Boyd E. Wickman
United States Forest Service
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Boyd E. Wickman.
Archive | 1988
Richard R. Mason; Boyd E. Wickman
The Douglas-fir tussock moth, Orgyia pseudotsugata (McDunnough), is a common defoliator of fir in the interior forests of western North America. It is one of four western species of Orgyia, but it is the only member of the group that occasionally reaches outbreak numbers while feeding exclusively on conifers.24 Because of the explosive and destructive nature of its outbreaks, the Douglas-fir tussock moth has achieved much deserved notoriety among forest managers. For this reason, considerable effort has been made in recent years to understand the dynamics of tussock moth populations and to develop methods for minimizing their impact.11
Ecology | 2001
James H. Speer; Thomas W. Swetnam; Boyd E. Wickman; Andrew Youngblood
Archive | 1992
Boyd E. Wickman
Research Paper - US Department of Agriculture, Forest Service | 1995
Thomas W. Swetnam; Boyd E. Wickman; P. H. Gene; Christopher H. Baisan
Environmental Entomology | 1997
Richard R. Mason; Daniel T. Jennings; H. G. Paul; Boyd E. Wickman
Archive | 1981
Boyd E. Wickman; Richard R. Mason; Galen C. Trostle
Journal of Economic Entomology | 1969
Boyd E. Wickman; Richard Hunt
Environmental Entomology | 1976
Boyd E. Wickman
Archive | 1994
Boyd E. Wickman; Richard R. Mason; Thomas W. Swetnam
In: Shepperd, Wayne D.; Eskew, Lane G., compilers. 2004. Silviculture in special places: Proceedings of the National Silviculture Workshop; 2003 September 8-11; Granby, CO. Proceedings RMRS-P-34. Fort Collins, CO: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station. p. 31-48 | 2004
Andrew Youngblood; Kim Johnson; Jim Schlaich; Boyd E. Wickman