Resource managers need a means of identifying practical management units when working with large landscapes; a method that identifies vegetation-environment relationships based on soils, topography, productivity, and microclimate. This perspective is useful because topography, soils, and microclimate vary across landscapes, with vegetation and productivity responding to this spatial variability. With a map that subdivides large landscapes into units that have similar management needs and will likely respond similarly to treatment, managers can tailor specific treatments to specific parts of the landscape
Reference conditions describe attributes of ecosystem structure, composition, and function and are u...
Northern Arizona is home to the largest contiguous ponderosa pine forest in North America spanning t...
Forest death from extreme drought and wildfires are reducing regional carbon reservoirs and overall ...
National forest planners now endorse the ecological restoration of forests adapted to frequent surfa...
The Terrestrial Ecosystem Survey (TES) delineates ecosystems according to their climate, geology, so...
High-elevation streamside or spring-fed wet meadows (i.e., montane meadows, riparian meadows, sedge ...
The U.S. Forest Service estimates that 132 million acres of forested public and private land are at ...
A recent article in Restoration Ecology by three Northern Arizona University scholars - Tong Wu, Yeo...
Altered forest structure and functional processes have led to many critical conservation problems in...
The 500,000-acre Applegate Watershed is embedded in the Klamath Mountains Geological Province of sou...
Efforts to restore degraded forest ecosystems often involve thinning small-diameter trees and reintr...
Hazardous fuels reduction projects with the primary goal of reducing potential for uncontrollable wi...
Previous watershed experiments in ponderosa pine forests of the Southwest have investigated how chan...
Unnatural wildfires and unprecedented insect and disease outbreaks threaten the ecological and socia...
Pinyon-juniper ecosystems presently occur on approximately 50 million acres across the semi-arid lan...
Reference conditions describe attributes of ecosystem structure, composition, and function and are u...
Northern Arizona is home to the largest contiguous ponderosa pine forest in North America spanning t...
Forest death from extreme drought and wildfires are reducing regional carbon reservoirs and overall ...
National forest planners now endorse the ecological restoration of forests adapted to frequent surfa...
The Terrestrial Ecosystem Survey (TES) delineates ecosystems according to their climate, geology, so...
High-elevation streamside or spring-fed wet meadows (i.e., montane meadows, riparian meadows, sedge ...
The U.S. Forest Service estimates that 132 million acres of forested public and private land are at ...
A recent article in Restoration Ecology by three Northern Arizona University scholars - Tong Wu, Yeo...
Altered forest structure and functional processes have led to many critical conservation problems in...
The 500,000-acre Applegate Watershed is embedded in the Klamath Mountains Geological Province of sou...
Efforts to restore degraded forest ecosystems often involve thinning small-diameter trees and reintr...
Hazardous fuels reduction projects with the primary goal of reducing potential for uncontrollable wi...
Previous watershed experiments in ponderosa pine forests of the Southwest have investigated how chan...
Unnatural wildfires and unprecedented insect and disease outbreaks threaten the ecological and socia...
Pinyon-juniper ecosystems presently occur on approximately 50 million acres across the semi-arid lan...
Reference conditions describe attributes of ecosystem structure, composition, and function and are u...
Northern Arizona is home to the largest contiguous ponderosa pine forest in North America spanning t...
Forest death from extreme drought and wildfires are reducing regional carbon reservoirs and overall ...