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Research Project: INTEGRATED INVASIVE SPECIES CONTROL, REVEGETATION, AND ASSESSMENT OF GREAT BASIN RANGELANDS

Location: Great Basin Rangelands Research

Title: Status Report on the "Wildfires and Invasive Plants in American Deserts" Symposium and Workshop

Authors
item Pellent, Mike -
item Coastes-Markle, Linda -
item Cribley, Bud -
item Devoe, Nora -
item Pregitzer, Kurt -
item Swanson, Sherman -
item Weltz, Mark

Submitted to: Society for Range Management Meeting Abstracts
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: November 5, 2008
Publication Date: February 8, 2009
Citation: Pellent, M., Coastes-Markle, L., Cribley, B., Devoe, N., Pregitzer, K., Swanson, S., Weltz, M.A. 2009. Status Report on the "Wildfires and Invasive Plants in American Deserts" Symposium and Workshop [abstract]. Society of Range Management Annual Conference.

Technical Abstract: The “Wildfires and Invasive Plants in American Deserts” symposium and workshop, was held in Reno, Nevada on December 9-11, 2008. The purpose of this symposium was to synthesize the current understanding of the interactions of wildfire and invasive plants in the four U.S. deserts and the Colorado Plateau and develop strategies to better address this issue. Key recommendations from conference are: I. Hot Desert Fire and Invasive Species Management Workshop 1)Improve coordination and prioritization strategies to address invasive plants and fires. 2)Consistent long-term funding is needed to treat, monitor, and conduct needed research. II. Cold Desert Fire and Invasive Species Management Workshop 1) Improve science, public education, and coordination to reduce wildfire-invasive impacts. 2) Establish priority areas for fuels, restoration, and fire rehabilitation treatments. III. Effective Invasive Plants Management Workshop 1) People will have to be persistent in applying treatments to keep pace with invasives. 2) Bureaucratic impediments and biases must be removed and science applied for success. IV. Fuels Management at the Landscape Scale Workshop 1) Plan, implement, and collaborate with all stakeholders to implement fuels treatments 2) Fuels management planning must be at the landscape level to address large fires. V. Wildfire Rehabilitation and Restoration Workshop 1) Amend guidance to improve the linkage between policy and implementation of treatments. Detailed recommendations and next steps will be consolidated and published in a special issue of Rangelands, 31: 2-35 that will be published in June 2009.

   

 
Project Team
Blank, Robert - Bob
Longland, William - Bill
Weltz, Mark
Swope, Sarah
 
Publications
   Publications
 
Related National Programs
  Pasture, Forage and Rangeland Systems (215)
  Crop Protection & Quarantine (304)
 
Related Projects
   ASSESSING HYDROLOGIC RESPONSE OF PLANT COMMUNITIES IN THE GREAT BASIN
   REDUCING THE IMPACT OF WILDFIRES IN NORTH AMERICAN DESERTS
   QUANTIFYING ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS DERIVED FROM IMPLEMENTING RANGELAND CONSERVATION PRACTICES WITHIN THE GREAT BASIN
   INTEGRATED INVASIVE SPECIES CONTROL, REVEGETATION, AND ASSESSMENT OF GREAT BASIN RANGELANDS
   QUANTIFYING PLANT GROWTH RESPONSE AND ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS DERIVED FROM IMPLEMENTING GRAZING LAND CONSERVATION PRACTICES.
   GREAT BASIN COOPERATIVE ECOSYSTEM STUDIES UNIT NFCA
   DEVELOPING ECOLOGICAL SITE DESCRIPTION STATE AND TRANSITIONS MODELS FOR GREAT BASIN RANGELAND PLANT COMMUNITIES
   GREAT BASIN ECOLOGICAL SITE DEVELOPMENT
   QUANTIFYING AND PREDICTING IMPACTS AND BENEFITS OF CONSERVATION ON GRAZING LANDS
   EVALUATION OF THE EFFECTS OF RANGELAND CONDITIONS ON THE SOURCES AND TRANSPORT OF DISSOLVED SOLIDS WITHIN THE UPPER COLORADO RIVER BASIN
   QUANTIFYING ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS DERIVED FROM IMPLEMENTING RANGELAND CONSERVATION PRACTICES TO IMPROVE WATER QUALITY
   Quantifying Soil Erosion and Runoff from Western Rangelands
 
 
Last Modified: 06/19/2013
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