Skip to main content

Mapping "old" vs. "young" piñon-juniper stands with a predictive topo-climatic model

Citation

William H Romme, Brian F Jacobs, and Craig D Allen, Mapping "old" vs. "young" piñon-juniper stands with a predictive topo-climatic model: .

Summary

Piñon pine and juniper woodlands in the southwestern United States are often represented as an expanding and even invasive vegetation type, a legacy of historic grazing, and culpable in the degradation of western rangelands. A long-standing emphasis on forage production, in combination with recent hazard fuel concerns, has prompted a new era of woodland management with stated restoration objectives. Yet the extent and dynamics of piñon-juniper communities that predate intensive Euro-American settlement activities are poorly known or understood, while the intrinsic ecological, aesthetic, and economic values of old-growth woodlands are often overlooked. Historical changes in piñon-juniper stands include two related, but poorly differentiated [...]

Contacts

Attached Files

Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.

metadata.xml 3.62 KB text/plain

Communities

  • Upper Colorado River Basin

Tags

Provenance

From Source - Mendeley RIS export <br> On - Tue May 10 10:04:11 CDT 2011

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
Title Citation Mapping "old" vs. "young" piñon-juniper stands with a predictive topo-climatic model

Citation Extension

citationTypeMendeley
noteNotes
tableOfContentsTable of Contents

Item Actions

View Item as ...

Save Item as ...

View Item...