-
37-2 - Winter 2005 - Revegetation in Alaska: Usibelli, seeds & topsoil, and mycorrhizae [revegetation, mycorrhizae, succession, Usibelli Coal Mine]; Assessing climate change: Did we get it right? [arctic sea ice, climate change, glacier, permafrost, taiga, tundra]; Harvesting art [art, cartooning, teaching]; Blight outbreak tests new Western Plant Diagnostic Network [potato blight fungus]; Kennecott Mill Town: Visitors and the park experience [copper, Kennecott Mill, history, mining, recreation, tourism, Wrangell-St. Elias National Park]; Centennial at the farm [Fairbanks Experiment Farm, history]; Mastering the philosophy of
science: graduate student research [agency culture, marine mammals; fire fuel loads, forest types; black spruce, fire ecology, succession; Green Star program, environmentalism; lodgepole pine, non-native species introduction; birch sap; moose, GIS; moose browse production]; Ecotourism in Chile [ecotourism, recreation, tourism]
-
37-1 - Summer 2005 - Morels: a morsel after the fire [morel mushrooms; nontimber forest products]; Students and environmental ethics: "Towards a Personal Environmental Ethic" [ethics, black howler monkey, Belize], "A Soiled Epiphany" [consumption, ethics, resource management, soil conservation], "Ripple Effect" [ethics, hunting, personal accountability, snapping turtle]; Exotic plants in Alaska's parks [exotic and invasive plants, park management]; Creativity and independent thought [education, resources management], "Avalanche knowledge, experience, and behaviors among winter backcountry users in Turnagain Pass, Alaska" [avalanche, recreation], "Can lettuce growers profitably use smaller containers for seedlings?" [greenhouse, lettuce, vegetable propagation, transplant]; Revitalizing US support for developing nations' agriculture [agriculture, foreign policy]
-
-
36-1 - Summer 2004 - Reindeer inspire new teaching guide [education, alternative livestock]; Susan Willsrud & Calypso Farm [education, sustainable agriculture]; The wildlife viewing challenge [tourism, wildlife management]; Taxonomy and evolution of Alaska birches; Birch use in the former Soviet Republics; Heavenly garden, earthly pursuits [Georgeson Botanical Garden].
35-2
- Winter 2003 - Birch:
white gold in the boreal forest [birch, birch syrup];
Invasive Plants in Alaska: assessment of research priorities
[invasive plants management]; A Winter Delta Dig [tillage,
soil]; Students Afield! Natural Resources Management 290
[field course]; Jobs for Credit [internships]; The North
Jarvis Stand Conversion Project [wildfire, resources management];
Antioxidants in the North [berries, antioxidants]; Shapeshifter
Carbon: a universal building block [carbon cycle, climate
change, tree growth, soils, wildfire].
-
35-1
- Summer 2003 - Peony--A Future Crop for Alaska? [field cut flower crop, peony]; Alternative Livestock
in Alaska: Bison to Yaks [alternative livestock]; The Legacy
of Aldo Leopold [land use policy, ethics]; The Wolf Control
Issue [wildlife management, wolf]; Cooperative Research and
Knowledge Transfer at SNRAS [Agricultural Research Service,
USDA, Integrated Pest Management, Food Technology, Plant Germ
Plasm, North and West Alaska Cooperative Ecosystem Studies
Unit (CESU), Interdisciplinary Graduate Studies, Regional
Resilience and Adaptation]; 2002/2003 SNRAS Graduates and
Senior Theses [summaries]; Permafrost and Ponds [climate change,
climate warming, permafrost, lake level changes, remote sensing,
GIS].
-
34-2
- Winter 2002 (Annual Report) - Perceptual
geography [sense of place, high plains]; Hands-on science
education [GLOBE, elementary school teacher training]; Fresh
raspberries in March [greenhouse production]; Computer modeling:
fire, climate, and the boreal forest [wildfire, forest fires,
climate change]; Research [summaries]: USDA Agricultural Research
Service, Forest Sciences, Geography, Resources Management,
Plant, Animal, and Soil Sciences.Publications list for 2001;
Faculty
-
34-1
- Summer 2002 - Reindeer research,
intensive management may be key [caribou]; Palmer Research
Center [devil's club, improving turfgrasses, leafy greens,
Palmer laboratories]; Northern exposure for hoppers [grasshopper
research]; Fairbanks Experiment Farm; Georgeson botanical
Garden; Taiga ecology [boreal forest]; Trip to Iceland [Fourth
Circumpolar Agricultural Conference]; Field trip to Hawaii;
News and notes: new staff, student awards, faculty news and
grants, Women in Agriculture Award [Mary Andrews; Tribute
to Marsha Melton.
-
33-2
- Winter 2001 (Annual Report) - Faculty
profiles; Research achievements: Plant, Animal, ad Soil Sciences,
Forest Sciences, Resources Management, Geography, Agricultural
Research Service; Faculty publications [Publication list for
2000]; FY01 research funding; Financial Statement.
-
33-1
- Summer 2001 - Inventory
of grasses along the Trans-Alaska Pipeline, 1999; Boreal Alkaligrass
(Puccinellia borealis), is this the one? [tundra revegetation];
Implementation of silvicultural systems for Alaska's Northern
Forest; Innovative ways of implementing global change education
in K-12 classrooms; UA President mark Hamilton on education
and agriculture; SALRM 2001 graduates; 2001 scholarship recipients;
News and notes: Women in Agriculture Award [Kathy Burton]
-
32-2
- Fall 2001 (Annual Report) - Can
mulch mats help regenerate beetle-killed spruce forests?;
Faculty profiles; Plant, animal, and soil sciences research;
Forest sciences research; Resources management research; Faculty
publications [Publications list for 1999] FY00 research funding;
Financial statement; Dean Husby retires [Fred Husby]; News
and notes; Wallace retires [Carolyne Wallace].
-
32-1
- Summer 2000 - Planting trees
in the Aleutians; Climate change and growth of white spruce
in South-Central Alaska; Northern tansy mustard fills a niche;
Silviculture systems for Alaska's Northern Forest; Wavelength-selective
mulches and tomato production in Fairbanks, Alaska; Musk ox,
historical industry looks toward the future; Hey, I thought
I say Rudolph in the hallway! [reindeer program educational
outreach]; What Next? Agenda for Alaska agriculture in the
21st Century; Historical perspective, Delta ag project [agriculture
history]; What's a grower to do? [essay]; 1999 Alaska women
in agriculture [Patricia Fellman, Marsha Melton]; SALRM student
news; Faculty news.
-
31-2
- Fall 1999 (Annual Report) Constructed
wetlands for treating wastewater [sewage treatment]; faculty
profile; Research achievements: Plant, Animal and Soil Sciences,
Forest Sciences, Resources Management;Publications list for
1998; FY 99 research funding; Achievements, activities, news.
[Mary Boyd and Kith Magoon retire; Milan Shipka joins faculty.
-
31-1
- Spring 1999 - Wetlands and
botanical gardens, an educational opportunity; Educational
outreach at the Georgeson Botanical Garden; A day at the Georgeson
Botanical Garden; Third Circumpolar Agricultural Conference
was in Anchorage; AFES hosts FFA students, a partnership for
agriscience education; The GLOBE Program: Global learning
and Observations to Benefit the Environment; Bonanza Creek
Schoolyard LTER [long term ecological research program]; Distance
[education] delivery, SALRM reaches out; Reindeer for education
and research; Initial forest stand density and wood quality,
a preliminary report [Alaska's Northern Forest]; Arctic tundra
recovery from crude oil after 24 years, Prudhoe Bay [oil pollution];
Wildlife and vegetation find habitat niches in oil field gravel
pad; New: 1998 Woman in Agriculture Award [Evelyn Bush], forestry
curriculum, Dr. Susan Todd chairs UAF trails committee; Dr.
Charlie Knight recognized.
-
30-2
- Fall 1998 (Annual Report) - Honeybees
tested as pollinators; Faculty profiles; AFES-celebrating
100 years of agricultural research in Alaska; Palmer station
hosts 2nd Agriculture Appreciation Day as part of the AFES
centennial Celebration; Research achievements: Plant, Animal,
and Soil Sciences, Forest Sciences, Resources Management;Publications
list for 1997; Financial Statement; FY98 research funding;
Achievements, activities, news.
-
30-1
- Spring 1998 - [History]100
years of agricultural research in Alaska; Alaska's first agricultural
experiment station: Sitka, 1898-1931; Kodiak Station; Kenai
Station, Rampart Agricultural Experiment Station, 1900-1925;
Copper Center Station; Fairbanks Station; Matanuska Station;
Palmer Research Center; Charles christian georgeson; George
T. Gasser; Last frontier's sweet nectar: strawberries; Alaska's
reindeer industry; Alaska's agriculture; Alaska Agricultural
Experiment Stations transfer to college; News: 1997 Alaska
woman in agriculture [Ileen Hollembaek], [obituary] Arvo Kallio,
1917-1997.
-
29-2
- Fall 1997 (Annual Report) - State
of the station, school address; Researchers develop a megatransect
[remote sensing, global climate change]; Plants that weren't
tough enough [inadequate snow cover, winterkill, Georgeson
Botanical Garden]; Research achievements: Plant, Animal, and
Soil Sciences, Forest Sciences, Resources Management;Publications
list for 1996; FY97 research funding; financial statement;
professional staff profile; Achievements, activities, news;
Retirements [K. C. Christianson, Bob Schlentner; J. Stephen
Lay, Don Brainard, Warren Fiscus].
-
29-1
- Spring 1997 - Accredited:
forest science department; Resource managers gather info [Geographic
Information Systems (GIS)]; Using GIS to solve problems for
Alaska [Geographic Information Systems]; Arctic tundra revegetation;
Remote satellite spectral analysis in Bosnia i Hercegovina;
Assessing Bosnia forest damage using remote satellite sensing;
Restoring spruce beetle-impacted forests in Alaska [effects
of the spruce beetle (Dendroctonus rufipennis)]; Rejuvenating
the land, converting mined lands to thriving ecological communities;
Tundra plant succession and vascular plant species diversity;
Bioremediation of petroleum-contaminated soil using fish bonemeal
[oil pollution, polluted soil]; Characteristics of permafrost
soils along a latitudinal transect in arctic Alaska; Wetlands
could hold the answer [sewage treatment]; Faculty, students,
and alumni in the news.
-
28-2
- Fall 1996 (Annual Report) - Propagating
Asiatic hybrid lilies; Researchers judge science fairs; Establishing
Alaska wildflower meadows; Research achievements: Plant, Animal
and Soil Sciences, Forest Sciences, Resources Management;Publications
list for 1995; FY 96 research funding; Financial statement;
Young masters two programs [Christina Young]; Achievements,
activities, news.
-
28-1
- Spring 1996 - AFES notes
[Dr. Fredric Husby acting dean, Dr. Allen Mitchell acting
director, SALRM supports PBS Alaska One]; Yes alaska, agriculture
is viable in Delta Junction; Station research at work in Delta
Junction, Alaska; Experiment Station yields results; Agronomist
discusses nitrogen fixation; Who wants to weed anyway [grass
clipping mulch]; Agronomic crops for interior Alaska; Technology
improves Palmer's laboratory research capabilities [Palmer
Research Center]; Brewing up an Alaska crop, graduate student,
researchers try growing hops; NRM 310, agricultural concepts
[marketing, carrots]; NRM 453, students learn to harvest [and]
use forest for products; Want to farm in Alaska?, Advice from
someone who's doing it; Dr. Bonita J. Neiland, professor emeritus,
reflects on professional accomplishments; Dave Liebersbach,
Class of '88; Honoring Alaska's 1995 women in Agriculture
[Jeannette Braiser, Joanne Marie Mosesian, Edna Anderson];
People, news and happenings.
-
27-2
- Fall 1995 (Annual Report) - Harvesting
a career, dean and director retires after 20 [years] [Dr.
James V. Drew]; Reflections, Dr. Drew shares thoughts on agricultural
development, views on Alaska's resources; Good-bye! Van Cleve,
Hartman retire [Dr. Keith Van Cleve; Chick Hartman]; A matter
of taste [consumer marketing, sensory testing, NRM 310, honey,
carrots, barley pancakes, salsa; Research achievements: Plant,
Animal, and Soil Sciences, Forest Sciences, Resources Management;Publications
list for 1994; FY95 research funding; Financial Statement;
Professional staff; Notes (achievements, activities, news).
-
27-1
- Spring 1995 - Editor's Comments
(surveying readers); News [USDA Agricultural Research Service
(ARS) closes; Delta bison herd conflict; NRM 215 [plant propagation];
Air layerings, division tips [plant propagation]; Dreams of
helping Jonnie grow [gardening nurtures minds, Georgeson Botanical
Garden, children and gardening]; Northern belle exudes southern
charm, Carolyne Wallace administers SALRM's office for 23
years; coordinator enrolls people skills to enhance student
retention [student recruiter, Barbara Pierson]; SALRM welcomes
new, returning students; SALRM students plant Senator Murkowski's
tree of honor; AFES honors women in Agriculture [Lois M. Lintelman,
Cyndie Warbelow-Tack; Suus Vanderweele]; AFES research farm
open house in Delta Junction; Highlights and happenings; Undergrad
never gives up [Jeanne Pigors]; Graduate student strives to
quench his knowledge thirst [Tim Hammond]; In memoriam: Dr.
Roscoe Taylor.
-
26-2
- Fall 1994 (Annual Report) Biodiversity
[forest management]; Remembering Dr. Frank Wooding; SALRM
alumni; [Alaska] Interior has fertile agriculture history;
flowering future; Research summaries for: Plant, animal, and
soil sciences, forest sciences, and resources management.Publications
list for 1993.
-
26-1
- Spring 1994 - Dean reports
on school's strategic plan, focus; Associate dean discusses
new research, new methods, new tools; Back to the farm [researchers...take
experiments to the people]; CO2, better in the Arctic?; Cochrans
work, play, stay together [Verlan Cochran, Diana Cochran];
Scientist harnesses dog power [Jeff Conn]; Southeast alaska's
temperate rainforests; Understanding natural disturbance regimes
helps forest managers make sound management decisions; doctoral
candidate vows to make a difference [Robert Ott]; Researchers
probe Hagemeister Island reindeer die-off of 1991; Alaska,
don't kill the goose that lays the golden egg [outdoor recreation,
nonresident tourism]; Examining a part of the forest ecosystem
puzzle [boreal forest, alder and white spruce]; Art meets
science [Darleen Masiak]; Students ask questions, question
all answers [Natural Resource Management 495, bioregionalism];
Profiles [Birgit Njastad, Greg Robbe; AFES notes; Delta Junction
field day.
-
25-2
- July 1993 (Annual Report) - Transmittal
letter; Statement of purpose; Board of Advisors; Baked Alaska,
scientist examines temperature trends; Farewell Dr. Carla
Kirts; People, activities, accomplishments;1992 research review
[see Vol. 25, No. 1 for 1992 publications list]; Financial
Statement and Funding; Professional Staff.
-
25-1
- January 1993 - U.S. rangeland
technology: rehabilitating Russia's oil, gas production sites;
Forest management; Impact of public trust doctrine on natural
resources management; wetlands: an editorial perspective;
travelers eye Alaska's scenic viewpoints; Gaia hypothesis,
old questions, new forms;Publications list for 1992.
-
24-1
- January 1992 - Game
farm management; Restructured steaks, a potential product
from Alaskan reindeer; History of national forest planning;
Charles Christian Georgeson, a man with a vision; Georgeson
Botanical Garden; Gravel vegetation experiments, Alaska North
Slope; Lessons from the Tunalik test well site No. 1, National
Petroleum Reserve in Alaska; Of moose and mines; Geographic
Information Systems (GIS); Models for management, megabytes
for insights; On the meridian of friendship, Soviet and American
scientists; Alaska Grown, implementation of a positive agricultural
policy; Ping and Sharratt monitor wetlands; Publications list
for 1991.
-
23-1
- January 1991 - AFES Notes;
Economics of reindeer rangeland; Reindeer meat: relationship
among dietary fat, flavor, and acceptability; Game production,
agricultural diversification for Alaska?; Return to Green
Island; Arctic tundra rehabilitation, observations of progress
and benefits to Alaska; Strip mine reclamation and Alaska's
big game wildlife; From boreal forest to reclaimed site, revegetation
at the Usibelli coal mine; Cuisine and cure on the Dalton
Highway [native plants, wildflowers]; Endangered Aleutian
shield-fern grows at the University of Alaska Fairbanks; Agricultural
research cooperation continues between Alaska and Siberia;
Alaska as seen by Russian exchange student; Publications list
for 1990.
-
22-1
- January 1990 - AFES Notes;
Cooperation in agricultural science between Siberia and Alaska;
International cooperation in cropping systems research between
Alaska and Siberia; Musk oxen exchange offers researchers
new opportunities; Germplasm exchange program; Preliminary
look at effects of the Exxon Valdez oil spill on Green Island
research natural area; Land farming of oil sludge at Valdez
oil terminal; History of the Alaska reindeer industry and
its problems with land use, ownership, and marketing; Profile
of interior Alaska dog mushers; Hulless barley and crab shell
in diets fed to steers; Class project in information transfer:
an effective application of learning by doing [natural resource
management]; Alaska food costs: do we really pay more for
a nutritionally balanced diet?; Permit reform in Alaska's
coastal zone; Publications list for 1989.
-
21-1
- January 1989 - AFES notes;
Wholesale pricing of locally grown cut roses in Fairbanks,
Alaska; Importance of vase life in marketing locally grown
roses; maximizing the vase life of cut roses grown in Alaska;
Pruning strategies for greenhouse rose production in Alaska;
Food irradiation and Alaska's food industries; Equations for
predicting energy values of Alaska feedstuffs; Effect of six
gypsum rates on bromegrass yield and chemical composition;
Inoculation of alfalfa in Alaska; Publications list for 1987.
-
20-1
- January 1988 - AFES
notes; Wholesale pricing of locally grown cut roses in Fairbanks,
Alaska; Importance of vase life in marketing locally grown
roses; maximizing the vase life of cut roses grown in Alaska;
Pruning strategies for greenhouse rose production in Alaska;
Food irradiation and Alaska's food industries; Equations for
predicting energy values of Alaska feedstuffs; Effect of six
gypsum rates on bromegrass yield and chemical composition;
Inoculation of alfalfa in Alaska; Publications list for 1987.
-
19-1
- July 1987 - AFES notes;
Notice of release of 'Kenai' polargrass; Trip report: a visit
to the Swedish reindeer industry, 1986; Whole-grain yeast
bread and consumer acceptability using hull-less barley grown
in Alaska; Observations of effects on agricultural soils of
the artificial enhancement of snowmelt in interior Alaska;
Performance, costs, and value of Holstein steers fed a corn
diet or an Alaska barley diet; Effect of basic-H on vegetable
and agronomic crops and soil fertility at Point MacKenzie;
Effect of lime and four phosphorus rates on yield of head
lettuce, table beets, and carrots at Pt. MacKenzie; Denitrification
in floodplain successional soils of the Tanana River in interior
Alaska; Publications list for 1986.
-
18-1
- July 1986 - Federal support
of agricultural research, a White House perspective; Notice
of release of 'Norton' tufted hairgrass; AFES notes; Use of
Plant growth regulator on barley to prevent lodging; Natural
selection may modify introduced white clover toward superior
winterhardiness; Effect of phosphorus and potassium on alsike
clover; Plant-parasitic nematodes in Alaska soils; Helping
your greeenhouse help you; Wintering beef cows on Alaska barley
and subsequent selenium status; Feeding tanner crab meal to
Holstein dairy calves; Who's planning Alaska? [natural resource
management]; Cross-country skiers in interior Alaska; Amenity
values of farmland; Publications list for 1985.
-
16-2
- July 1984 - AES Notes; Evaluation
of plants used for strip mine reclamation near Healy, Alaska;
native Alaskan pumpelly Bromegrass: characteristics and potential
for use; Lingonberry cultivation; Monitoring the activity
of root maggots; Rhizoctonia disease of potato; Frost seeding
of rapeseed; conservation-tillage and residue-management systems
for interior Alaska; Factors affecting the palatability of
reindeer meat; Alaska's agricultural lands: some issues in
public policy; Forest management for interior Alaska: can
products justify costs?
-
16-1
- January 1984 - Soil fertility considerations
for barley and oat forage production at Point MacKenzie; What
happens to fertilizer nitrogen?; Using Alaska feeds in dairy
nutrition research; Earthen storage basin [for manure] for
dairy farms in Alaska; Research associated with registration
of pesticides and drugs in Alaska; Growing winter grains in
Alaska; Introduction and suitability of Icelandic horses in
northwestern Alaska; A grass from Alaska gives promising results
in Alaska; Far-north-adapted bluegrasses from areas with rigorous
winter climate perform best in southcentral Alaska; Do slow-release
nitrogen fertilizers have an advantage for lawn fertilization
in southcentral Alaska?; Cooperative Extension Service publishes
major report [Alaska's Agriculture and Forestry, Alaska Rural
Development Council Publication No. 3]; Publication list for
1983.
-
15-1
- January 1983 - Conservation
tillage research in Interior Alaska; Soil moisture and temperature
as influenced by fall and spring tillage systems; Planting
and fertilizing options in barley production; Recreation planning
in the White Mountains National Recreation Area; Limestone
landscapes of the White Mountains; Valuing outdoor recreational
opportunities; Influence of a complete fertilizer on soil
pH and available NO3 -N,P,m and K in Kachemak silt loam; Computer
comes to Alaska farming; Changes in weed-species assemblage
with increasing field age; Increased or decreased energy [Susitna
hydroelectric project] for moose?; Undergraduate degree encompasses
new options in forestry and agriculture; Spinach Creek watershed;
Tissue culture; Effect of feeding whole-grain barley to free-ranging
and penned reindeer; Public policy and the future of Alaska's
reindeer industry; Does feeding crab meal to dairy cows adversely
milk taste?; Notes; Publications list for 1982.
-
14-1
- January 1982 - Strip mine
[stripmine] reclamation and wildlife in Alaska; Project agriculture:
an experience in the southern hemisphere; Climatic trends
in the interior of Alaska: moving toward a high CO2 world?;
Forestry in Sweden and Finland: its applicability to interior
Alaska; Cultured biological product [Agrispon] provides no
beneficial effects on barley or bromegrass; barley whole-wheat
quick bread, a potential use for Alaska grains; Grasses and
their uses in Alaska; Using the recreation concept plan technique
to assess public choice; Notes; Fertilizer requirements for
barley grown on newly cleared land in Alaska's interior; Beefalo
in Alaska; Rapeseed response to seeding rate, row spacing
and nitrogen application; Vegetation studies for the proposed
Susitna hydroelectric project; Potential markets for ducks,
geese, and rabbits in Alaska; Village-based plan for the small-scale
production of ducks, geese, and rabbits; Solar energy for
grain drying in Alaska; Nitrogen: transformations and availability
in Alaska soils; Alaska's bison, a game biologist's range-management
problem; Retired: Dr. Curtis H. Dearborn; Toward a system
of grazing fees for state rangelands in Alaska; Crab meal,
a local protein source for the Alaska dairy industry; Intensive
forest management: the Bonanza Creek demonstration project;
Publications list for 1981.
-
13-1
- January 1981 - Changing
Pattern in small-grain silage mixtures in Alaska; Biological
catalyst [BIO-CAT soil additive] leaves bromegrass, barley,
and wheat yields and bromegrass composition unchanged; Land
application of sludge; Marketing Alaska's roses; Agriculture
and wildlife, are they compatible in Alaska?; Simple structure
for plant environment enhancement; Natural revegetation of
dredge tailings at Fox, Alaska; Techniques for continuous
and improved vegetable harvests, the effects of plant spacing,
transplanting, and direct seeding; Optimum herd structure
in Alaska reindeer herds; Plant diseases: a potential threat
to Delta barley; Rust diseases on white spruce in Alaska;
Persistence of herbicides 2,4-D and Picloram in Alaska soils
north of latitude 60º; Responses of arctic tundra to
intensive muskox grazing; Alaska-developed grass varieties
coming into use; Persistence and movement of agricultural
chemicals in soils in the Delta-Clearwater area; Notes; News
and comment: Delta Agricultural Project: success or failure?;
Publications list for 1980.
-
12-1
- January 1989 - AFES notes;
Wholesale pricing of locally grown cut roses in Fairbanks,
Alaska; Importance of vase life in marketing locally grown
roses; maximizing the vase life of cut roses grown in Alaska;
Pruning strategies for greenhouse rose production in Alaska;
Food irradiation and Alaska's food industries; Equations for
predicting energy values of Alaska feedstuffs; Effect of six
gypsum rates on bromegrass yield and chemical composition;
Inoculation of alfalfa in Alaska; Publications list for 1987.
-
11-1-
January 1979 - Homer beef
production project; Hay quality survey for Homer project;
Gains of beef calves during winter-feeding and summer grazing,
lower Kenai Peninsula, Alaska; Managing native bluejoint reedgrass
for forage production; Cool heads and warm feet [soil warming
research]; Rampart Agricultural Experiment Station, 1900-1925;
Brief biography of George T. Gasser; Iceland: productive northland;
Delta-Clearwater lands opened for agricultural use, 2,000-acre
clearing trials project; Delta dust? Soil management on agricultural
land in interior Alaska; 'Summerred' Apple, a delightful addition
to 'Chinese Golden Early' and 'Rescue' eating apples for southcentral
Alaska; Asian markets for Alaska's agricultural products;
Woodland nutrient cycling, an important consideration in renewable
resource management; In memoriam: Dr. Richard H. Washburn;
Publications list for 1978
-
10-1
- January 1978 - Agricultural
field day at Aniak; Low-cost, year-around calf housing; Biological
nitrogen fixation in natural and agricultural situations in
Alaska; Some research on turfgrasses in Fairbanks; The pH
of Bodenburg silt loam soil as related to forest cover and
time under cultivation; Wild rice trials in Alaska; Rehabilitation
of bare sites in interior Alaska; Crisp green salad at forty
below; Potato storage management in Alaska; Who Cares? [Agroborealis
questionnaire]; An oilseed crop looks promising for interior
Alaska [rapeseed]; Publications list for 1977.
-
9-1
- Jan 1977 - Outdoor recreation
research in Alaska; Trade interdependencies...Alaska and Washington;
Evaluating Alaska soils; Meat price trends in Fairbanks and
Seattle, 1973-1975; Timothy yield and composition as influenced
by lime and nitrogen applications to Kachemak soil series;
Unusual autumn temperature pattern; consumer reaction to CEA
vegetables; Quality of bluejoint hay; High-level panel reviews
Alaska's agricultural research needs; Publications list for
1976.
-
8-1
- January 1976 - Flowering
shrubs used in phenological net; Vegetable variety trials...;
Avoid fertilizers with low phosphorus content and containing
nitric phosphates; Measuring feed quality by proxy; Native
grass seed enters commercial production; Early planting is
important to Alaska growers of bluegrass and red fescue seed;
Photo: plots reveal arctic secrets; New director, James V.
Drew; New staff: Tony Gasbarro, Kenneth L. Casavant; Leonard
K. Johnson; Frederic M. Husby; Publications list for 1975.
-
7-1
- June 1975 - A look at forage
research in the Soviet Union: Alaska's interests; Red turnip
beetle; Climate reversals and Alaska's grasslands; Modern
dairy cow; Report on the Western Governor's Conference; Volcanic-ash
affected soils of southcentral Alaska, some chemical and mineralogical
properties; Production tips: cauliflower, swiss chard, beet,
spinach, cucumber, potato, summer squash; Small grains on
agricultural land in remote areas; Thomas E. Loynachan joins
Palmer staff; In memoriam: John C. Brinsmade; Publications
list for 1974.
-
6-2
- December 1974 - Alaska's
agricultural stations: then and now; A new building for Fairbanks;
Matanuska Farm gets a cow palace; Matanuska Valley farm and
research center; Three red meat programs: Fairbanks swine
barn, new beef program for Homer, research at Kodiak to help
ranchers.
-
6-1
- May 1974 - Grains in Seward's
icebox; Examination of the salad vegetable market of Anchorage;
sweet holygrass, a potentially valuable ally; Alfalfa pellets
increase dry matter and protein of oat-pea silage; Prospecting
for green gold [native grassland forage]; Phosphorus fixation
problems in some Alaska soils; Winter stresses affecting overwintering
crops in the Matanuska Valley; Native bluejoint: a valuable
forage and germplasm resource; Beekeeping in Alaska; Barley
response to phosphorus and lime; Super bird's eye view of
Alaska [satellite imaging]; Early sweet corn for Alaska; Two
researchers join IAS staff to develop controlled environment
agriculture in Alaska [Hertha S. Guthrie, Delbert D. Hemphill,
Jr.]; Agronomists on the banks of the Sagavanirktok; In Memoriam:
Milton A. Barzee; Publications list for 1973 [Also see Vol
5, No. 1]..
-
5-1
- July 1973 - 1972 meat prices
down in Fairbanks and Seattle; Controlled environment agriculture
(CEA); Agricultural climatologists meet in Alaska; Preserving
Alaska's wood products by double diffusion; Nitrogen fertilization
of polar bromegrass; Soil testing as a research tool; Milton
Barzee new agronomist at Palmer; Photoperiod / Nyctoperiod
pattern in autumn critical to grasses in Alaska; Pumpkins,
polyethylene, and photoperiod; Alaska Plant Materials Center,
a new institution; Research progress with alfalfa in Alaska;
New swine research facility; comparison of oat-pea and barley-pea
silage as feed for dairy cows; Barley yields on summer-fallowed
and stubble land; Wheat research in Alaska; Using native plant
resources for conservation; Rotary plow gives yeoman service;
Basil Bensin dies at 91; New potato Varieties for diversification
and specialized markets; Controlling Alaskan insects without
chemicals; Private campgrounds in Alaska. Publications list
[1972/1973].
-
4-2
- November 1972 - Lawrence
Davis: reindeer owner; Bannons grow vegetables on scenic farm
[Mary and Al Bannon]; Marie Fett wanted fresh eggs [Lee Fett
and Marie]; Ann Dolney turns hobby into business [Ann and
Ed Dolney]; Russell James does his gardening under glass;
It's not Kansas, but Alaska! [OHM grain/hog venture, Ed Merdes
and Jim Harding]; Profile of a Matanuska Dairy Farm [Myrtle
Gislason, Bob McCombs, Merlie McCombs, Fairview Dairies];
Holmes family runs Aleutian Islands sheep ranch [Milt Holmes,
Beverly Holms at Unalaska]; Visit to a Kodiak cattle range
[Burton Ranch: Kathy Burton, Bill Burton, Jim Burton, Toni
Burton]; The Robert Mielkes, Matanuska valley potato farmers
[Evelyn Mielke, Robert]; McKee family runs Fairbanks area
hog ranch [Don McKee, Alice McKee].
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4-1
- April 1972 - The surplus dairy calf;
Research insect collection; Increased soil temperature / plastic
mulches; New Alaska grasses excel in winterhardiness; Diced
summer squash, new Alaska frozen food; High protein grain
in interior Alaska; New tool for land preparation in Alaska;
Which Alaska plants are poisonous to livestock; Will remote
sensing give us the answer?; Internal parasites in Alaska
cattle; Economic factors in Alaska milk marketing; Fiddleheads,
trick or treat?; Lettuce storage problems, 1971; new cereal
varieties for Alaska; Processed crab waste, valuable as a
liming agent; Red fescue and bluegrass rank high in frequent-cut
test. Publications list for 1971.
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3-1
- April 1971 - Ecology, environment,
and agriculture; Fermented, high-moisture barley; Apples in
Alaska; Native Alaska legumes studied; Low-temperature fungi;
Two sources of nitrogen for bromegrass; Time of planting critical
for Alaska grass seed growers; Freeze-branding cattle; Energy
measurements in a subpolar environment; Frozen french fries
for Alaska; Oat varieties for forage; Alaska veal for the
Alaska consumer; Resurgence noted in Alaska cutworms; Views...[future
range livestock production]; So many questions, so few answers;
Distinguished and charming visiting scientist [Yvonne Aitken].
Publications list for 1970.
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2-2
- October 1970 - 'Alaska Frostless'
[potato variety] holds promise; D. H. Dinkel: Alaska's custom-made
scientist; L. J. Klebesadel: He makes hay while the sun shines;
Paul Martin: He does the station's dirty work; C. L. Branton;
He helped in building breakthrough [construction / vapor barriers];
Lee Allen: As an engineer, he's in high demand; Charles Marsh:
Always looking for new markets; William Mitchell: Conservation
is his business; Arthur Brundate: He watches over Alaska's
dairy herd; NC-64 committee meets in Alaska: a regional effort
to solve scientific problems; Winston Laughlin: Keeping an
eye on soil nutrients; Sigmund Restad: experiment station's
'crying towel' [executive officer]; Wayne Burton: a real place
in the research picture [agriculture economist]; James Leekley:
Some 2,000 mink are in his charge; Charles Logsdon: He specializes
in vegetable disease; Roscoe Taylor: Development of cereal
crops has two goals; Richard Washburn: His work is usually
full of bugs; Frank Wooding: an exciting program for 1971
[triticale].
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2-1
- February 1970 - Scientific
tour of the pipeline route; Stretching the forage production
season; Merits of irrigation in Alaska; Red fescue, a valuable
species; Coffee, tea, or milk? [experiment station survey/what
people in Fairbanks drink; Unusual test at Petersburg [can
sonic booms affect mink birth and growth?]'; Potato skin spot,
a northern disease; A hardy strawberry: 'Alaska Pioneer';
Weeds studied for strengths and weaknesses; Cobalt's a must
in cattle diet; Revegetation problems and progress; To interview
a cow [herd observed on subalpine range]; Lack of sulfur limits
plant growth. Publications list for 1969.
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1-2
- September 1969 - Dairy production...enterprise...with
good potential; Dairy cows; Vegetables in Alaska; Ornamentals
[grass, flowers, bedding plants; Small fruit development [air
freight business/markets]; Red meat possibilities [research
needed]; Soil picture in Alaska; land development requires
research; Climate data from around Alaska; How can you help
agriculture in Alaska?
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1-1
- April 1969 - [First Agroborealis
issue] A review of some research in progress: Sub-alpine rangeland
requires careful management; Agronomists evaluate native grasses;
Green Gold (grass seed collected from Hope, Alaska; USDA ire
summary ratings under scrutiny; Agricultural engineer monitors
weather; Phosphorus important to Kenai barley; Pea project
[frozen vegetables] shows promise; Low temperature storage
increases fresh lettuce sales; Soil tests measure nutrients;
Warm-season vegetables thrive on polyethylene-insulated soils;
Barley varieties for Alaska; Vegetable growers battle turnip
maggot; Mink feed from fish wastes; Limnanthes: a potential
oilseed crop; Policy Planning: key to progress in agriculture;
Economist analyzes demand for fresh veal in Fairbanks.
Publications
for the School of Natural Resources and Agricultural Sciences
(SNRAS) and the Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station (AFES)
are produced by the AFES Publications Office
305
O'Neill Building
University of Alaska Fairbanks, P.O. Box 757200, Fairbanks, AK
99775-7200
The
office can be contacted by e-mail at fynrpub@uaf.edu.
Note:
Prior to 2003, SNRAS was the School of Agricultural and Land Resources
Management (SALRM)
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