheep grazing on Bishop Pine (Pinus muricata) forests, Santa Cruz Island, California. M.A. Thesis, University of California, Los Angeles, 61 pp.
  20. Hoehne, V. M., 1994. Wild pigs in Santa Cruz County. Fremontia 22(2):18-19.
  21. Hone, J., 1983. A short-term evaluation of feral pig eradication at Willandra in western New South Wales.. Austr. Wildl. Res 10(2):269-275.
  22. Kotanen, P., 1994. Effects of fetal [sic] pigs on grasslands. Fremontia 22(2):14-17.
  23. Lacki, M. J. and R. A. Lancia, 1986. Effects of wild pigs on beech growth in Great Smoky Mountains National Park. J. Wildl. Mgmt. 50(4);655-659.
  24. Larson, Lawrence and G. Murdock, 1989. Small bison herd utilization of and impact on tall grass prairie. Restoration & Management Notes 7(1):36.
  25. Laycock, G., 1984. A scourge of goats. Audubon 86(1):100.
  26. Loope, L., 1989. Island ecosystems. In C. Stone and D. Stone (eds)., Conservation Biology in Hawai'i. University of Hawaii Press. (Honolulu). 252 pp.
  27. Lugo, A., 1990. Removal of exotic organisms. Conservation Biology 4(4):345
  28. Mitchell, R. J., N. D. Grace and R. A. Fordham, 1987. The nitrogen and mineral content of seven native plant species preferred by feral goats (Capra hircus L.) in lowland rimu-ratakamahi forest on eastern Mount Taranaki (Mt Egmont). New Zeal. Jour. Zool. 14(2):193-196.
  29. Mitchell, R. J., R. A. Fordham and A. John, 1987. The annual diet of feral goats (Capra hircus L.) in lowland rimu-rata-kamahi forest on eastern Mount Taranaki (Mt Egmont). New Zeal. Jour. Zool. 14(2):179-192.
  30. Moorhead, B., 1989. Non-native mountain goat management undertaken at Olympic National Park. Restoration & Management Notes 7(2):102.
  31. Oberbauer, T. A., 1994. San Clemente Island revisited. Fremontia 22(2):11-13.
  32. Parkes, J. P., 1984a. Feral goats on Raoul Island. I. Effect of control methods on their density, distribution, and productivity. New Zealand Jour. Ecol. 7:85-94.
  33. Parkes, J. P., 1984b. Feral goats on Raoul Island II. Diet and notes on the flora. New Zealand Jour. Ecol. 7:95-101.
  34. Peart, D., 1990. Influence of feral pigs on oak woodland, hydrology examined through exclosure studies on Santa Cruz Island (California). Restoration & Management Notes 8(1):53.
  35. Purdie, R.W. and I. R. Noble (eds.), 1983. Effect of feral pigs (Sus scrofa) on subalpine vegetation at Smokers Gap, ACT. Mountain Ecology in the Australian Region, Proc. Ecol. Soc. Aust. 12:135-142.
  36. Ray, J., 1988a. Wild pigs in California: a major threat in California. Fremontia 16(1):3-8.
  37. Ray, J., 1988b. Wild pigs in California: a major threat. Restoration & Management Notes 6(2):107.
  38. Rose, C. I., 1979. Nature Conservation and Species Introductions. University College London Discussion Papers in Conservation, No. 26. University College London (London, England). 47 pp.
  39. Schofield, E., 1989. Effects of introduced plants and animals on island vegetation: examples from the Galapagos archipelago. Conservation Biology 3(3):227-38.
  40. Schofield, E., 1990. Effects of introduced plants and animals on island vegetation: examples from the Galapagos Archipelago. Restoration & Management Notes 8(1):55.
  41. Singer, F. J., W. T. Swank and E. E. C. Clebsch, 1984. Effects of wild pig rooting in a deciduous forest. J. Wildl. Mgmt. 48(2):464-473.
  42. Soule, M. E., 1990. The onslaught of alien species, and other challenges in the coming decades. Conservation Biology 4(3):233-239.
  43. Steuter, Allen, et al., 1989. Role of fire, bison and gophers on grassland patch dynamics studied by restoration, management techniques (Nebraska). Restoration & Management Notes 7(1):34.
  44. Stone, C., 1989. Non-native land vertebrates. In Stone, C. and D. Stone, Conservation Biology in Hawai'i. University of Hawaii (Manoa, HI). pp 88-95.
  45. Temple, S., 1990. The nasty necessity: eradicating exotics. Conservation Biology 4(2):113-115.
  46. Tietje, W. and R. Barrett (eds.), 1993. The Wild Pig in California Oak Woodland: Ecology and Economics. Integrated Hardwood Management Program, Department of Forestry and Resource Management, University of California, Berkeley.
  47. VanVuren, D. 1981. The feral sheep on Santa Cruz Island: status and impact. Prepared for The Nature Conservancy, 129 pp.
  48. VanVuren, D., 1984. Diurnal activity and habitat use by feral pigs on Santa Cruz Island, California. Calif. Fish & Game 70(3):140-144.
  49. Watts, T. and W. Conley, 1984. Reproductive potential and theoretical rates of increase for feral goat populations. J. Wildl. Mgmt. 48(3):814-822.

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