11. PRINCIPAL REFERENCE MATERIAL:
Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission. 1985. Fishery management plan for anadromous alosid stocks of the eastern United States: American shad, hickory shad, alewife, and blueback herring: phase II in interstate management planning for migratory alosids of the Atlantic coast. Washington, D.C.
Barrett, N.E. 1989. Vegetation of the tidal wetlands of the lower Connecticut River: Ecological relationships of plant community-types with respect to flooding and habitat. University of Connecticut, M.S. Thesis.
Bell, M. 1985. The Face of Connecticut: People, Geology, and the Land. CT Geol. Nat. Hist. Surv. Bull. 110, 196 p.
Bevier, L.(ed.). 1994. The Atlas of Breeding Birds of Connecticut. CT Geol. Nat. Hist. Surv. Bull. 113, 461 p.
Boyd, W.A. 1970. Connecticut River Ecological Study: Water temperatures 1966-1969. Essex Marine Laboratory Report No. 1. Essex, CT.
Brumback, J.J. 1965. The Climate of Connecticut. CT Geol. Nat. Hist. Surv. Bull. 90.
Buckley, J. and B. Kynard. 1985. Habitat use and behavior of pre-spawning and spawning shortnose sturgeon, Acipenser brevirostrum, in the Connecticut River. Dev. Environ. Biol. Fish. 6:111-117.
Craig, R.J. 1973. Distributional ecology of marsh birds of the Connecticut River. M.S. thesis. University of Connecticut.
Craig, R.J. 1990. Historic trends in the distribution and populations of estuarine marsh birds of the Connecticut River. Dept. Nat. Res. Management and Engineering, Storrs Agricultural Experiment Station. Research Report No. 83.
Crecco, V. and T. Savoy. 1988. Fishery Management Plan for American Shad in the Connecticut River. CT-DEP, Bureau of Fisheries. Waterford, CT
Dater, C. 1963. Status survey of rails and wading birds in Connecticut. Connecticut Audubon Council, Harwinton, CT, 127 p.
Denette, R.E. 1975. 1975 Connecticut River rail census. CT DEP, Wildlife Unit, 48 p.
Dowhan, J.J. and R.J. Craig. 1976. Rare and endangered species of Connecticut and their habitats. State Geol. Natur. Hist. Surv., CT Dept. Environmental Protection, Rep. Invest. No. 6, 137p.
Federal Power Commission. 1976. Report on significant interrelationships between electric power generation and natural and developed resources in the Connecticut River Basin. Office of Energy Systems. Washington, D.C.
Gale, J.A. and J.S. Perkins. 1982. Great Meadow: A Connecticut River estuarine marsh, Essex, Connecticut. Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, New Haven, CT.
Hoehn, T. and D. Dodge. 1974. Bird Surveys of selected coastal areas, Stonington to Greenwich during spring to summer. Unpublished Report, CTDEP, Wildlife Division, 93 p.
Hoehn, T. 1975. Bird surveys of selected coastal areas, Stonington to Norwalk during spring and summer. Unpublished Report, CTDEP, Wildlife Division, 107 p.
Hotchkiss, C.S. 1947. Aquatic vegetation of the lower Connecticut River. Conn. Board of Fish and Game. Unpublished report, 51 pages.
Howard, C.S. 1940. Salt water intrusion in the Connecticut River. Trans. Amer. Geophys. Union 21:455-457.
Leggett, W.C. 1969. Studies on the reproductive biology of the American shad, Alosa sapidissima: A comparison of populations from four rivers of the Atlantic seaboard. Ph.D. thesis. McGill University.
Marcy, B.C. Jr. 1972. Spawning of the American shad, Alosa sapidissima, in the lower Connecticut River. Ches. Sci. 13 (2):116-119.
Master, L. 1986. Alasmidonta heterodon: Results of a Global Status Survey and Proposal to List as An Endangered Species. Report submitted to Region 5 of the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Merola, P.R. and G.G. Chasko. 1989. Waterfowl in Connecticut. CT Dept. Envir. Prot., Wildlife Bureau Publ. No. WF-4.
Merriman, D. and L.M. Thorpe, eds. 1976. The Connecticut River ecological study: the impact of a nuclear power plant. American Fisheries Society. Monograph No. 1. Washington, D.C.
Metzler, K.J. and A.W.H. Damman. 1985. Vegetation patterns in the Connecticut River floodplain in relation to frequency and duration of flooding. Natur. Can. 112:535-547.
Metzler, K.J. and N.E. Barrett. 1982. National Wetlands Inventory: Connecticut Final Report. U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (unpublished).
Metzler, K.J. and R. Rozsa. 1982. Vegetation of fresh and brackish tidal marshes of Connecticut. Newsl. Conn. Bot. Soc. 10:1-3.
Metzler, K.J. and R. Rozsa, 1987. Additional notes on the tidal wetlands of the Connecticut River. Newsl. Conn. Bot. Soc. 15(1):1-6.
Metzler, K.J. and R.W. Tiner. 1992. Wetlands of Connecticut. Connecticut Geol. & Nat. Hist. Survey, Report of Investigations No. 13, 115 p.
Nichols, G.E. 1920. The vegetation of Connecticut: VII. The associations of depositing areas along the seacoast. Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 47:511-548.
Nothnagle, P. 1992. Analysis of historic collection sites for Cicindela dorsalis dorsalis, the Northeastern beach tiger beetle, and C. puritana, the Puritan tiger beetle, in Connecticut, with comments on potential reintroduction. Unpublished report submitted to The Nature Conservancy.
Odum, W.E., T.J. Smith III, J.K. Hoover, and C.C. McIvor. 1984. The ecology of tidal freshwater marshes of the United States East Coast: a community profile. U.S. Fish Wild. Serv. FWS/OBS-83/17. 177 p.
Savoy, T. 1991. Sturgeon status in Connecticut waters. Annual Progress Report. 22p.
Savoy, T. and D. Shake. 1991. Population dynamics studies of American shad, Alosa sapidissima, in the Connecticut River. Progress Report AFC-19-1. Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection. 49 p.
Smith, C.R., D.M. Pence, and R.J. O'Connor. 1993. Status of Neotropical Migratory Birds in the Northeast: A Preliminary Assessment. Pp. 172-188 in Status and Management of Neotropical Migratory Birds (Finch, D.M. and P. Stangel, eds.), Gen. Tech. Rep. RM-229. Fort Collins, CO: USDA, Forest Service, Rocky Mtn. Forest & Range Exp. Sta. 422p.
Stone, S.L., T.A. Lowery, J.D. Field, C.D. Williams, D.M. Nelson, S.H. Jury, M.E. Monaco and L. Anderson. 1994. Distribution and abundance of fishes and invertebrates in Mid-Atlantic estuaries. ELMR Report No.12, NOAA/NOS Strategic Environmental Assessments Division, Silver Spring, MD. 280 p.
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 1991. Northeast Coastal Areas Study: Significant Habitats of Southern New England and Portions of Long Island, New York. Report to Congress. 249 p.
Return to table of contents