Videos To Borrow
PNW has a selection of videos that we loan out
for 2-week periods. They are not copyrighted and may be copied.
If you borrow our videos, the only cost to you is return postage.
To order a video click here.
TAPE NUMBER AND TITLE
BMNRI-V-1 Fire ecology and management in the Blue Mountains: fall
1993
BMNRI-V-2 Watersheds: the critical link: spring 1994
BMNRI-V-5 Soil: The foundation of the ecosystem: fall 1994
BMNRI-V-6 Noxious weeds: stemming the tide: spring 1995
BMNRI-V-7 Cottonwood and aspen: managing for balance, ecology,
and management: fall 1995
BMNRI-V-9 Broad-scale assessment of land-use effects on fishes
of the interior Columbia basin by Danny Lee and Bruce Reiman
BMNRI-V-10 Landscape analysis in ecosystem management: modeling
process and pattern by Steve Garman
BMNRI-V-11 Mechanisms that drive bird species diversity in Yellowstone
National Park by Andy Hansen
BMNRI-V-12 Late Quarternary environments of eastern Oregon: forest
and fire history of the Blue Mountains by Peter Mehringer
BMNRI-V-14 Living with wildfire: spring 1998
BMNRI-V-15 Clearcutting; no clear-cut answer: fall 1998
BMNRI-V-16 Blue Mountains elk initiative: projects and progress
BMNRI-V-17 The breeding bull elk study: preliminary results and
implications from the Starkey Experimental Forest and Range
BMNRI-V-18 Building the future: the Blue Mountains Natural Resources
Institute
BMNRI-V-19 Choice and consequences: prescribed natural fire in
wilderness
BMNRI-V-20 Circle in the forest: land management by consensus
BMNRI-V-21 Continually correcting course: a tale of adaptive management
BMNRI-V-22 East-side ecosystem management project video, August
1994
BMNRI-V-23 Fixing the system: ecosystem health in the Blue Mountains
BMNRI-V-25 The Limber Jim project: putting science to work
BMNRI-V-26 Managing for compatible uses: grazing, timber, and ecological
resources
BMNRI-V-27 More than the sum of the parts: managing the ecosystem
BMNRI-V-29 Riparian revival: the Elk Creek demonstration area
BMNRI-V-30 Sharing the canvas: the learning center of the Blue
Mountains Natural Resources Institute
BMNRI-V-31 Smallwood 98: conference and exposition
BMNRI-V-32 Transforming fire
BMNRI-V-33 Voice for the forest: a changing approach to public
participation
BMNRI-V-34 Salmonids in peril: ecology and management of Blue Mountain
native fishes
V-3 Clean air: a common objective
V-4 Gloom and doom or opportunity?
V-5 The spirit of the woods
V-17 Ecosystem management: background and principles
V-18 Profiling impacts on forest lands: 1996
V-19 Back to the basics: an understanding of riparian function
and processes
V-20 Photo monitoring approaches in riparian systems 1996
V-21 Role of disturbance in boreal forest ecosystems
V-22 Satellite conference "A Vision in Common" 6/98
V-23 Where water meets the land: understanding and managing the
riparian resource
V-24 Dr. Bill Walner on the Asian gypsy moth
V-25 Natural enemies of forest insect pests
V-26 Forest operations
V-27 Tall trees and test tubes: a chronicle of the Pacific Northwest
Research Station
V-28 The urban forest: people and trees living together
V-29 Portland community treehouse project 9/1996
V-30 Keepers of the forest: the rewards and responsibilities of
forest stewardship
V-31 Growing stock control: the route to diverse forest structure
V-32 Creating cavities in trees: one facet of ecosystem management
V-33 Forest fragmentation
V-34 Spruce bark beetle
V-35 America's forests: a history of resiliency and recovery
V-36 Clean air: a common objective
V-37 New concepts in ecosystem management: soil
V-38 New concepts in ecosystem management: soil ecosystem invertebrates
V-39 New concepts in ecosystem management: landscape analysis and
design
V-40 New concepts in ecosystem management: overview of landscape
processes
V-41 New concepts in ecosystem management: understanding aboriginal
approaches to land management
V-42 Construction of the canopy crane
V-43 The forest canopy--the last biological frontier
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