Repellents in Wildlife Management Symposium: Proceedings of a Symposium

Proceedings of the Second DWRC Special Symposium
Denver, Colorado, August 8-10, 1995
Edited by J. Russell Mason<

1995

Acknowledgments

Author Index

Contributors

Foreword

Table of Contents

Repellents: Integrating Sensory Modalities, Michael L. Avery

Repellency of Plant, Natural Products, and Predator Odors to Woodchucks, N. Jay Bean, Wyatt L. Korff, and J. Russell Mason

Chemical Signals and Repellency: Problems and Prognosis, Gary K. Beauchamp

Grit-Use Behavior in Birds: A Review of Research to Develop Safer Granular Pesticides, Louis B. Best

Peripheral Trigeminal Neural Processes Involved in Repellency, Bruce P. Bryant

Experiments on Chemical Control of Behavior in Brown Tree Snakes, David Chiszar, Gordon H. Rodda, and Hobart M. Smith

A Review of the Bird Repellent Effects of 1 17 Carbocyclic Compounds, Larry Clark

Responsiveness of Brown Tree Snakes to Odors, Larry Clark

Behavioral Principles Governing Conditioned Food Aversions Based on Deception, Michael R. Conover

Comparative Analysis of Deer Repellents, Abderrahim el Hani and Michael R. Conover

BEHAVIORAL RESPONSES TO PINE NEEDLE OIL IN THE NORTHERN POCKET GOPHER, Gisela Epple, Dale L. Nolte, J. Russell Mason, Eugeny Aronov, and Shirley Wager-Page

Effectiveness of Capsaicin as a Repellent to Birdseed Consumption by Gray Squirrels, Christopher S. Fitzgerald, Paul D. Curtis, Milo E. Richmond, and Joseph A. Dunn

Norway Rats' Communication About Foods and Feeding Sites, Bennett G. Galef Jr.

Cinnamamide: A Nonlethal Chemical Repellent for Birds and Mammals, Elaine L. Gill, Richard W. Watkins, Joanne E. Gurney, Julie D. Bishop, Chris J. Feare, Clare B. Scanlon, and David P. Cowan

Review of Regulatory-Imposed Marketing Constraints to Repellent Development, Judith M. Hushon

Dilution and Detoxication Costs: Relevance to Avian Herbivore Food Selection, Walter J. Jakubas, Christopher G. Gulgielmo, and William H. Karasov

The Role of Analytical Chemistry in Repellent Research, Bruce A. Kimball, Dale L. Nolte, Kevin L. Kelly, and John J. Johnston

In-Water Electroshock Techniques to Repel Aquatic Mammals and Birds, A. Lawrence Kolz and Richard E. Johnson

Review of Synthetic Predator Odor Semiochemicals as Repellents for Wildlife Management in the Pacific Northwest, Pontus M.F. Lindgren, Thomas P. Sullivan, and Douglas R. Crump

The Public is Attracted by the Use of Repellents, Cathy A. Liss

Sucrose as a Feeding Deterrent for Fruit-Eating Birds, Carlos Martinez del Rio, Michael L. Avery, and Kristin E. Brugger

Predator Odors as Repellents to Brushtail Possums and Rabbits, David R. Morgan and Anthony D. Woolhouse

A Preliminary Evaluation of Three Food Flavoring Compounds as Bird Repellents, Richard E.R. Porter

Origins of Food Preference in Herbivores, Frederick D. Provenza

The Chemistry of Plant/Animal Interactions, Paul B. Reichardt

Recent Studies on Flavor Aversion Learning in Wildlife Damage Management, Russell F. Reidinger Jr.

Bird Deterrent Research and Development: Marine Oil Spills, Timothy J. Reilly

An Integrated Strategy to Decrease Eared Dove Damage in Sunflower Crops, Ethel N. Rodriguez, Richard L. Bruggers, Roger W. Bullard, and Robert Cook

Avian Repellents: Options, Modes of Action, and Economic Considerations, J. Russell Mason and Larry Clark

Electronic Rodent Repellent Devices: A Review of Efficacy Test Protocols and Regulatory Actions, Stephen A. Schumake

Repellency of Predator Urine to Woodchucks and Meadow Voles, Robert K. Swihart, Mary Jane I. Mattina, and Joseph J. Pignatello

Repellency of Mongoose Feces and Urine to Rats (Rattus spp.), Mark E. Tobin, Ann E. Koehler, Robert T. Sugihara, and Michael E. Burwash

The Role of Sensory Cues and Feeding Context in the Mediation of Pine-Needle Oil's Repellency in Prairie Voles, Shirley A. Wager-Page, J. Russell Mason, Eugeny Aronov, and Gisela Epple

Effectiveness of Varpel Rope@ on Norway Rats and House Mice in Laboratory and Field Conditions, J.D. Wilhide and M.D. Fletcher

Repellent Trials to Reduce Reforestation Damage by Pocket Gophers, Deer, and Elk, Gary W. Witmer, Rodney D. Sayler, and Michael J. Pipas