Message:

[

Previous   Next

]

By Topic:

[

Previous   Next

]

Subject:

Brooke Meanley's journal articles & reports, part 3, 1970-1996

From:

Henry Armistead

Reply-To:

Henry Armistead

Date:

Thu, 13 Sep 2007 17:18:35 -0400

BROOKE MEANLEY's JOURNAL ARTICLES and RELATED NON-MONOGRAPHIC WRITINGS AND
REPORTS.

Part 3:  1970-1996.

There are 2 disparities I have not been able to check on or reconcile. 
There are 2 citations to articles on Clapper Rails in the Raven, one for
1983, another for 1985, yet both are for volume 54.  In the Chat there are
two 1988 citations concerning Bachman's Sparrows that are both for 1988,
one is for volume 52(1), the other for volume 53(1).

1970.  A million robins and 10,000 Pine Siskins in the Dismal Swamp,
Atlantic Naturalist 25(1): 40.

1970.  The Wayne Warbler in the Great Dismal Swamp, Atlantic Naturalist
25(3): 116-117.

1970.  Head-scratching method of the Swainson's Warbler, Auk 87(1): 163.

1970.  with G. M. Bond, Molts and plumages of the Red-winged Blackbird with
particular reference to fall migration, Bird-Banding 41(1): 22-27.

1970.  The Dismal Swamp - its flora and fauna, Living Wilderness 34(112):
34-37.

1970.  Method of searching for food by the Swainson's Warbler, Wilson
Bulletin 82(2): 228.

1971.  Great Dismal Swamp mammals, Atlantic Naturalist 26(1): 17-18.

1971.  Additional notes on pre-nesting and nesting behavior of the
Swainson's Warbler, Wilson Bulletin 83(2): 194.

1973.  February nesting of Mourning Doves near Laurel, Maryland, Maryland
Birdlife 29(1): 33.

1973.  Additional notes on Dismal Swamp birds, the Raven 44(1): 3-4.

1973.  Notes from the Great Dismal Swamp, spring 1973, Atlantic Naturalist
28(3): 119-120.

1974.  with M. C. Perry, Red-cockaded Woodpecker near Bowie, Maryland,
Atlantic Naturalist 29(3): 133.

1974.  with M. C. Perry, Red-cockaded Woodpecker near Bowie, Maryland,
Maryland Birdlife 30(3): 104. [apparently duplicated in 2 journals]

1974.  Red-winged Blackbird roosts and flight patterns in northern Ohio,
September 1973.  1974.  4pp.  a report in the P.W.R.C. library.

1975.  Early nesting of King Rail in Dorchester County, Maryland, Atlantic
Naturalist 30(1): 35.

1975.  The blackbird-starling roost problem, Atlantic Naturalist 30(3):
107-109.

1975.  Two more Yellow-headed Blackbirds banded near Laurel, Maryland,
Maryland Birdlife 31(4): 138-139.

1976.  M. C. Perry & MBM, Early egg laying for the Carolina Wren, Maryland
Birdlife 32(1): 15.

1976.  with W. C. Royall, Jr., Nationwide estimates of blackbirds and
starlings, Proceedings of Bird Control Sem. 7: 39-40.

1976.  A census of breeding birds of the Dismal Swamp, the Raven 47(2):
40-43.

1976.  Distribution and ecology of blackbird and Starling roosts in the
United States ... progress report ... Patuxent Wildlife Research Center,
Laurel, MD, U. S. Fish & Wildlife Service, 82pp.

1977.  Birds of the Dismal Swamp, Virginia-North Carolina, the Raven 48(1):
3-25.

1978.  with R. A. Dolbeer, Source of Common Grackles and Red-winged
Blackbirds wintering in Tennessee, the Migrant 49(2): 25-28.

1979.  A second breeding bird census in the Dismal Swamp, the Raven 50(2):
34-35.

1980.  Breeding status of the Sora in Maryland, Maryland Birdlife 36: 98.

1981.  Nesting of the Fish Crow in the Shenandoah Valley, Virginia, the
Raven 52(3): 45-46.

1982.  Early fall activity of the Bobolink in the Shenandoah Valley, the
Raven 53(2): 35.

1982.  Swainson's Warbler and the cowbird in the Dismal Swamp, the Raven
53(3): 47-49.

1983.  A comparison of nesting Clapper Rail populations at Chincoteague,
Virginia, between 1950 and 1981-82, the Raven 54(2): 44-45.

1984.  Notes on Clapper Rail broods at Chincoteague, the Raven 54(1): 13.

1985.  A comparison of Clapper Rail populations at Chincoteague, Virginia,
between 1950 and 1981-82, the Raven 54(2): 45-46.

1986.  Hawk predation on Red-winged Blackbirds, Maryland Birdlife 42(4):
99.

1986.  King Rails banded at Patuxent Wildlife Research Center, Maryland
Birdlife 42(1): 22-23.

1987.  Maryland's pioneer ornithologists, Maryland Birdlife 43(3): 63.

1988.  Notes on Bachman's Sparrow in the Croatan National Forest, the Chat
52(1): 2-3.

1988.  Unique shape of a Bachman's Sparrow nest, the Chat 53(1): 12-13.

1988.  A King-Clapper rail hybrid from a Rappahannock River marsh, the
Raven 59: 15-16.

1988.  Eddleman, W. R., F. L. Knopf, B. Meanley, F. A Reid & R. Zembal,
Conservation of North American rallids, Wilson Bulletin 100(3): 458-475.

1989.  Wood Ducks feeding on flowers of Wildrice, Maryland Birdlife, 45(1):
42.

1989.  with Anna G. Meanley, Banding neotropical migrants that breed in the
Dismal Swamp, the Raven 60: 3-4.

1990.  Some observations on the singing behavior of Bachman's Sparrow, the
Chat 54(2): 63.

1994.  Frederic A, Reid, MBM & Leigh H. Frederickson, King Rail in T. C.
Tacha & C. E. Braun (editors), Migratory shore and upland game bird
management in North America, pp. 181-191.

1995.  In memoriam: Paul A. Stewart, 1909-1994, Auk 112(1): 245-246.

1995.  Some foods of the Rusty Blackbird in the Great Dismal Swamp region,
the Raven 66(1): 9-10.  

1996.  Chandler S. Robbins & MBM, In memoriam: Robert Earl Stewart, Sr.,
1913-1993, Auk 113(3): 680-682.

Some annual and other reports in the P.W.R.C. library.  I assume these are
all U. S. Fish & Wildlife Service reports/publications:

1.  Distribution and ecology of blackbird and starling roosts in eastern
United States.  12 separate reports:  Annual Progress Reports: July 1,
1962-June 30, 1975.  1963-1976.  total of 181pp. by MBM et al.

2.  Distribution and ecology of blackbird and starling roosts in eastern
United States, July 1, 1974-June 30, 1975 by MBM.  1976.  82pp.

3.  Distribution and migration of the Common Grackle (movements between
states and provinces) by MBM.  Special Report: Work Unit P-F-24.3.  1976. 
51pp.

4.  Migration and movements of blackbirds and starlings by MBM et al.  10
separate reports.  1963-1973.  153pp.

5.  Red-winged Blackbird roosts and flight patterns in northern Ohio by
MBM, Sept. 1973.  1974.  4pp.

Best to all. - Harry Armistead, Philadelphia, PA.  215-248-4120.  e-mail,
please, only to: