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CTAP Documents | Illinois
Flora | INHS Staff Bibliography
INHS Technical Reports
| Taxonomic Web Sites
The resources listed above have been created
and maintained by INHS Library Staff, and are all openly available
for anyone to use. Click names above for descriptions. They
may be searched together or individually; the default is an
all-database search.
With the exception of Taxonomic Websites, the
databases do not contain or link to full text of the items
cited. The INHS Technical Reports database contains links to UIUC Catalog records for those reports that have been cataloged; full text of the Technical Reports is not available at this time. Use UIUC Library's Online
Research Resources and the UIUC
Online Catalog to find cited items in the UIUC Libraries.
Please
contact us if you would
like help using these resources or locating cited items, or
if you note errors in database records.
CTAP Documents in the UI Library
Database of documents from the Illinois Critical Trends Assessment Program which are held in the UIUC Library, most are available in the INHS Library. Coming soon, UI call numbers, links to catalog records, and county level search access for CTAP reports.
Search CTAP database
Illinois
Flora
The database holds the 1,275 citations from
Bibliography of Illinois Vegetation by Paul Risser
(1984), published as INHS Biological Note no. 121.
Covers the literature describing the plant communities throughout
Illinois from the ~100 years prior to publication. Not updated.
To search Illinois Flora, click
and select Illinois Flora.pdt.
See below for search tips and instructions
on exporting records from the database.
INHS
Staff Bibliography, 1870 - Present
A near comprehensive bibliography of publications (articles,
books, book chapters, and conference proceedings) by INHS
researchers from 1870 to the present. Also includes some items about early INHS staff. The INHS Library maintains copies of article reprints through the 1980s, which are available
for in-house use. Most items are included in UIUC Library
collections. Discover buttons which appear with search results lead to full text or print copies in the UIUC Library when these are available. Contains more than 7,500
citations as of August 2007; updated regularly. (Formerly the INHS Reprints database.)
Search INHS Staff Bibliography in RefWorks.
Also see,
Stephen Alfred Forbes Bibliography
Theodore Henry Frison Bibliography
INHS
Technical Reports
INHS Technical Reports are authored by INHS
scientists for the purpose of documenting the status, stewardship,
conservation, and restoration of Illinois’ biotic resources.
The reports are used by INHS, the Department of Natural Resources,
and various granting agencies to assess needs and formulate
policy. Reports may originate from any of the INHS centers
and field stations. The collection comprises more than 1250
reports as of April 2007, and most are owned only by the INHS
Library. Copies are kept at the INHS Library and are available
for in-house use, with a few exceptions. More than 300 reports have been cataloged and are available
for request/check out via the UI
Library catalog or via I-Share. Records for cataloged items include call numbers and links to catalog records. Some reports, notably the INHS Human Dimensions Program reports are available online, and database records provide links to online reports when available. Digitization of reports from 1962-2006 is currently underway. Our new RefWorks interface features an author and county index. Updated regularly.
Search INHS Technical Reports in RefWorks.
Taxonomic
Web Sites
This database contains more than 200 web sites
(as of May 2006).
Records include the name of the database (title), the URL or link to the database, a brief abstract describing the database, and keywords. The keywords used are: annelids, arachnids, botany,
classification systems, conferences, crustaceans, entomology,
herpetology, ichthyology, information sharing, Internet resources,
invertebrates, mammalogy, mollusks, museums, mycology, organizations,
ornithology, publications, special status species resources,
species information resources, species Internet resources,
and species lists.
Searching "all indexed fields" will find information in the title or keywords fields. Searching "all non-indexed
fields" will find info in the URL or abstract.
To search Taxonomic Websites, click
and select taxonomy web sites.pdt
See below for additional search tips and instructions on exporting records from the database.
Reference
WebPoster Help
Search Tips
The default is an all-database search in "advanced search" mode. To search
only one database, choose it from the drop-down
menu near the top of the search window.
In advanced search, fields available for searching are:
- author
- title
- periodical (source publication name, e.g., Journal of Parasitology),
- year (of publication)
- keywords
- all indexed fields, which finds terms in any indexed database field (i.e., author, title, periodical, year, keywords).
- all nonindexed fields, which finds terms in any nonindexed database field (including abstract, notes, volume, issue, and page numbers).
Select the desired fields using the "field to search" pull down menu. It is possible to combine multiple search criteria with Boolean operators (and, or, not).
In results lists, click on the page icon next to the citation to see the complete record in the database.
Exporting
Records
To export records, records must be marked. Select desired records by clicking the checkboxes associated with them.
Marked records are not saved from search to search. Export all desired records from one search before conducting another search.
Marked references may be exported to a Reference Manager,
a ProCite database, EndNote. They may also be exported as tagged text files which can be imported into Refworks or other citation management utilities. *A maximum of 350 references
can be exported at one time.
1. Export marked references directly to Reference
Manager 7/8/9 or ProCite 3/4/5. In order to complete this
direct export, you must install a free export plug-in for
Windows. For Reference Manager, go to http://www.refman.com/support/rmisihelper.asp.
For ProCite, go to http://www.procite.com/support/pcisihelper.asp.
2. You have the option to save marked references
to a tagged text file formatted in the National Library of
Medicine MEDLARS format. This format primarily supports journal
reference types.
3. You can also save marked references to a
tagged text file formatted in an RIS format. This format maintains
all character formatting (such as bold, italics, etc.) included
in the original reference and supports 35 reference types.
Then use Reference Manager, ProCite, EndNote, or any other
bibliographic management program to import this text file
into a database.
Created:
02/26/04 af
Last Updated: 06/21/06 smb
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