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1 Abstein, J. 1977. Slow and steady win the race. Florida Department of Natural Resources, Florida Conservation News 12(10):7–8.
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7 Allen, E. R. 1938. The copperhead in northern Florida. Copeia 1938:50.
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9 Allen, E. R. 1939. Hyla versicolor versicolor from Silver Springs, Florida. Copeia 1939:53.
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24 Anonymous. 1859. Letter from Florida. Valley Farmer (St. Louis) 11(May):142.
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27 Anonymous. 1876. Largest alligator killed in Florida for many years. Forest and Stream 7(6):84.
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29 Anonymous. 1881. The Florida rattlesnake. Forest and Stream 16(February 10):27–28.
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46 Barbour, T., and G. Noble. 1915. Notes on the water snake Natrix compressicauda. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 67:29–35.
47 Barbour, T. 1919. Distribution of Sceloporus in southern Florida. Copeia 1919:48–51.
48 Barbour, T. 1920. Herpetological notes from Florida. Copeia 1920:55–57.
49 Barbour, T. 1923. The crocodile in Florida. Occasional Papers of the Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan No. 131. 6pp.
50 Barbour, T. 1924. Reptiles and amphibians: their habits and adaptations. Riverside Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. 125pp.
51 Barbour, T. 1931. Another introduced frog in North America. Copeia 1931:140.
52 Barbour, T. 1936. Two introduced lizards in Miami, Florida. Copeia 1936:113.
53 Barbour, T. 1939. A red eft from Florida. Copeia 1939:175.
54 Barbour, T., and A. F. Carr, Jr. 1940. Eumeces in the Miami area. Copeia 1940:129.
55 Barbour, T. 1940. Pine snakes, black and brown. Copeia 1940:205.
56 Barbour, T. 1943. Naturalist at large. Little, Brown and Company, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. 314pp.
57 Barbour, T. 1944. Alligators and crocodiles. The Atlantic 174(1):87–91.
58 Barbour, T. 1944. That vanishing Eden: a naturalist's Florida. Little, Brown and Company, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. 237pp.
59 Bartram, W. 1791. Travels through North & South Carolina, Georgia, East & West Florida, the Cherokee country, the extensive territories of the Muscogulges, or Creek Confederacy, and the country of the Chactaws; containing, an account of the soil and natural productions of those regions, together with observations on the manners of the Indians. James & Johnson, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. 522pp. Bartram, W. 1947. The travels of William Bartram [edited by Mark van Doren]. Dover, New York, New York, USA. 414pp.
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63 Beck, W. M. 1938. Notes on the reptiles of Payne's Prairie, Alachua County, Florida. Florida Naturalist 11:85–87.
64 Beck, W. M. 1939. The Pinellas County snake bounty. Florida Naturalist 12:94.
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66 Bevan, W. A. 1930. Snake lore. Outdoor Life 65(4):108.
67 Bird, G. L. 1931. The fisherman's friend: how the alligator helps to maintain the fish supply. Nature 18:107–109.
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75 Brice, J. J. 1896. The fish and fisheries of the coastal waters of Florida. Report to the U.S. Commission on Fish and Fisheries 22:263–342.
76 Brimley, C. S. 1903. Notes on the reproduction of certain reptiles. American Naturalist 37:261–266.
77 Brimley, C. S. 1910. Records of some reptile and batrachians from the southeastern United States. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington 23:9–18.
78 Brinton, D. G. 1869. A guide-book of Florida and the South, for tourists, invalids and emigrants, with a map of the St. John River. George MacLean, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. 136pp.
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81 Brown, K. V. 1988. Alligators: dragons in paradise. Florida Wildlife 42(6):15–16.
82 Brown, L. G. 1993. Totch: a life in the Everglades. University Press of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 269pp.
83 Buck, S. V. 1998. The sea turtle industry in the Florida Keys. Reptile & Amphibian Magazine (September–October):30–34, 36.
84 Bullen, R. P., and A. Bullen. 1976. The Palmer site. Florida Anthropological Society Publications No. 8. 55pp.
85 Burt, C. E. 1937. The lizards of the southeastern United States. Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science 40:349–366.
86 Burt, C. E. 1938. The frogs and toads of the southeastern United States. Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science 41:331–367.
87 Butler, W. 1875. Letter of William Butler, Lake Worth. Forest and Stream 4(April 22):167.
88 Carbary, L. J. 1961. All about alligators. Science Digest 50(3):27–31.
89 Carr, A. F., Jr. 1933. A key to the breeding-songs of the Florida frogs. Florida Naturalist 7:19–23.
90 Carr, A. F., Jr. 1934. Notes on the habits of the short-tailed snake, Stilosoma extenuatum Brown. Copeia 1934:138–139.
91 Carr, A. F., Jr. 1935. The identity and status of two turtles of the genus Pseudemys. Copeia 1935:147–148.
92 Carr, A. F., Jr. 1936. The Gulf island cottonmouths. Proceedings of the Florida Academy of Sciences 1:86–90.
93 Carr, A. F., Jr. 1937. The geographic and ecological distribution of reptiles and amphibians of Florida. Dissertation, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 145pp.
94 Carr, A. F., Jr. 1939. A geckonid lizard new to the fauna of the United States. Copeia 1939:232.
95 Carr, A. F., Jr. 1940. A contribution to the herpetology of Florida. University of Florida Publications, Biological Sciences 3:1–118.
96 Carr, A. F., Jr. 1940. Dates of frog choruses in Florida. Copeia 1940:55.
97 Carr, A. F., Jr., and D. K. Caldwell. 1956. The ecology and migration of sea turtles. I. Results of fieldwork in Florida, 1955. American Museum Novitates No. 1793. 23pp.
98 Carr, A. F., Jr. 1983. All the way down upon the Suwannee River. Audubon Magazine 85(2):78–101.
99 Carr, A. 1994. Alligator country. Pages 104–124 in M. H. Carr, editor. A naturalist in Florida: a celebration of Eden. Yale University Press, New Haven and London,Connecticut, USA.
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102 Chabreck, R. H. 1968. The American alligator—past, present and future. Proceedings of the Annual Conference of Southeastern Game and Fish Commissioners 21:554–558.
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112 Cope, E. D. 1871. Catalogue of the Reptilia and Batrachia obtained by J. C. Maynard in Florida. Annual Report of the Peabody Academy of Science 3:82–85.
113 Cope, E. D. 1886. Synonymic list of the North American species of Bufo and Rana, with descriptions of some new species of Batrachia, from specimens in the National Museum. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 23:514–526.
114 Cope, E. D. 1888. On the snakes of Florida. Proceedings of the U.S. National Museum 11:381–394.
115 Cope, E. D. 1889. The Batrachia of North America. Bulletin of the U.S. National Museum, No. 34. 525pp.
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119 Covington, J. W. 1958. Life at Fort Brooke 1824–1836. Florida Historical Quarterly 36:319–330.
120 Covington, J. W., editor. 1962. La Floride: 1565. Florida Historical Quarterly 41:275–281.
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122 Cushman, J. D., Jr. 1964. The Indian River Settlement: 1842–1849. Florida Historical Quarterly 43:21–35.
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129 De Sola, C. R. 1934. Phrynosoma from Florida. Copeia 1934:190.
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207 Hines, T. C. 1979. The past and present status of the alligator in Florida. Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the Southeastern Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies 33:224–232.
208 Hobbs, R. G. 1886. A Florida museum. Forest and Stream 25(January 14):484.
209 Holder, J. B. 1871. Along the Florida reef. Harper's New Monthly Magazine 42(April):706–718.
210 Holder, C. F. 1885. Turtling on the outer reef. Lippincott's Magazine 36(October):379–386.
211 Holder, E. A. (Gove). 1892. At the Dry Tortugas during the war. A lady's journal. [Part I]. Californian Illustrated Magazine 1(January):87–93.
212 Holman, J. A., and C. Clausen. 1984. Fossil vertebrates associated with Paleo-Indian artifact at Little Salt Spring, Florida. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 4:146–154.
213 Hoole, W. S., editor. 1974. East Florida in 1834: letters of Dr. John Durkee. Florida Historical Quarterly 52:294–308.
214 Hornaday, W. T. 1875. The crocodile in Florida. American Naturalist 9:498–504.
215 Hornaday, W. T. 1886. A crocodile-hunt in Florida. The Youth's Companion (February 4):39.
216 Hornaday, W. T. 1887. The pluckiest boy in Florida. The Youth's Companion (November 3):87.
217 Hornaday, W. T. 1914. The American natural history: a foundation of useful knowledge of the higher animals of North America. Volume 4. Reptiles, amphibians and fishes. Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, New York, USA.
218 Hubbard, C. C. 1876. The Florida alligator; his customs, capture and care. C. C. Hubbard, Middletown, Connecticut, USA. 49pp.
219 Hubbard, H. G. 1893. The Florida land tortoise-gopher, Gopherus polyphemus. Science 22:57–58.
220 Hutt, A. 1964. The alligator. Florida Wildlife 18(3):12–17, 34.
221 Jacobsen, T. 1983. Crocodilians and islands: status of the American alligator and the American crocodile in the lower Florida Keys. Florida Field Naturalist 11:1–24.
222 Johnson, J. R. 1970. The southern swamps of America. David McKay Company, Inc., New York, New York, USA. 152pp.
223 Jones, J. P. 1927. An extension of the range of Sceloporus woodi Stejneger. Copeia 1927:181–182.
224 Kallakalla [pseudonym]. 1883. Camp life at Payne's Prairie. Forest and Stream 21(September 27):164–165.
225 Kay, R. 1971. Tamiami Trail blazers: a personal memoir. Florida Historical Quarterly 49:278–287.
226 Kellogg, R. 1929. The habits and economic importance of alligators. U.S. Department of Agriculture Technical Bulletin No. 147, Washington, D.C. 36pp.
227 Kenworthy, C. J. 1882. Florida alligators and crocodiles. Forest and Stream 19(August 10):25.
228 Kersey, H. A., Jr. 1973. Pelts, plumes, and hides: white traders among the Seminole Indians, 1890–1930. Florida Historical Quarterly 51:250–266.
229 Kersey, H. A., Jr. 1975. Pelts, plumes and hides: white traders among the Seminole Indians, 1870–1930. University Presses of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 158pp.
230 King, F. W., and T. Krakauer. 1966. The exotic herpetofauna of southeast Florida. Quarterly Journal of the Florida Academy of Sciences 29:144–154.
231 King, F. W. 1995. Historical review of the decline of the green turtle and the hawksbill. Pages 183–188 in K. A. Bjorndal, editor. Biology and conservation of sea turtles. Revised edition. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C.
232 Knight, C. F. 1871. Remarks on the Florida turtles. Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History 14:16–18.
233 Krakauer, T. 1968. The ecology of the neotropical toad, Bufo marinus, in south Florida. Herpetologica 24:214–221.
234 Kushlan, J. A., and F. J. Mazzotti. 1989. Historic and present distribution of the American crocodile in Florida. Journal of Herpetology 23:1–7.
235 Lane, P. S. 1986. "Florida is a blessed country": letters to Iowa from a Florida settler [J. A. Erickson]. Florida Historical Quarterly 64:432–445.
236 Lanier, S. 1973. Florida: its scenery, climate, and history. [A facsimile reproduction of the 1875 edition, with introduction and index by Jerrell H. Shofner.] University of Florida Press, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 266pp.
237 Latham, F. E. B. 1890. Nesting of the loggerhead turtle. Forest and Stream 33(January 9):496–497.
238 LeBaron, J. F. 1876. The naturalist and sportsman in Florida. Rod and Gun and American Sportsman 9(November 11):83–84.
239 LeConte, J. 1854. Notice of American animals, formerly known, but now forgotten or lost. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 7:8–14.
240 Libby, H. F. 1918. Turkey hunts. Pages 66–68 in E. H. D. Pearse. 1954. Florida's vanishing era: from the journals of a young girl and her father, 1887 to 1910. [No publisher given]
241 Little, J. P. 1870. Florida, how to go and where to stay. Lippincott's Magazine 6(December):605–612.
242 Lobdell, R. N. 1936. Field and laboratory studies upon insect pests of south Florida with particular reference to method of control. Annual Report of the Agricultural Experiment Station., University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA.
243 Lockwood, S. 1876. The Florida chameleon. American Naturalist 10:4–16.
244 Loennberg, E. 1894. Notes on reptiles and batrachians collected in Florida in 1892 and 1893. Proceedings of the U.S. National Museum 17:317–339.
245 Manning, P. 1997. Orange blossom trails: walks in the natural areas of Florida. John F. Blair, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA. 258pp.
246 Maude, A. 1900. Alligator hunting in Florida. World Wide Magazine 6:122.
247 Maynard, C. J. 1873. The naturalist in Florida. Forest and Stream 1(October 25):161–162.
248 Maynard, C. J. 1875. Occurrence of a Cuban crocodile in Florida. Annual Record of Science and Industry for 1874:308–309.
249 Maynard, C. J. 1884. The curled-tailed lizard. The Naturalist in Florida (September):1, St. Augustine, Florida, USA.
250 Maynard, C. J. 1929. Adventures of a naturalist in Florida – III. Florida Naturalist 2:61–69.
251 Maynard, C. J. 1929. Adventures of a naturalist in Florida – II. Florida Naturalist 2:33–39.
252 McCall, G. A. 1868. Letters from the frontiers. J. B. Lippincott and Company, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. 539pp.
253 McCarthy, K. M., compiler. 1998. Alligator tales. Pineapple Press, Sarasota, Florida, USA. 170pp.
254 McCully, D. 1999. The Everglades: and environmental history. University Press of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 215pp.
255 McKay, D. B., editor. 1959. Pioneer life. Volume I. Southern Publishing Company, Tampa, Florida, USA. 292pp.
256 McKinnon, J. L. 1911. History of Walton County. The Byrd Printing Company, Atlanta, Georgia, USA. 389pp.
257 Means, D. B. 1988. Management recommendations for the gopher tortoise in longleaf pine ecosystems. Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Gopher Tortoise Council 6:41–56.
258 Means, D. B. 1988. Keynote address: John Muir's walk through the Southeast: one hundred seventeen years later. Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Gopher Tortoise Council 5:1–3.
259 Means, D. B., T. E. Ostertag, and D. Printiss. 1994. Distribution, habitat ecology, and management of the striped newt, Notophthalmus perstriatus, in the Apalachicola National Forest, Florida. Report to the U.S. Forest Service, National Forests in Florida, Tallahassee, Florida, USA. 30pp.
260 Means, D. B. 1999. Venomous snakes of Florida. Florida Wildlife 53(5):13–20.
261 Mickler, L. E. 1986. Gopher stew. North Florida Living 6(1):68, 77.
262 Miller, J. J. 1998. An environmental history of northeast Florida. University Press of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 223pp.
263 Moller, F. C. 1987. Winter shooting in Florida (1889). Pages 115–118 in F. Oppel and T. Meisel, editors. Tales of Old Florida. Castle, Secaucus, New Jersey, USA.
264 Monk, J. F. 1991. Sea turtles and the Cedar Key turtle fishery; compiled for Cedar Key Historical Museum Research Library. J. F. Monk, Miami, Florida, USA. 210pp.
265 Munroe, K. 1882. American crocodiles. Scientific American 47(July 5):45.
266 Munroe, K. 1883. Adventures with alligators. Harper's Weekly 27(January 6):9–10.
267 Munroe, K. 1892. Alligator hunting with Seminoles. Cosmopolitan 13:576–581.
268 Munroe, K. 1893. Crocodiles and alligators. Youth's Companion 66(March 9):123–124.
269 Munroe, R. M. 1897. The green turtle, and the possibilities of its protection and consequent increase on the Florida coast. Bulletin of the U.S. Fish Commission 18:273–274.
270 Munroe, T. M., and V. Gilpin. 1930. The Commodore's story. I. Washburn, New York, USA. 384pp. [Reprinted in 1966 by the Historical Association of South Florida.]
271 Murphy, J. M. 1889. Alligator shooting in Florida. Outing 15:213, 299.
272 Murphy, J. M. 1890. Turtling in Florida. Outing 17(November):97–103.
273 Murphy, J. M. 1987. Turtling in Florida (1890). Pages 75–81 in F. Oppel and T. Meisel, editors. Tales of Old Florida. Castle, Secaucus, New Jersey, USA.
274 Murphy, J. M. 1987. Alligator shooting in Florida (1899). Pages 353–364 in F. Oppel and T. Meisel, editors. Tales of Old Florida. Castle, Secaucus, New Jersey, USA.
275 Murril[l], W. A. 1927. Hunting cottonmouth moccasins. Outdoor Life 60(6):84.
276 Neill, W. T., H. J. Gut, and P. Brodkorb. 1956. Animal remains from four preceramic sites in Florida. American Antiquity 21:383–395.
277 Neill, W. T. 1957. Historical biogeography of present-day Florida. Bulletin of the Florida State Museum, Biological Sciences 2:175–220.
278 Neill, W. T. 1961. Giant rattlesnakes—past and present. Florida Wildlife 15(1):10–13.
279 Neill, W. T. 1971. The last of the ruling reptiles: alligators, crocodiles, and their kin. Columbia University Press, New York, New York, USA. 486pp.
280 Ober, F. A. 1873. Wild life in Florida. Camping among the Seminoles. Shooting at Salt Lake. Number four. Forest and Stream 1(November 27):241–242.
281 Ober, F. A. 1887. The Knockabout Club in the Everglades: the adventures of the club in exploring Lake Okechobee [sic]. Estes and Lauriat, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. 213pp.
282 Ogden, J. C. 1971. Survival of the American crocodile in Florida. Animal Kingdom 74:7–11.
283 Ogden, J. C. 1978. Status and nesting biology of the American crocodile, Crocodylus acutus (Reptilia, Crocodilidae), in Florida. Journal of Herpetology 12:183–196.
284 O'Keefe, M. T. 1995. Sea turtles: the watcher's guide. Larsen's Outdoor, Lakeland, Florida, USA. 128pp.
285 Orson [pseudonym]. 1836. Familiar sketches of life in Florida. Knickerbocker [New-York Monthly Magazine] 8(September):276–288.
286 Orson [pseudonym]. 1836. East Florida—alligators—the Seminoles, etc. Knickerbocker [New-York Monthly Magazine] 8(August):150–155.
287 Packard, W. 1910. Florida trails as seen from Jacksonville to Key West and from November to April inclusive by Winthrop Packard ... illustrated from photographs by the author and others. Small, Maynard and Company, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. 300pp.
288 Palma Sola Land Company. 1884. Palma Sola. The youngest and largest town in Florida. Brown and Green, Stationers, New York, New York, USA. 108pp.
289 Parsons, J. J. 1962. The green turtle and man. University of Florida Press, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 126pp.
290 Partridge, S. W. 1936. Alligators in Florida. Outdoor Florida 1(5):3, 18.
291 Perry, W. L. 1859. Scenes in a surveyor's life; or a record of hardships and dangers encountered, and amusing scenes which occurred, in the operations of a party of surveyors in south Florida. C. Drew's Book and Job Printing Office, Jacksonville, Florida, USA. 176pp.
292 Phillips, C. 1939. The flat-tailed water snake. Proceedings of the Florida Academy of Sciences 4:210–211.
293 Pierce, J. 1825. Notices of the agriculture, scenery, geology, and animal, vegetable and mineral productions of the Floridas, and of the Indian tribes, made during a recent tour in these countries. American Journal of Science and Arts 9(June):119–136.
294 Pierce, C. W. 1970. Pioneer life in southeast Florida. University of Miami Press, Coral Gables, Florida, USA. 246pp.
295 Porter, C. M. 1983. Following Bartram's "track": Titian Ramsay Peale's Florida journey. Florida Historical Quarterly 61:431–444.
296 Portier, M. 1947. From Pensacola to St. Augustine in 1827. A journey of the Rt. Rev. Michael Portier [translated by J. E. Cahalan]. Florida Historical Quarterly 26:135–166. [reprinted from Historical Records and Studies of the United States Catholic Historical Society 2(2), August 1901]
297 Preble, G. H. 1883. A canoe expedition into the Everglades in 1842. United Services, Quarterly Review of Military and Naval Affairs 1883:358–376. Reprinted in Journal of the Historical Society of Southern Florida 1946(1):30–51.
298 Pritchard, P. C. H. 1982. The biology and status of the alligator snapping turtle (Macroclemys temmincki) with research and management recommendations. Report to World Wildlife Fund. 126pp.
299 Proby, K. H. 1974. Audubon in Florida. With selections from the writings of John James Audubon. University of Miami Press, Coral Gables, Florida, USA. 384pp.
300 Provancha, J. 1999. Sea turtles and habitats in transition. Florida Naturalist 72(1):24–25.
301 Quay, M. P. 1900. A northern girl's "huntin' of a 'gaitah." Outing Magazine 35:447–451.
302 Reese, A. M. 1907. The breeding habits of the Florida alligator. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections 48 (Part 4), No. 1696:381–387.
303 Reese, A. M. 1910. The home of the alligator. Popular Science Monthly 77:365–372.
304 Reese, A. M. 1915. The alligator and its allies. G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York, New York, USA. 358pp.
305 Reese, A. M. 1917. Reptiles as food. Science Monthly 5:545–550.
306 Reese, A. M. 1922. Unusual human foods. Science Monthly 14:475–481.
307 Reid, G. K. 1991. The gopher tortoise: landlord of the sandhills. Florida Naturalist 64(1):3–5.
308 Rice, A. F. 1915. Tarpon and amberjack in Florida. Field and Stream 20:794–800.
309 Riemer, W. J. 1958. Giant toads of Florida. Quarterly Journal of the Florida Academy of Sciences 21:207–211.
310 Roberts, W. 1976. An account of the first discovery, and natural history of Florida. [A facsimile reproduction of the 1763 edition with and introduction and index by R. L. Gold.] University Presses of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 102pp.
311 Robinson, R. G. 1896. Florida snakes. Lippincott's Monthly Magazine 58(November):710–713.
312 Rogers, B. F. 1955. Florida seen through the eyes of nineteenth century travellers. Florida Historical Quarterly 34:177–189.
313 Roosevelt, T. 1917. Notes on Florida turtles. American Museum Journal 17:288–291.
314 Ross, J. P. 1995. Historical decline of loggerhead, ridley, and leatherback sea turtles. Pages 189–195 in K. A. Bjorndal, editor. Biology and conservation of sea turtles. Revised edition. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C.
315 Rudloe, J. 1979. Time of the turtle. Penguin Books, New York, New York, USA. 273pp.
316 Sand, G. X. 1971. The Everglades today: endangered wilderness. Four Winds Press, New York, New York, USA. 191pp.
317 Say, T. 1818. Notes on herpetology. American Journal of Science and Arts 1(3):256–265.
318 Schmidt, K. P. 1922. The American alligator. Field Museum of Natural History Leaflet No. 3:25–38.
319 Schmidt, K. P. 1928. Notes on American coral snakes. Bulletin of the Antivenin Institute of America 2(3):63–64, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
320 Schroeder, W. C. 1924. Fisheries of Key West and the clam industry of southern Florida. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Fisheries Document No. 962. 74pp.
321 Schroeder, W. C. 1931. The turtle industry of Key West, Florida. Memoirs of the U.S. Bureau of Fisheries S-239:1–4.
322 Scudder, S. 1999. Alligator burial. Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter 18(3):15.
323 Shields, G. O. 1883. Rustlings in the Rockies: hunting and fishing by mountain and stream. Belford, Clarke, and Company, Chicago, Illinois. 306pp.
324 Simmons, W. H. 1882. Notices of East Florida, with an account of the Seminole nation of Indians. By a recent traveller in the province. A. E. Miller, Charleston, South Carolina, USA. 105pp.
325 Simmons, G., and L. Ogden. 1998. Gladesmen: gator hunters, moonshiners, and skiffers. University Press of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 197pp.
326 Simpson, C. T. 1924. Out of doors in Florida: the adventures of a naturalist, together with essays on the wild life and the geology of the state. E. B. Douglas Company, Miami, Florida, USA. 412pp.
327 Simpson, C. T. 1932. Florida wild life: observations on the flora and fauna of the state and the influence of climate and environment on their development. Macmillan Company, New York, New York, USA. 199pp.
328 Smith, H. M. 1893. Notes on the alligator industry. Bulletin of the U.S. Fish Commission 11:343–345.
329 Smith, H. M. 1896. Notes on Biscayne Bay, Florida, with reference to its adaptability as the site of a marine hatching and experiment station. Pages 169–191 in Report to the Commissioners of Fish and Fisheries for the year ending June 30, 1895, Washington, D.C., USA.
330 Smith, H. M., B. W. Evermann, J. N. Cobb, and W. C. Kendall. 1897. The fish and fisheries of the coastal waters of Florida. January 28, 1897. U.S. Congressional Documents of the 54th Congress, 2nd session.
331 Smith, H. D. 1937. A guide to the identification and study of the Florida snakes. M.A. Thesis, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 98pp.
332 Snyder, B. 1949. Diamondbacks and dollar bills. Florida Wildlife 3(4):3–5, 16, 19.
333 Speir, R. F. 1873. Going South for the winter. With hints to consumptives. Edward O. Jenkins, New York, New York, USA. 266pp.
334 Spencer, D. D. 2001. The Florida alligator: in old postcards. Camelot, Ormond Beach, Florida, USA. 96pp.
335 Staples, E. B. 1876. The west coast of Florida. Number 4. Forest and Stream 7(November 16):225–227.
336 Stearns, R. E. C. 1870. Rambles in Florida. American Naturalist 3:455–470.
337 Steel, R. 1989. Crocodiles. Christopher Helm, London, United Kingdom. 198pp.
338 Stejneger, L. 1922. Two geckos new to the fauna of the United States. Copeia 1922:56.
339 Stevenson, C. H. 1904. Utilization of the skins of aquatic animals. U.S. Commission of Fish and Fisheries Report 1902:281–352.
340 Stockbridge, F. P., and J. H. Perry. 1926. Florida in the making. The de Bower Publishing Company, New York, New York, USA. 351pp.
341 Stockbridge, F. P., and J. H. Perry. 1938. So this is Florida. Robert McBride & Company, New York, New York, USA. 300pp.
342 Storer, D. 1929. Automobiles and animal mortality. Science 69:670–671.
343 Storter, R. 2000. Crackers in the glade: life and times in the old Everglades. University of Georgia Press, Athens, Georgia, USA. 127pp.
344 Stowe, H. B. 1873. Palmetto-leaves. J. R. Osgood and Company, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. 321pp.
345 Sunquist, F., M. Sunquist, and L. Beletsky. 2002. Florida: the ecotravellers' wildlife guide. Academic Press, New York, New York, USA. 532pp.
346 Sutton, A., and M. Sutton. 1963. Exploring with the Bartrams. Rand McNally & Company, New York, New York, USA. 224pp.
347 Sweet, F. H. 1906. Outdoor Florida: the sportsman's and camper's paradise during the winter months. Field and Stream 11:637–674.
348 Taylor, G. C. 1862. Five weeks in the peninsula of Florida during the Spring of 1861, with notes on the birds observed there. (Part II). Ibis 4:197–207.
349 Taylor, G. C. 1862. Five weeks in the peninsula of Florida during the Spring of 1861, with notes on the birds observed there. Ibis 4:127–142.
350 Taylor, E. H. 1935. A taxonomic study of the cosmopolitan scincoid lizards of the genus Eumeces with an account of the distribution and relationships of its species. University of Kansas Scientific Bulletin 23:1–643.
351 Test, F. C. 1893. The "gopher frog." Science 22:75.
352 Torrey, B. 1894. On the upper St. John's River. The Atlantic Monthly 73:324–332.
353 Townshend, F. T. 1875. Wild life in Florida, with a visit to Cuba. Hurst and Blackett, London, United Kingdom. 319pp.
354 Trowbridge, C. C. 1952. (Letter). Florida Wildlife 5(9):4.
355 True, F. W. 1883. On the bite of the North American coral snakes (genus Elaps). American Naturalist 17:26–31.
356 True, F. W. 1884. The useful aquatic reptiles and batrachians. Section 1, Part 2. Pages 137–162 in The fisheries and fishery industries of the United States. U.S. Commission of Fish and Fisheries, Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C.
357 True, F. W. 1887. Fisheries and methods. Section 5, Volume 2, Part 19. In The fisheries and fishery industries of the United States. U.S. Commission of Fish and Fisheries, Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C.
358 Tucker, L. 1839. Florida. Genesee Farmer (Rochester, New York) 9(April 6):106–107.
359 Van Hyning, O. C. 1933. Batrachia and Reptilia of Alachua County, Florida. Copeia 1933:3–7.
360 Vignoles, C. 1823. Observations upon the Floridas. E. Bliss & E. White, New York, New York, USA. 197pp. [Vignoles, C. 1977. Observations upon the Floridas. A facsimile reproduction of the 1823 edition, with an introduction and index by J. H. Moore. University Presses of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 153pp.]
361 Vollbrecht, J. L. 1947. From swamp to swank. Nature Magazine 40:237–240. 276.
362 Wack, H. W. 1901. The sportsman's elysium of the South. Part II. Game animals of Florida. Field and Stream and American Angler 5:731-737.
363 Warren, F. B. 1905. The Florida alligator: information regarding an unappreciated saurian. Field and Stream 9:255–258.
364 West, G. A. 1900. The American crocodile. Bulletin of the Wisconsin Natural History Society 1:157–159.
365 White, F. F., Jr., editor. 1956. Macomb's mission to the Seminoles. John T. Sprague's journal—kept during April and May, 1839. Florida Historical Quarterly 35:130–193.
366 White, F. L., Jr., editor. 1959. The journals of Lieutenant John Pickell, 1836–1837. Florida Historical Quarterly 38:142–171.
367 Whitehead, C. E. 1991. The camp-fires of the Everglades or wild sports in the South. University of Florida Press, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 281pp. [First edition 1860]
368 Wik, R. M. 1960. Captain Nathaniel Wyche Hunter and the Florida Indian campaigns, 1837–1841. Florida Historical Quarterly 39:62–75.
369 Wilcox, W. A. 1896. Commercial fisheries of Indian River, Florida. Report of the U.S. Commission of Fish and Fisheries 22:249–262.
370 Will, L. E. 1964. Lawrence Will's cracker history of Okeechobee: "custard apple, moonvine, catfish and moonshine." Great Outdoors, St. Petersburg, Florida, USA. 308pp.
371 Williams, I. B. 1892. Water rattlesnake in captivity. Science 20:345.
372 Williams, J. L. 1962. The Territory of Florida or sketches of the topography, civil and natural history, of the country, the climate, and the Indian tribes, from the first discovery to the present time. [A facsimile reproduction of the 1837 edition, with an introduction by Herbert J. Doherty, Jr.] University of Florida Press, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 304pp.
373 Williams, J. L. 1976. A view of West Florida. [A facsimile reproduction of the 1827 edition with an introduction and index by Herbert J. Doherty, Jr.] University Presses of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA. 178pp.
374 Willoughby, H. L. 1898. Across the Everglades: a canoe journey of exploration, by Hugh L. Willoughby. J. B. Lippincott Company, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. 192pp.
375 Wilson, M. A. 1914. The hermit of Long Key. Outdoor Life 34(3):232–233.
376 Winter, N. O. 1918. Florida: the land of enchantment; including an account of its romantic history from the days of Ponce de Leon and the other early explorers and settlers, and the story of its native Indians; a survey of its climate, lakes and rivers and a description of its scenic wonders and abundant animal and bird life; and a comprehensive review of the Florida of to-day, as a state important for its industries, agriculture and educational advantages as well as the unsurpassed and justly celebrated winter resort of America, with unparalleled attractions for health and pleasure seekers, nature lovers, motorists and sportsmen. The Page Company, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. 380pp.
377 Wright, A. H., and S. C. Bishop. 1915. A biological reconnaissance of the Okefinokee Swamp of Georgia. II. Snakes. Proceedings of the Natural Academy of Sciences of Philadelphia 67:139–192.
378 Wright, A. H. 1926. The vertebrate life of the Okefinokee Swamp in relation to the Atlantic Coastal Plain. Ecology 7:77–95.
379 Wright, A. H. 1932. Life-histories of the frogs of Okefinokee Swamp, Georgia. Macmillan, New York, New York, USA. 497pp.
380 Wright, A. H. 1935. Some rare amphibians and reptiles of the United States. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 21:340–345.
381 Wyman, J. 1869. Note on the Florida crocodile. Page 78 in Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History.
382 Wyman, J. 1870. Note on the Florida crocodile. American Journal of Science and Arts 49:105.
383 Yarrow, H. C. 1882. The Florida "thunder worm." Forest and Stream 19(August 17):45.
384 Zieman, J. C., and R. T. Zieman. 1989. The ecology of the seagrass meadows of the West coast of Florida: a community profile. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Biological Report 85(7.25). 155pp.
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