Herbage production by weeping, Boer, and Lehmann lovegrasses was essentially unaffected by winter burning on a converted chaparral watershed in central Arizona. Burning opened up the stand and resulted in increased forb production, total herbage production, and frequency of some species.This material was digitized as part of a cooperative project between the Society for Range Management and the University of Arizona Libraries.The Journal of Range Management archives are made available by the Society for Range Management and the University of Arizona Libraries. Contact lbry-journals@email.arizona.edu for further information.Migrated from OJS platform August 202
This material was digitized as part of a cooperative project between the Society for Range Managemen...
This material was digitized as part of a cooperative project between the Society for Range Managemen...
Yield and nutrient content of herbage on burned plots differed little from that on plots that were c...
Herbage production the first season after burning was 2,110 lbs. per acre, as compared to 772 lbs. o...
Protecting two sites on pine-wiregrass range from fire caused a rapid reduction in herbage yields. R...
In a south-central Washington sagebrush-bluebunch wheatgrass community, bluebunch wheatgrass respond...
Burning increases the availability and usefulness of the early growing wiregrasses during the winter...
Ungrazed tallgrass prairie plots in the Kansas Flint Hills have been burned annually at 4 different ...
Over the past century, fire has been widely suppressed in the western Great Plains, in part because ...
Plots with no pretreatment and pretreated by shredding, chopping, scalping, root plowing, and root p...
Neither a single burn during late winter nor a second burn 2 years later reduced the density of mixe...
The long-term effect of fire was studied on the major grass species of west Texas when the winter-sp...
A severe May wildfire decimated an unthinned ponderosa pine stand in northern Arizona, while an adja...
Fall, spring, and summer burning significantly reduced total forage production on a Texas High Plain...
Immediate effects of fire on perennial grasses lasted only 1 or 2 years. Burroweed was easily killed...
This material was digitized as part of a cooperative project between the Society for Range Managemen...
This material was digitized as part of a cooperative project between the Society for Range Managemen...
Yield and nutrient content of herbage on burned plots differed little from that on plots that were c...
Herbage production the first season after burning was 2,110 lbs. per acre, as compared to 772 lbs. o...
Protecting two sites on pine-wiregrass range from fire caused a rapid reduction in herbage yields. R...
In a south-central Washington sagebrush-bluebunch wheatgrass community, bluebunch wheatgrass respond...
Burning increases the availability and usefulness of the early growing wiregrasses during the winter...
Ungrazed tallgrass prairie plots in the Kansas Flint Hills have been burned annually at 4 different ...
Over the past century, fire has been widely suppressed in the western Great Plains, in part because ...
Plots with no pretreatment and pretreated by shredding, chopping, scalping, root plowing, and root p...
Neither a single burn during late winter nor a second burn 2 years later reduced the density of mixe...
The long-term effect of fire was studied on the major grass species of west Texas when the winter-sp...
A severe May wildfire decimated an unthinned ponderosa pine stand in northern Arizona, while an adja...
Fall, spring, and summer burning significantly reduced total forage production on a Texas High Plain...
Immediate effects of fire on perennial grasses lasted only 1 or 2 years. Burroweed was easily killed...
This material was digitized as part of a cooperative project between the Society for Range Managemen...
This material was digitized as part of a cooperative project between the Society for Range Managemen...
Yield and nutrient content of herbage on burned plots differed little from that on plots that were c...