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Lake Champlain Colonial Waterbird Database Project
Sources and Acknowledgements
Sources
Audubon Vermont annual survey data of Popasquash and Rock
islands. Unpublished data. Huntington, VT.
High Peaks Audubon Society's annual surveys of the Four Brothers
Islands, 1982-2002.
Unpublished data. Elizabethtown, NY.
Hill, M. 1999. Herons and Cormorants on Shad Island, Vermont.
Unpubl. data.
University of Vermont. Burlington, VT.
LaBarr, M. S. 1996. The Vermont Common Tern Recovery Plan. Unpubl. Report.
Vermont Institute of Natural Science. Woodstock, VT.
LaBarr, M. S. 1997-2002. The Breeding Status of Common Terns on Lake Champlain.
Unpubl. Reports. Audubon Vermont. Huntington, VT.
LaBarr, M. S. The 2002 Breeding Status of Common Terns on Lake Champlain. Unpubl.
report. Audubon Vermont, Huntington, VT.
Missisquoi National Wildlife Refuge annual survey data. Unpublished. Swanton,
VT.
Richards, Z. and D. Capen. 2001. An Inventory of the Great Blue Heron Rookery
on Valcour Island, 2001.
Shambaugh, N. 2002. 2002 Black Tern Population Survey and other marsh bird monitoring
activities in Vermont. Unpupl. Report to the Vermont Department of Fish and Wildlife.
Waterbury, VT.
University of Vermont annual surveys of Young Island. Unpublished data. University
of Vermont. Burlington, VT.
University of Vermont annual surveys of Missisquoi National Wildlife Refuge.
Unpublished data. University of Vermont, Burlington, VT.
Vermont Department of Fish and Wildlife annual Young Island survey data. Unpublished.
Essex Jct. VT.
David Capen, personal communication.
John M. C. Peterson personal communication.
Nathaniel Shambaugh personal communication.
Acknowledgements
Audubon Vermont wishes to thank the Lake Champlain Basin Program and the Vermont
Department of Fish and Wildlife's Nongame Wildlife Fund for financial support
of this project. We also thank the numerous organizations and individuals (listed
above) who contributed data to the project. Special thanks to Alec Brecher of
Reseach Resources for help with designing and constructing the database. The
project could not have happened with out the efforts of Jeremy Brooks who gathered
and compiled much of the data. Thanks also to Jamie Whalen and Laura Sears who
entered the data into the database. Finally thanks to all the individuals who
over the years have often braved the noise, smell and avian attacks to collect
so much data on such a unique suite of species.
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