<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Wildfires / Artemisia tridentata / Ecological succession / Sage Thrasher / Sagebrush steppe / Sage Grouse / Sagebrush / Sage Sparrow / Sagebrush Cooperative / Flora of the United States / Occupational safety and health / Basin and Range Province
Date: 2013-09-09 19:09:20
Wildfires
Artemisia tridentata
Ecological succession
Sage Thrasher
Sagebrush steppe
Sage Grouse
Sagebrush
Sage Sparrow
Sagebrush Cooperative
Flora of the United States
Occupational safety and health
Basin and Range Province

SageSTEP_Newsletter_Issue_12.indd

Add to Reading List

Source URL: www.sagestep.org

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 680,34 KB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

THE STORY OF KLEPPE V. NEW MEXICO: THE SAGEBRUSH REBELLION AS UN-COOPERATIVE FEDERALISM ROBERT L. FISCHMAN * AND JEREMIAH I. WILLIAMSON ** The story of Kleppe v. New Mexico dramatizes how assertion of federal power advan

DocID: 1v9DV - View Document

Pocket Guide to Sagebrush PRBO Conservation Science Generalized map of the primary distribution of sagebrush in the American

DocID: 1uun6 - View Document

Ecosystem resilience is evident 17 years after fire in Wyoming big sagebrush ecosystems L. M. ELLSWORTH,1,  D. W. WROBLESKI,2 J. B. KAUFFMAN,1 AND S. A. REIS1 1 Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Oregon State Unive

DocID: 1tJ0C - View Document

Hydrologic Vulnerability of Great Basin Sagebrush Steppe Following Pinyon and Juniper Encroachment C. Jason Williams1,2, Frederick B. Pierson1, Patrick R. Kormos3, Stuart P. Hardegree1, Patrick E. Clark1, and Osama Z. Al

DocID: 1sJCz - View Document

Sage-Grouse Require SAGEBRUSH STEPPE Sage-grouse need open sagebrush steppe to thrive, but pinyon and juniper trees have encroached on Great Basin lands. Trees crowd out sagebrush, native grasses, and flowering

DocID: 1sISS - View Document