Acknowledgments 



Many members of the Forest Service, other Fed- 

 eral agencies. State agencies, universities, and con- 

 servation and industrial organizations have contrib- 

 uted to this study. The names of the principal 

 authors and contributors to the individual chapters 

 are listed below.' The help of all others who com- 

 piled material or contributed in other ways is also 

 gratefully acknowledged. 



The principal authors of Chapter 1, Basic Assump- 

 tions, were Dwight Hair and Perry R. Hagenstein 

 (New England Natural Resources Center). 



The principal authors of Chapter 2, Forest and 

 Range Lands, were Thomas E. Hamilton and Daniel 



D. Oswald. Other substantive contributors included 

 Lee J. Bardwell and Brian R. Wall — land use 

 trends; Dwane D. Van Hooser — forest land; Jack E. 

 Schmautz — rangeland, Kermit N. Larson — regional 

 overviews; Neal P. Kingsley — North; Paul A. Mur- 

 phy — South; Alan W. Green — Rocky Mountains 

 and Great Plains; Charles L. Bolsinger — Pacific 

 Coast; Howard E. Banta — minerals; Elwood L. 

 Shafer — urban forests; Neil Paulson and Leon S. 

 Dochinger — air. 



The principal author of Chapter 3, Outdoor Rec- 

 reation and Wilderness, was H. Fred Kaiser. Other 

 substantive contributors included Charles C. Harris 



— implications and opportunities; John Hof (Uni- 

 versity of Florida) — demand analysis; H. Kenneth 

 Cordell and Robert McLellan (Clemson University), 

 and Michael Legg (Stephen F. Austin University) — 

 private lands; Mack L. Hogans — dispersed land 

 activities; Wilbur F. LaPage and Malcolm Bevins 

 (University of Vermont) — developed land activities; 

 David L. Lime-water activities; H. Peter Wingle — 

 snow activities; and Robert C. Lucas and Thomas J. 

 Kovalicky — wilderness. 



The principal authors of Chapter 4, Wildlife and 

 Fish were Dennis L. Schweitzer, Charles T. Cushwa 

 (Fish and Wildlife Service), and Thomas W. Hoek- 

 stra. Other substantive contributors included William 



E. Wegert (Colorado State University — consump- 

 tive demand projections; Thomas More — noncon- 

 sumptive demands; Larry A. Dunkeson (Fish and 

 Wildlife Service) — waterfowl; David E. Capen (Uni- 

 versity of Vermont) — nongame bird populations; 

 Alexander T. Cringan (Colorado State University) 



— fur trade; National Marine Fisheries Service — 

 salmon; Dale A. Jones, Robert W. Phillips, C. John^ 

 Ralph, James Wiley (Fish and Wildlife Service), 

 Tamra Taylor, William L. Sheridan, Robert E. 

 Radtke, Malcolm G. Edwards, Randall C. Long, 

 Keith Guenther, John C. Capp, David J. Dunaway, 



' Contributors are members of the Forest Service unless other- 

 wise noted. 



John Adams, Paul W. Shields, William D. Zeedyk, 

 David R. Patton, A. F. C. Green, Edward R. 

 Schneegas, Carl Frounfelker, and Gregory R. Super 



— regional compilations of data on demand, supply 

 and species-habitat relationships, and coordinators 

 with State Wildlife and fish agencies; Samuel P. 

 Shaw (retired, FS) and Nathan A. Byrd — oppor- 

 tunities on private lands; Glen E. Brink — data man- 

 agement and analysis. 



The principal authors of Chapter 5, Range, were 

 Jack E. Schmautz, Melvin D. Belinger, Robert W. 

 Harris (retired, FS). Other substantive contributors 

 included Robert S. Rummell — Chapter manager; 

 John Chambers, Thomas E. Jordan, Jr., Gary R. 

 Evans (Soil Conservation Service), Donald T. Pendle- 

 ton (Soil Conservation Service), Ronald J. Younger 

 (Bureau of Land Management — resource analysis; 

 LeRoy C. Quance (Economics Statistics and Coop- 

 erative Service), Pramila K. Poudel — demand analy- 

 sis; Richard N. Ross, Nathan A. Byrd, Lester Fluck- 

 iger — supply analysis; Wayne E. Burton (University 

 of Alaska), C. Peairs Wilson (University of Hawaii) — 

 special analysis; and Gale L. Wolters — research 

 opportunities. 



The principal author of Chapter 6, Timber, was 

 Dwight Hair. Other substantive contributors 

 included Robert B. Phelps, Thomas C. Marcin, H. 

 Edward Dickerhoof, and William H. Reid — the 

 demand for timber; David R. Darr and Gary R. 

 Lindell — trade in timber products; David B. 

 McKeever and Robert N. Stone — primary timber 

 processing industries; Dwane D. Van Hooser, James 

 LaBau, and Glen E. Brink — domestic timber re- 

 sources; Thomas J. Mills, Ralph Alig, and Donald 

 R. Gedney — projected timber supplies; Darius M. 

 Adams (Oregon State University) and Richard W. 

 Haynes — timber demand-supply relationships; Wil- 

 liam McKillop (University of California, Berkeley) 



— social, economic, and environmental effects of ris- 

 ing prices; Stephen C. Boyce — biological and re- 

 search opportunities for increasing timber supplies; 

 George F. Dutrow, Joseph M. Vasievich, and Merle 

 E. Conkin (National Forest Products Association) — 

 economic opportunities for increasing timber sup- 

 plies; Neal P. Kingsley — importance of forest owner- 

 ship; Edward C. Thor — environmental and multiple- 

 use impacts of intensified management; and Thomas 

 H. Ellis — extending timber supplies through im- 

 proved utilization. 



The principal author of Chapter 7, Water, was 

 Adrian L. Haught. Other substantive contributors 

 included James E. Eggleston and Michael W. Mur- 

 phy — demand and supply situation for water; 

 Junior D. Helvey, Richard Lee (West Virginia Uni- 



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