<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Conservation in the United States / Ecological succession / Wildfires / Invasive species / Artemisia tridentata / Rocky Mountain Research Station / Bromus tectorum / Mountain pine beetle / Fire ecology / Biology / Flora of the United States / Terminology
Date: 2014-03-12 10:57:14
Conservation in the United States
Ecological succession
Wildfires
Invasive species
Artemisia tridentata
Rocky Mountain Research Station
Bromus tectorum
Mountain pine beetle
Fire ecology
Biology
Flora of the United States
Terminology

February[removed]USDA Forest Service GSDUpdate

Add to Reading List

Source URL: www.fs.fed.us

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 3,23 MB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

ECOHYDROLOGY EcohydrolPublished online in Wiley Online Library (wileyonlinelibrary.com) DOI: ecoEcohydrology of an outbreak: mountain pine beetle impacts

DocID: 1syRc - View Document

Program Definitions and Terms of Reimbursement for Mountain Pine Beetle Control Treatments Cut/Chunk - Cutting the trunk (up to 50 feet from base of tree at the ground or to a 5 inch diameter top) into pieces 2

DocID: 1s2Jy - View Document

South Dakota Mountain Pine Beetle Suppression Program Plan FY2016 The South Dakota Department of Agriculture, Resource Conservation & Forestry (RC&F) plan for mountain pine beetle (MPB) suppression during the MPB treatme

DocID: 1rNRi - View Document

Scolytinae / Hexapoda / Woodboring beetles / Ecological succession / Climate change in Canada / Mountain pine beetle / Wildfire / Dendroctonus

Microsoft Word - insect-firepressrelease5docx

DocID: 1rsbp - View Document

Forestry / Natural environment / Climate change in Canada / Climatology / United States Forest Service / Mountain pine beetle / American Forests / Canadian Forest Service / Wildfire / Forest

CANADA/U.S. FOREST HEALTH SUMMIT One Continent; One Forest; One Threat: Report and Recommendations

DocID: 1rbcT - View Document