Every $10 invested by the federal government can make a $13 difference to rural northern Arizona economies while creating healthy forests and reducing the risk of catastrophic wildfire. That, according to an Ecological Restoration Institute at Northern Arizona University study released this week
After more than two centuries of resource management and use, forests in the Inland Northwest region...
§ This study compares the cost of restoring forests to no taking action in ponderosa pine and dry mi...
Flagstaff, Ariz. – After working together for a year, community leaders, governmental organizations,...
The Nature Conservancy in Arizona is working to transform the way national forests are managed by fo...
A recent article in Restoration Ecology by three Northern Arizona University scholars - Tong Wu, Yeo...
Northern Arizona is home to the largest contiguous ponderosa pine forest in North America spanning t...
Utilizing woody biomass - small-diameter material and low-valued trees removed from forest restorati...
2 p.How can hazardous fuels reduction on national forests best contribute to local job creation? Man...
The U.S. Forest Service estimates that 132 million acres of forested public and private land are at ...
The purpose of the study was to estimate the willingness to pay (WTP) of Flagstaff residents for for...
This progress report presents preliminary results of an economic analysis comparing restoration-base...
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB), Government Accountability Office (GAO) and the United Sta...
There is general and widespread agreement that human actions are causing changes in global climate t...
In the late 1990s proposals to mechanically thin and restore public land forests generated intense c...
Arizona is home to 21 federally recognized tribes and more than 250,000 Native Americans. Reservatio...
After more than two centuries of resource management and use, forests in the Inland Northwest region...
§ This study compares the cost of restoring forests to no taking action in ponderosa pine and dry mi...
Flagstaff, Ariz. – After working together for a year, community leaders, governmental organizations,...
The Nature Conservancy in Arizona is working to transform the way national forests are managed by fo...
A recent article in Restoration Ecology by three Northern Arizona University scholars - Tong Wu, Yeo...
Northern Arizona is home to the largest contiguous ponderosa pine forest in North America spanning t...
Utilizing woody biomass - small-diameter material and low-valued trees removed from forest restorati...
2 p.How can hazardous fuels reduction on national forests best contribute to local job creation? Man...
The U.S. Forest Service estimates that 132 million acres of forested public and private land are at ...
The purpose of the study was to estimate the willingness to pay (WTP) of Flagstaff residents for for...
This progress report presents preliminary results of an economic analysis comparing restoration-base...
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB), Government Accountability Office (GAO) and the United Sta...
There is general and widespread agreement that human actions are causing changes in global climate t...
In the late 1990s proposals to mechanically thin and restore public land forests generated intense c...
Arizona is home to 21 federally recognized tribes and more than 250,000 Native Americans. Reservatio...
After more than two centuries of resource management and use, forests in the Inland Northwest region...
§ This study compares the cost of restoring forests to no taking action in ponderosa pine and dry mi...
Flagstaff, Ariz. – After working together for a year, community leaders, governmental organizations,...