Recent Publications October 2002 Ann Camp Camp, A.E.

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Recent Publications
Ann Camp
October 2002
1. Camp, A.E., Wibaralski, A. and Russo, R. 1989. Wetlands within the township of Canton,
Connecticut: Their hydrological and ecological functions. Published by the Inland Wetlands Agency,
Canton, Connecticut.
Manuscript was a collaborative effort, with each scientist responsible for analyzing and reporting on
the hydrological and ecological functions of about 50 wetlands. Camp provided input on organizing
the document for use by landowners and developers.
2. Camp, A.E., Hessburg, P.F., Everett, R.L., and Oliver, C.D. 1995. Spatial changes in forest
landscape patterns resulting from altered disturbance regimes on the eastern slope of the Washington
Cascades. In: Brown, James K. et al., tech. coords. Proceedings: Symposium on Fire in Wilderness
and Park Management; 1993 March 30 - April 1; Missoula, MT. Gen. Tech Rep. INT-GTR-320.
Ogden, UT: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Intermountain Research Station pp. 169172.
Camp wrote the paper based on preliminary findings from her doctoral research. Oliver and Everett
reviewed the manuscript. Everett and Hessburg financially supported the research
3. Camp, A.E., Hessburg, P.F., and Everett, R.L. 1996. Dynamically incorporating late-successional
forest in sustainable landscapes. In: Hardy, C.C. et al., eds. The Use of Fire in Forest Restoration.
Gen. Tech. Rep. INT-GTR-341. Ogden, UT: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service,
Intermountain Research Station pp. 20-23.
Camp prepared the manuscript; Everett and Hessburg reviewed and financially supported the
research.
4. Hadfield, J., Flanagan, P., and Camp, A. E. 1996. White pine mortality survey in the eastern
Washington Cascade Range. Nutcracker Notes No. 7.
Camp and Flanagan conceived the study; Hadfield analyzed the data, prepared the manuscript and
financially supported the work.
5. Everett, R.L., Camp, A.E., and Schellhaas, R. 1996. Building a New Forest with Fire Protection in
Mind. In: Proceedings of the 1995 Annual Meeting of the Society of American Foresters, Portland
Me. October 28 - November 1, 1995. pp. 253-258.
Everett presented this paper before the Fire Working Group Technical Session at the Society of
American Foresters 1995 Annual Meeting (11/95) in Portland, ME. Camp was responsible for
developing some key concepts expressed in the paper, especially that of using a template of slope,
aspect, and topography to site stands having late-successional compositions and structures in a fireprone landscape. Manuscript preparation was a collaborative effort; Camp wrote about 30% of the
manuscript.
6. Everett, R.L. Schellhaas, R. Anderson, T., Lehmkuhl, J.F., and Camp, A.E. 1996. Restoration of
ecosystem integrity and land use allocation objectives in altered watersheds. In: McDonnell, J.J. et
al. (eds.) proceedings of the American Water Resources Association: Watershed Restoration
Management, July, 1996. pp. 271-280. (Refereed)
Everett presented this paper before the American Water Resources Association. Collaborative effort
arising from authors' work on the 1994 Fire Restoration Science Advisory Panel.
7. Oliver, C.D., Osawa, A., and Camp, A. 1997. Forest dynamics and resulting animal and plant
population changes at the stand and landscape levels. J. of Sustainable Forestry 6(3/4): 281-312.
(Refereed)
Oliver presented this paper at an international workshop held September 7-9, 1993 at Forestry and
Forest Products Research Institute, Tsukuba, Japan. Camp provided examples of disturbances and
resulting landscape-level vegetation patterns from eastern Washington and collaborated on portions of
the manuscript concerning temporal changes in vegetation patterns at the landscape-level.
8. Camp, A. E.; Oliver, C.D.; Hessburg, P.F.; and Everett, R. L. 1997. Predicting late-successional
fire refugia pre-dating European settlement in the Wenatchee Mountains. Forest Ecology and
Management 95:63-77. (Refereed)
Camp wrote the paper based on her doctoral research. Oliver, Hessburg, and Everett reviewed the
manuscript. Everett and Hessburg financially supported the research.
9. Camp, A. E.; and Everett, R.L. 1997. Fire, insects, and pathogens: managing risk in latesuccessional reserves. In: Proceedings of the SAF National Convention, Fire and
Entomology/Pathology Working Group, November 9-13, 1996, Albuquerque, NM. Society of
American Foresters, Bethesda, MD. pp. 216-221.
Camp prepared the manuscript. Everett reviewed the manuscript and provided examples of risk
associated with administrative fragmentation of landscapes.
10a. US Forest Service, Wenatchee National Forest. 1996. Late Successional Reserve and Managed
Late Successional Area Assessment (Draft).
10b. US Forest Service, Wenatchee National Forest. 1997. Late Successional Reserve and Managed
Late Successional Area Assessment (Final).
Camp was member of core team that developed the assessment. Camp wrote Chapter III
(Disturbances, Forest Overview), the Disturbance Module in Chapter VII, and the Disturbance Risk
Analysis for each LSR/MLSA. Camp contributed to Chapter XIII (Monitoring) and the forest-wide
and individual reserve fire plans.
11. USDA 1997. Research plan for evaluating silvicultural treatments in fire-created, overstocked,
small-diameter forest stands. Colville National Forest.
Camp worked with Susan Willits, PNW Portland, to develop this Congressionally-mandated research
plan for using an adaptive management approach to treating thousands of acres of dense forest stands
that regenerated following fires in the 1920s. The study plan, mandated by Congress (House Report
104-625), was a collaborative effort between Camp (75%) and Sue Willits (25%).
12. Everett, R. L.; Camp, A. E.; and Furlong, J. 1998. Impacts of land-use allocations on long-term
landscape management. In: J.M. Calhoun (ed.) Forest Policy: Ready for Renaissance, proceedings of
a conference held September 17-19, 1996, Forks, WA. Olympic Natural Resources Center, University
of Washington, Seattle. pp. 83-96. (Refereed)
Manuscript preparation was a collaborative effort between Everett (70%) and Camp (30%). Camp
provided examples of incorporating whole-unit management in late-successional reserves and edited
the manuscript. Furlong provided examples of administrative fragmentation of National Forest lands.
13. Harrod, R.J.; Gaines, W.L.; Hartl, W.E., Camp, A.E. 1998. Estimating historical snag density in
dry forests east of the Cascade Range. Gen. Tech. Rep. PNW-GTR-428. Portland, OR: U.S.
Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. 16 p.
Harrod and Hartl developed the methodology. Camp provided information about diameter
distributions in balanced, uneven-aged stands and technical support on the derivations of deLiocourt
q-factors.
14. Camp, A.E. 1999. Age structure and species composition resulting from altered disturbance
regimes on the eastern slopes of the Cascades Range, Washington. Journal of Sustainable Forestry
9(3/4): 39-67.
15. Schellhaas, R., Camp, A.E., Spurbeck, D., and Keenum, D. 2000. Report to the Colville National
Forest on the results of the South Deep watershed fire history research.
Camp was instrumental in securing funding for this project, provided substantial assistance with data
analysis and wrote the report.
16. Schellhaas, R., Spurbeck, D., Keenum D., Ohlson, P., and Camp, A.E. 2000. Report to the
Colville National Forest on the results of the Quartzite Planning Area fire history research.
Camp provided some assistance with data analysis and helped write the report.
17. Camp, A.E. 2001. A sustainable alternative to administrative set-asides for providing latesuccessional forest habitat in fire-regulated landscapes. Proceedings of the Management of Fire
Maintained Ecosystems Workshop. May 23-24, 2000 Whistler, BC. Hosted by the BC Ministry of
Forests and the Forestry Continuing Studies Network. Pp. 21-23.
Invited paper.
18. Camp, A.E. 2002. Damage to residual trees from combining cut-to-length and cable yarding
operations in small diameter, mixed conifer forests on steep slopes in northeastern Washington: a
case study. Western Journal of Applied Forestry 17(1): 14-22.
19. Camp, A.E. 2002. Damage to residual trees from a commercial thinning of small-diameter mixed
conifer stands in northeastern Washington. Proceedings of the National Silvicultural Workshop held
May 7-10, 2001 in Hood River OR. PNW-GTR-546. Portland OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture,
Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. pp. 52-58
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Papers in Press or Preparation
20. Camp, A.E., Baumgartner, D.M., and Hanley, D.P. In Press. Forest Ecology in Washington.
Washington State University Cooperative Extension Program. Pullman, Wa., p. 30.
Camp wrote the manuscript. Baumgartner and Hanley provided background material, reviewed the
manuscript, and tested a draft version in several education programs and workshops attended by
loggers and non-industrial private landowners.
21. Camp, A.E., Baumgartner, D.M., and Hanley, D.P. In Press. Silviculture for Washington's
Forests. Washington State University Cooperative Extension Program. Pullman, Wa. 26 p.
Camp wrote the manuscript. Baumgartner and Hanley provided background material, reviewed the
manuscript, and tested a draft version in several education programs and workshops attended by
loggers and non-industrial private landowners.
22. Camp, A.E. Demographics of dead trees on the eastern slope of the Washington Cascades from
the Cascades Crest to the Columbia Plateau (In prep with anticipated outlet being Northwest
Science)
23. Camp, A.E. Damage to residual trees from four harvest systems operating in small diameter,
mixed conifer forests in northeastern Washington: a case study. Accepted by Western Journal of
Applied Forestry with minor revisions.
24. Camp, A.E., Lundquist, J.E., Droege, K.M. and McLaughlin, J. In prep. Relationships among
diseases and other small-scale disturbance processes, forest growth and development, fuel dynamics,
and wildfire spread and behavior: A review of the literature.
Droege, McLaughlin and Camp reviewed the literature and Camp wrote the manuscript. The project
was funded by a FS grant through Lundquist who is currently reviewing the paper.
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