Processed Leaflets— Continued, 



In.iurious S"pecies and Their Control 



10 WL, Tile possibility of secondary poisoning from thallium used in the 

 control of rodents. 



13 V/L. Protecting grain crops from damage "by wildfowl. 



27 V/L, A cage trap useful in the control of whiter-necked ravens, 



54 WL, Rodent control aided "by emergency conservation work, 



59 \'TL, Directions for organizing and conducting rabbit drives, 



62 WL, Suggestions on trapping coyotes and wolves in Alaska, 



64 liTL, Protecting crops from damage by horned larks in California. 



78 WL, . Directions for destroying house mice, 



83 WL. Birds in relation to fishes, 



91 VJL, Research studies in the control of destructive fflanimals, 



113 WL, European and American methods of rat conljrol. 



115 WL, Cultural -and other methods for the control of injurious wildlife, 



117 WL, Protecting orchard trees from deer, 



121 WL. Tv;o home-made traps for English sparrows. 



123 WL, Crow damage to fall grain crops in Oklahoma in 1937, 



141 WL, Protecting blueberries from damage by herring gulls, 



143 WL. Suggestions fo,r the control of vagrant domestic pigeons, 



149 V/L, Protecting field crops from waterfowl damage by means of reflectors 

 and revolving beacons, 



172 WL, Suggestions for combating objectionable roosts of birds with 

 special reference to those of starlings, 



181 WL. The control of skunks, 



3-770, Directions for destroying crawfishes, 



3-889, Publications on trapping, 



• &*10a8» The effect of poisons used in rodent control on grouse, pheasant^, 

 and quail. 



3-1162, Directions for poisoning thirteen-striped ground squirrels, 



3-1163, Directions for controlling tree squirrels. 



3-1283, Directions for using poison in chipmunk control. 



Miscellaneous Sub.iects 



5 V/L, Tularemia, an animal-borne disease. 



14 WL, Planting for wildlife in the corn belt. 



15 \'0j. Planting for wildlife in the cotton belt, 



37 V/L, The correlation of forestry and wildlife management, 



52 WL, Raising guinea pigs. 



57 WL, Marking vdld animals for identification. 



72 V/L, Check-list of marsh and aquatic plants of the United States, 



87 WL, Some accomplishments of the cooperative research units: A sum^ 

 mary to Janua.ry 31, 1937. 



98 WL, Collegesand universities offering courses in vdldlife manage- 



ment, 1937-38. 



99 WL, Disease as a factor in game fluctuation, 



100 Wl, Annotated list and index of Leaflets 1 VJL to 100 WL. 

 104 WL. The status of wildlife research, 1937. 



8 



