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24 TECHNICAL PROGRAM Sunday Afternoon Symposium Advances and Challenges of Integrating Adaptive Management in Range Practices Moderator: Steve Light Room: Ruidoso 1:00 Welcome and Introductions Steve Light; BLM 1:15 Adaptive Management Opportunities and Challenges including Climate Change, ESA and Agency Legacy Issues Steve Light 1:30 The Sage Steppe Restoration Plan and Progress Tim Burke; BLM 2:00 Northwest Colorado Case and Progress in Changes Incorporated into the Snake River RMP Rich Whitley; BLM 2:30 Questions and Answers 2:45 Break 3:00 Discussion and Small Group Work Sunday Afternoon Workshop Rangeland Technology and Equipment Council Workshop: GIS and GPS Technology to Improve Rangeland Improvement Success Moderator: Mike Pellant Room: Nambe SUNDAY
Transcript

24

TECHNICAL PROGRAM

Sunday Afternoon Symposium

Advances and Challenges of Integrating AdaptiveManagement in Range Practices

Moderator: Steve LightRoom: Ruidoso

1:00 Welcome and Introductions Steve Light; BLM

1:15 Adaptive Management Opportunities andChallenges including Climate Change, ESA andAgency Legacy Issues Steve Light

1:30 The Sage Steppe Restoration Plan and ProgressTim Burke; BLM

2:00 Northwest Colorado Case and Progress inChanges Incorporated into the Snake River RMPRich Whitley; BLM

2:30 Questions and Answers

2:45 Break

3:00 Discussion and Small Group Work

Sunday Afternoon Workshop

Rangeland Technology and Equipment CouncilWorkshop: GIS and GPS Technology to ImproveRangeland Improvement Success

Moderator: Mike PellantRoom: Nambe

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Monday Morning Breakfast

7:00-8:45 SRM Memorial Breakfast

Room: Ballroom C & D

Monday Morning Plenary Session

Plenary Session

Room: Kiva

9:00 Opening Remarks

9:10 Presentation of the FlagIntroductions/Master of SessionDr. Allen Rasmussen, SRM President

Cultural Perspectives-

9:20 Our HeritageDr. Eric Blinman, Director, New Mexico Office ofArchaeological Studies

9:45 Rural CommunitiesDr. Larry Torres, Professor, University of NewMexico - Taos

Scientific Perspectives-

10:05 Our Scientific HistoryDr. Kelly Allred, Dept. Animal and Range Sciences,New Mexico State University

10:30 Applications of ScienceDr. William deBuys, Professor of DocumentaryStudies, College of Sante Fe

Innovations-

10:55 A Future of PossibilitiesDr. Lowell Catlett, Dean, College of Agriculture andHome Economics, New Mexico State University

Closing-

11:25 Albuquerque Sights and SoundsSteve Stucker, Co-anchor, Eyewitness News

11:45 Concluding RemarksDr. Allen Rasmussen, SRM President

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Monday Afternoon Technical Session

Fire Ecology

Chair: Carlton BrittonRoom: Laguna

1:00 Treated vs. Untreated Understory Forest ResponseFollowing Wildland Fire in the Southwest:Implications for Range Managers Douglas S.Cram1, Terrell T. Baker1 and Carl Edminster2; (1)New Mexico State University, (2) Rocky MountainResearch Station

1:20 Fuels in the Sagebrush Steppe and JuniperWoodlands of the Great Basin: A New Tool toBetter Predict Fuel Loading Andi A. Stebleton andStephen Bunting; University of Idaho

1:40 Blue Grama (Bouteloua gracilis) Response toSeason of Burn and Simulated Fire Temperaturesin the Chihuahuan Desert Miguel Luna-Luna1,Carlton M. Britton2, Carlos Villalobos2, David B.Wester2, Sandra Rideout-Hanzak2 and FranciscoVillanueva3; (1) INIFAP - Vaquerias, Jalisco, MX, (2)Texas Tech University, (3) Santiago Ixcuintla Nayarit,MX

2:00 Innovative Use of Seed Coating Technologies forthe Restoration of Soil Wettability and PerennialGrasses on Burned Arid and Semi-AridRangelands Matthew D. Madsen1, Steven L.Petersen1, Bruce A. Roundy1, Bryan G. Hopkins1,Alan G. Taylor2 and Stu Barclay3; (1) Brigham YoungUniversity, (2) Cornell University, (3) Summit SeedCoatings

2:20 Effects of the East Amarillo Complex Wildfires inthe Texas Panhandle Grant Sorensen1, SandraRideout-Hanzak1, David B. Wester1, Carlton M.Britton1 and Heather Whitlaw2; (1) Texas TechUniversity, (2) Texas Parks and Wildlife Dept.

2:40 Multiple Regression Models to Predict Biomass ofPurple Threeawn and Blue Grama: A Non-Destructive Method to Measure Plant Response toFire Grant E. Sorensen, Sandra Rideout-Hanzak andDavid B. Wester; Texas Tech University

3:00 Break

3:20 Response of Six Tropical Grasses to PrescribedBurning in the West Coast of Mexico JoseFrancisco Villanueva1, Luis F. Negrete2, CarlosVillalobos3 and Carlton M. Britton3; (1) INIFAP -Santiago Ixcuintla, Nayarit, MX, (2) Union GanaderaRegional de Jalisco, Tlaquepaque, Jalisco, MX, (3)Texas Tech University

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3:40 Aboriginal Use of Fire and Implications for ActiveManagement of Sagebrush - Grass Communities J.Kent McAdoo, Brad W. Schultz and Sherman R.Swanson; University of Nevada

4:00 Evaluation of Patch-Burn Grazing Production andImpact to Vegetative Height-Density andComposition Malissa L. Underwood and BrentJamison; Missouri Department of Conservation

Monday Afternoon Technical Session

Water and Riparian Systems

Chair: Greg FenchelRoom: Santa Domingo

1:40 Hydrologic Functions of a Valley-Scale RangelandRiparian Area Carlos G. Ochoa1, AlexanderFernald1, Steven Guldan1, Vincent Tidwell2, PhillipKing1, Yeliz Cevik1 and Ciara Cusack1; (1) NewMexico State University, (2) Sandia NationalLaboratories

2:00 Improving Water Quality Using RangeManagement in the Belle Fourche RiverWatershed Matthew B. Stoltenberg; RESPECConsulting

2:20 Adobe Meadows NRCS Wetland Reserve Project:Phase II, Implementation Robert A. Pearce andJessica Groves; NRCS

3:00 Break

3:20 Three Tiered Wetland Condition AssessmentUsing a Probabilistic Design Christina L.M.Hargiss, Edward S. DeKeyser, Don R. Kirby andMichael J. Ell; North Dakota State University

3:40 Indicator Bacteria: Sentinels of Safe Water, OrMaybe Not?? Holly George, K.W. Tate, D.F. Lile,B.R. Hoar, E.R. Atwill and C.D. Childers; Universityof California-Davis

4:00 Longstem Transplants for Riparian Plantings inthe Southwest Gregory A. Fenchel and David R.

Dreesen; USDA NRCS

Monday Afternoon Technical Session

Ecology I

Chair: Kirk DaviesRoom: Santa Ana

1:00 The Importance of a Historical Perspective forWestern Rangeland Restoration and ManagementLesley R. Morris and Tom Monaco; USDA ARS

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1:20 Are Historic Disturbance Regimes Appropriate inSagebrush Plant Communities Under ModernConditions? Kirk W. Davies, Tony J. Svejcar and JonD. Bates; USDA-ARS

1:40 Identifying Relationships Between LivestockGrazing, Plant Community Characteristics andSoil Attributes in Central Sierra Nevada MeadowsLeslie M. Roche, K.W. Tate, A.T. O’Geen and D.J.Eastburn; University of California-Davis

2:00 Patchiness of Mixed-Grass Prairie at DifferentGrazing Intensities Jack E. Norland1, Ryan F.Limb2, Jay M. Volk3 and Don R. Kirby1; (1) NorthDakota State University, (2) Oklahoma StateUniversity, (3) BNI Coal

2:20 Effect of Annual, Growing Season, and SpringPrecipitation on Peak Standing Crop at ThreeLocations Gale H. Dunn1, Lori Wiles1, Jeff Printz2,Bob Patton3 and Anne Nyren3; (1) USDA ARS, (2)NRCS, (3) North Dakota State University

2:40 Developing New Tools to Understand VegetationChange in the Sagebrush Steppe and Pinyon-Juniper Woodlands of the Great Basin DesertRegion Lesley R. Morris1, Neil E. West2 and RonaldJ. Ryel2; (1) USDA ARS, (2) Utah State University

3:00 Break

3:20 Survivors of Invasion: Seed Bank Response toJuniper Expansion in the Sagebrush SteppeCorinne M. Duncan1, Richard F. Miller1, David A.Pyke2, Jane M. Mangold3 and Jaime S. Ratchford1;(1) Oregon State University, (2) U.S. GeologicalSurvey, (3) Montana State University

3:40 Phenotypic Variation of Achnatherum hymenoidesin Relation to Environmental Factors MichaelCashman1, Richard Johnson1 and Linda Hardesty2; (1)USDA ARS, (2) Washington State University

4:00 Insect Abundance and Plant CommunityStructure: Implications for Sage-Grouse BroodRearing Habitat Erica A. Ersch1, Tamzen K.Stringham2 and Jeffrey Miller1; (1) Oregon StateUniversity, (2) University of Nevada-Reno

4:20 Range Scientists Should Calculate Effect Sizes,Not P-Values Matthew J. Rinella and Jeremy J.James; USDA ARS

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Monday Afternoon Symposium

Western Rangelands Partnership: Using the Internetfor Information Transfer

Moderator: John TanakaRoom: San Miguel

1:00 Introduction to Rangelandswest.org and theWestern Rangelands Partnership Carla LongCasler; University of Arizona

1:20 A Collaborative Model for Creating a Web Portalon Rangeland Management Barbara Hutchinson;University of Arizona

1:30 Development of Content Areas and Groups,Versions One Through Three: What’s Working orNot George Ruyle; University of Arizona

1:40 Implementing a Database- and User-DrivenPortal: Metadata and Technical Issues, andResults of User Survey Jeanne Pfander; Universityof Arizona Libraries

1:50 Content Development Process forRangelandswest.org Mark S. Thorne; University ofHawaii at Manoa

2:00 Touring Rangelandswest.org: Special Featuresand Hot Topics Julie Conley; Consultant To WesternRangelands Partnership

2:10 Connecting to State Rangelands Websites NormanR. Harris; University of Alaska Fairbanks

2:30 Break

2:50 Tools for the Future Barron Orr1, Carla Long Casler1

and John A. Tanaka2; (1) University of Arizona, (2)Oregon State University

3:50 Feedback and Discussion

4:30 Conclusions and Where To In the Future Karen L.Launchbaugh and Merrita Fraker-Marble; Universityof Idaho

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Monday Afternoon Symposium

Wolf-Livestock Interactions: Using Science toDevelop Innovative Management to Protect Naturaland Cultural Resources

Moderator: Sam SmallidgeRoom: Ruidoso

1:00 Opening Remarks – Sam Smallidge; New MexicoState University

1:15 Overview of Indirect Impacts of Predators onLivestock Foraging Behavior Larry D. Howery1,Bryan M. Kluever1 and Stewart W. Breck2; (1)University of Arizona, (2) USDA-Wildlife Service

1:50 Wolf-Livestock Interactions in the NorthernRocky Mountains Patrick E. Clark1, Douglas E.Johnson2, Kerry Wilson3, Larry Larson3, MichaelJohnson4 and Fredrick Pierson1; (1) USDA-ARS, (2)Oregon State University, (3) Eastern OregonUniversity, (4) University of California, SantaBarbara

2:25 The Role of Science for Optimizing Wolf-Live-stock Coexistence: Where We’ve Been and WhereWe Should Go Stewart Breck; USDA-APHIS

3:00 Break

3:15 Scientific and Social Challenges of Re-establishinga Free-ranging Population of Mexican GrayWolves in the Southwest Benjamin Tuggle; US Fishand Wildlife Service

3:50 Wolf-livestock Interactions: A Rancher’s Perspec-tive Laura Schneberger; Rafter Spear Ranch, NM

4:25 Discussion and Feedback

Monday Afternoon and TuesdaySymposium

Military Rangelands Supporting National Security

Moderator: Thomas SmithRoom: La Cienega

1:00 Opening Remarks Thomas Smith; US Army Corpsof Engineers

1:10 Natural Resources Management on MilitaryLands – Past to Future Eric N. Anderson; HQ ArmyNational Guard

1:30 Livestock Grazing at Avon Park Air Force Range,Florida: A Synopsis of Rangeland Managementfrom 1859 to Present-Day Clarence V. Morgan; USAir Force

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1:50 Striving to Achieve “No Net Loss” Terry L.Bashore; US Air Force HQ Air Combat Command

2:10 Army Land Management Planning John R.Phillips; HQ US Army

2:30 Heritage Livestock Grazing as a Tool for Manag-ing Southeastern Longleaf Pine Savanna Carl P.Qualls; University of Southern Mississippi

2:50 Break

3:10 Conservation of Fish And Wildlife Resources –Cooperative Efforts of the Fish and WildlifeService and the Departments of the Army, Navy,and Air Force Steve Helfert; US Fish and WildlifeService

3:30 Collaboration in the Desert: An InteragencyEffort to Protect and Restore the CaliforniaDeserts Clarence A. Everly; DoD Desert ManagersGroup

3:50 Merging Mission: Soldiers, Neighbors andSpecies Nancy S. Natoli; HQ US Army Environmen-tal Center

4:10 Targeting Cooperative Conservation Initiatives toSupport Conservation and Military Training GaryL. Belew; US Army Environmental Center

4:30 The Front Range Eco-Regional PartnershipStanley Rogers; US HQ Air Force Space Command

Tuesday continue8:00 Opening Remarks Thomas Smith; US Army Corps

of Engineers

8:05 Sylvatic Plague, an Ancient, Notorious andResilient Invasive Species Now Inhabiting theSemi-Arid Western US Remains Steeped inMystery Jeffrey Wimsatt; University of Virginia

8:25 Feral Swine on the Great Plains: A RapidlyExpanding Exotic Species Philip S. Gipson; TexasTech University

8:45 Wind Power Energy Development and PotentialImpacts on Wildlife Warren Ballard; Texas TechUniversity

9:05 The San Pedro Basin and Fort Huachuca:Balancing Human and Ecosystem Water NeedsThomas Runyon; US Army, Ft. Huachuca, AZ

9:25 Resiliency of Improved Germplasms to MilitaryTraining at the Yakima Training CenterWashington Timothy J. Cary1, Antonio J. Palazzo1,Kay H. Asay2, Kevin B. Jensen2 and Blair Waldron2;(1) US Army ERDC, (2) USDA-ARS

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9:45 Nitrogen-Fixing Trees and Shrubs: Functions andRoles in Rangeland Ecosystems Jeffrey O. Dawson;University of Illinois

10:05 Break

10:20 Field Research on the Assessment of CommunityImpacts from Weapons Noise Edward T. Nykaza;US Army ERDC

10:40 Phytoremediation as a Tool for Military LandManagement Elly P.H. Best1, T. Smith1, Frank L.Hagen1 and Jeffrey O. Dawson2; (1) US Army ERDC,(2) University of Illinois

11:00 Elk Habitat Use in Northeastern Kansas: The Roleof Military Training Areas as Refugia Jonathan M.Conard; Sterling College

11:20 Heterogeneous Disturbance Enhances BiodiversitySteven D. Warren; Colorado State University

11:40 A Test of Symbiotic Rangeland/Native Pollinatorin West Texas Donald Pitts; US Army ERDC

12:00 Break

1:00 Large-Scale Implementation and Expansion ofNoxious Weed Biological Control: Examples fromthe Colorado-Wyoming Front Range G.J. Michels,Jr., V.A. Carney, H.L. Lindon; Texas A&M University

1:30 Vegetation and Invasive Species Impacts onMilitary Lands Robert M. Lacey; US Army ERDC

1:40 Cooperative Efforts to Manage the InvasiveSpecies Saltcedar on Fort Peck Lake inNortheastern Montana Patricia Gilbert; US ArmyCorps of Engineers NWD

2:00 A Simple GIS Model to Prioritize the Use ofPrescribed Burning Resources Carla Picinich; TheNature Conservancy, Ft. Hood, TX

2:20 Vegetation Guide for Restoration of MilitaryLands Antonio J. Palazzo1, Kevin B. Jensen2, Kay H.Asay2 and Timothy J. Cary1; (1) US Army ERDC, (2)USDA-ARS

2:40 Fire Management on Military and OtherFederally Managed Lands John C. Ward; AppliedServices and Information Systems

3:00 Break

3:20 Grassland Recovery After Mechanical Masticationof Ashe Juniper Carla Picinich; The NatureConservancy, Ft. Hood, TX

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3:40 Army and DOD Invasive Species ManagementHarold E. Balbach1, Lisa Rew2 and Joseph Fleming3;(1) US Army ERDC, (2) Montana State University,(3) US Forest Service

4:00 International, State and Air Force CooperativeEfforts to Restore Endangered PronghornsJonathan Stevens; Wyoming Game and Fish Dept.

4:20 Scientific and Other Challenges in Working onMilitary Lands Ann Hild; University of Wyoming

4:40 Closing Remarks Thomas Smith; US Army Corps ofEngineers

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Poster Session A

Monday Afternoon (1:00 pm - 6:00 pm) andTuesday Morning (8:00 am – 10:00 am)

Room: Aragon

Ecology Posters

Describing Ecosystem Shifts in Rangelands Using Data-Driven State and Transition Models Emily Kachergis,Maria Fernandez-Gimenez and Monique Rocca; ColoradoState University [1]

Prediction, Detection, and Monitoring of Invasive Speciesin Forest, Rangeland, and Aquatic Ecosystems: ASynthesis of USDA Forest Service’s Rocky MountainResearch Station Research Program Mee-Sook Kim andJack L. Butler; US Forest Service [2]

Native Grass Characteristics within XeroriparianCommunities of the Barry M. Goldwater Range-East,Arizona Eva Osmer and Jeffery S. Fehmi; University ofArizona [3]

Rangeland Assessment and Update of Soil - EcologicalSite Correlation for Dinosaur National MonumentMathew K. Barnes, Herman B. Garcia and Steve Park;USDA NRCS [4]

The Interacting Effects of Grazing and Productivity onCarabid Beetle and Spider Communities in Semi-AridGrasslands Eleanor R. Bassett, Lauchlan H. Fraser and KarlLarsen; University of Glamorgan [5]

Characterization of the Population Structures in theWildland Collections of Dalea ornata and D. searlsiaefrom the Western US Kishor Bhattarai1, B. ShaunBushman2, Douglas A. Johnson2 and John G. Carman1; (1)Utah State University, (2) USDA ARS [6]

Mongolian Rangelands and Resilience (MOR2):Transcending Boundaries in Collaborative ResearchPlanning Maria E. Fernandez-Gimenez1, Batkhishig Baival1,Steven Fassnacht1, Corrie Knapp2, Melinda Laituri1, RobinReid1 and Jessica Thompson1; (1) Colorado State University,(2) University of Colorado [7]

Development of a Simulation Modeling Tool to EvaluateEcological Impacts of Livestock Grazing in the EasternSierra of California David W. Martin1, Terry McLendon2,Cade Coldren3, Mike Childress3 and Joe Trlica2; (1) LosAngeles Department of Water and Power, (2) KS2Ecological Consulting, (3) Raven Consulting [8]

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Successional Changes of Native and Modified PlantCommunities of the Rough Fescue Ecological Site inAlberta Michael G. Willoughby and Michael J. Alexander;Alberta Sustainable Resource Development [9]

Plant and Soil Transitions Due to Conifer Encroachmentin Aspen Stands of Lassen Volcanic Park, CaliforniaSarah A. McCullough, Kenneth W. Tate, Michael L. Whitingand Anthony T. O’Geen; University California-Davis [10]

Effects of Black-tailed Prairie Dog (Cynomysludovicianus) on Short Grass Vegetation of the ChalkFlats Region of Western Kansas Dustin H. Tacha, CharlesD. Lee, Robert A. Nicholson and Rob Channell; (1) FortHays State University, (2) Kansas State University [11]

Age and Cultivar Effects on Heavy Metal and MetalloidConcentration in Alfalfa Elisabeth Poscher, Michael P.Schellenberg, John M. Clarke, Myriam R. Fernandez andTom N. McCaig; Agriculture And Agri-Food Canada [12]

Denitrification as a Function of Moisture Gradients andAnnual Livestock Utilization in Upper MontaneMeadows of the Central Sierra Nevada Leslie M. Roche,K.W. Tate, A.T. O’Geen and D.J. Eastburn; UniversityCalifornia – Davis [13]

Ecological Site Descriptions as a Management Tool:Results of an SRM Workshop Joel Brown1, WendellGilgert1, Terry Messmer2, Mark Brunson2 and JeremyMaestas1; (1) USDA NRCS, (2) Utah State University [14]

Effects of Prairie Dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus) andCattle on Vegetation Composition and Disappearance inthe Mixed-Grass Prairie Melissa L. Staples, Patricia S.Johnson, Lan Xu and Alexander J. Smart; South DakotaState University [15]

Setting the Stage to Enhance Ecological Site DescriptionApplications to Wildlife Management in SagebrushEcosystems: A 2007 Society for Range ManagementWorkshop Wendell Gilgert and Joel Brown; USDA NRCS[16]

Litter Decomposition in a Sierra Nevada RiparianMeadow as a Function of Plant Species, Distance fromStream Edge, and Grazing Edward A. Vasquez1, Gregg M.Riegel2 and Tony J. Svejcar1; (1) USDA ARS, (2) US ForestService [17]

Adapting Ecological Sites Descriptions to EnhanceWildlife Management: Lessons Learned from the 2007Society for Range Management Workshop JeremyMaestas1, Terry A. Messmer2 and Joel Brown1; (1) USDANRCS, (2) Utah State University [18]

The Effect of Brush Mowing on Invertebrate Populationsin Sagebrush Ecosystems Lars Santana1, Tom Eager2, KevinAlexander3, Evan Bulla3 and Angel Watkins3; (1) USDANRCS, (2) US Forest Service, (3) Western State College [19]

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Enhancing Knowledge of Rangeland Ecological Processeswith Benchmark Ecological Sites William G. Ypsilantis1,Michael “Sherm” Karl1, Tim Bottomley1, Pete Biggam2,Anthony O’Geen3, Curtis Talbot4, Lyn Townsend4, BrandonBestelmeyer5 and Randy Davis6; (1) USDI-BLM, (2) USDINational Park Service, (3) University California – Davis, (4)USDA NRCS, (5) USDA ARS, (6) US Forest Service [20]

Distribution of Switchgrass in Mexico Juan M. MartinezReyna; Universidad Autonoma Agraria Antonio Narro [21]

Management Effects on Dynamic Soil Properties in theNorthern Great Plains Stanley C. Boltz and RickBednarek; USDA NRCS [22]

Grazing and Grazing Exclusion Effects on ChihuahuanDesert Vegetation Trends Francisco Molinar1, JosephNavarro2, Jerry Holechek3, Dee Gault4, and Milt Thomas3;(1) USDA-NRCS, (2) USDI-BLM, (3) New Mexico StateUniversity, (4) Private consultant [180]

Plant Posters

Seed Coat Dormancy on Native Plant Species fromChihuahua, Mexico Alicia Melgoza1, Abigail Vazquez1,Pedro Juardo2, Carlos Morales2, Carlos Ortega1, GerardoBezanilla1, Mario H. Royo2 and Carmelo Pinedo1; (1)UACH, (2) INIFAP [23]

Using a Hot Plate to Estimate Seed Viability Clare L.Poulsen1, Chad Boyd1 and Jane M. Mangold2; (1) USDAARS, (2) Montana State University [24]

Hybrid Buffelgrass: An Option for Higher Forage orBiomass Production in Mexico Jorge R. Gonzalez-Dominguez1, and Susana Gomez-Martinez2; (1) Saltillo,Coahuila, Mexico, (2) Universidad Autonoma AgrariaAntonio Narro [25]

Morphological Traits in Some Commercial andExperimental Buffelgrass Varieties Susana Gomez-Martinez1 and Jorge R. Gonzalez-Dominguez2; (1)Universidad Autonoma Agraria Antonio Narro, (2)Fraccionamiento Insurgentes [26]

Seed Polymorphism in Two Western Nevada IndianRicegrass Communities Rachel Ezzell, Charlie D.Clements, Dan N. Harmon and Mark Weltz; USDA ARS[27]

Long Term Storage of Mojave Seed Species MicheleClark, Dan N. Harmon, James A. Young and Charlie D.Clements; USDA ARS [28]

Germination Comparisons of Crested WheatgrassCultivars Hycrest and Hycrest II Dan N. Harmon andCharlie D. Clements; USDA ARS [29]

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Seasonal Growth and Nutritive Quality Distribution for 7Warm Season Perennial Grasses in the Texas Rolling RedPlains Rob Ziehr, Rudy Esquivel, Ken Spaeth, GeorgePeacock, Arnold Norman and Joel Douglas; USDA-NRCS[179]

Invasive Species/Weed Management Posters

Exotic Weeds and Plant Species Diversity as Affected byGroundwater Depth in the Great Basin Ricardo Mata-Gonzalez1, Terry McLendon2, David W. Martin3, M.J. Trlica2

and Robert A. Pearce4; (1) Oregon State University, (2)Colorado State University, (3) Los Angeles Department ofWater and Power, (4) USDA NRCS [30]

Pastoral Livestock Facilitate Dispersal of Prosopisjuliflora in an Ethiopian Wildlife Reserve Almaz Kebede1

and D. Layne Coppock2; (1) Ethiopian Wildlife ConservationAuthority, (2) Utah State University [31]

Targeted Grazing - Using Aversion Trained Sheep forVineyard Floor Vegetation Control Morgan Doran1, JohnHarper1, Roger Ingram1, Stephanie Larson1, Mel George2 andEmilio Laca2; (1) University of California CooperativeExtension, (2) University California – Davis [32]

Forage Species With Nitrate Toxic PrincipleAccumulation Capabilities for Cattle in Rangelands ofSonora, Mexico Francisco G. Denogean1, Martha H.Martin1, Fernando A. Ibarra2 and Salomon Moreno1; (1)Universidad De Sonora, (2) INIFAP [33]

Using Hoof Action to Control Clubmoss Robert Kilian1,Katrina Johnson1 and Renee Nelson2; (1) USDA NRCS, (2)Wibaux County Conservation District [34]

Arizona Invasive Species Strategic Management PlanJohn H. Brock1, Thomas McMahon2 and Brian McGrew3; (1)Arizona State University Polytechnic, (2) ArizonaDepartment of Game and Fish, (3) Arizona Department ofAgriculture [35]

Invasions of Kentucky Bluegrass in the Northern GreatPlains: Does Precipitation or Defoliation Drive It? JohnR. Hendrickson1 and Jinxiang Liu2; (1) USDA ARS, (2)Zhanjiang Normal University [36]

Landscape Scale Constraints on Conversion of aSagebrush Steppe Ecosystem to an Annual GrassDominated Stable State Marques Munis, Cynthia Brown,Roy Roath and Mike Coughenour; Colorado State University[37]

Long-Term Response of African Rue and AssociatedVegetation to Herbicides Laurie B. Abbott, Kevin S.Branum, Nina Klypina and Tracy M. Sterling; New MexicoState University [38]

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Shrub Restoration and the Use of Plateau Herbicide onGrazing Lands Affected by Cheatgrass Invasion SuzanneM. Neal1, Carolyn H. Sieg2 and Catherine Gehring1; (1)Northern Arizona University, (2) US Forest Service [39]

Patterns of Bluegrass Invasion into Fescue MonoculturesUnder Field Conditions Edward W. Bork and Walter D.Willms; University of Alberta [40]

Is Prescribed Fire a Solution to Control Invasive Grassesin Chihuahua Grasslands? Rodrigo Miranda-Baeza, CarlosOrtega-Ochoa, Alberto Rico-Diaz, Ramon Sandoval-Reyes,Rey Quintana-Martinez, Otilia Rivero-Hernandez and OscarViramontes-Olivas; Universidad Autonoma de Chihuahua[41]

Natal Grass Monitoring in Chihuahua GrasslandsFernando Hernández-Peralta, Carlos Ortega-Ochoa, ManuelVillalobos-Carrera, Eduardo Varela-Guadarrama, NathalieHernández-Quiroz, Alicia Melgoza-Castillo and CarmeloPinedo-Alvarez; Universidad Autonoma de Chihuahua [42]

Status Report on the “Wildfires and Invasive Plants inAmerican Deserts” Symposium and Workshop MikePellant1, Matt Brooks2, Linda Coates-Markle1, Bud Cribley1,Nora DeVoe1, Kurt Pregitzer3, Sherm Swanson3, JohnTanaka4 and Mark Weltz3; (1) BLM, (2) USGS, (3)University of Nevada Reno, (4) Society for RangeManagement [43]

Short-Term Effect of Six Herbicides on SandbergBluegrass (Poa secunda) Following Wildfire Brad W.Schultz and Earl Creech; University of Nevada [44]

Herbicide Effectiveness on Adjacent Populations ofYoung (Seedling) and Mature Perennial Pepperweed(Lepidium latifolium) Brad W. Schultz; University ofNevada [45]

The Response of Crested Wheatgrass (Agropyron spp)Seedlings to Six Herbicides Brad W. Schultz and E. Creech;University of Nevada [46]

Assessing Invasion Strategies by Old World Bluestem, anInvasive C4 Grass Karen R. Hickman, Gail W.T. Wilsonand Melinda M. Williamson; Oklahoma State University [47]

Vegetation Management and Restoration PracticesPosters

Rates of Legume Decline Vary Among Forage Mixes inCentral Alberta Erin M. McLeod, Edward W. Bork, Jane R.King and Linda M. Hall; University of Alberta [48]

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Genetic and Phenotypic Analysis of Blue Grama[Bouteloua gracilis (Willd. Ex-Kunth) Lag. Ex-Steud.]Populations in Chihuahua Mexico Luís Madrid-Pérez1,Quintón Rascón-Cruz1, Carlos Morales Nieto2, VictorAguirre Arzola3, Benito Pereyra-Alférez3, GuadalupeNevárez-Moorillón1, Armando Aguado-Santacruz3 andSigifredo Arévalo-Gallegos1; (1) Universidad Autonoma deChihuahua, (2) INIFAP-La Campana, (3) INIFAP-Bajío [49]

The Influence of Plant Functional Group Removal onSuccession in Wyoming Big Sagebrush CommunitiesChad S. Boyd and Tony J. Svejcar; USDA ARS [50]

Establishing Fourwing Saltbush (Atriplex canescens) byTransplanting in Arid Zones in Northern Mexico JesusEnrique Cantu Brito; UAAAN Ul, Mexico [51]

The Effect of Discing to Reduce Cheatgrass DensitiesFollowing Wildfires Charlie D. Clements, Dan N. Harmonand James A. Young; USDA ARS [52]

Hydrologic Response of Mechanical Mastication inJuniper Woodland in Utah Nathan L. Cline1, Bruce A.Roundy1, Fredrick B. Pierson2, Patrick Kormos2 and C. JasonWilliams2; (1) Brigham Young University, (2) USDA ARS[53]

Glacier Creek Wetland Restoration in Rocky MountainNational Park Scott M. Esser, Jeff Maugans, LonniePilkington, Lindsay Springer, Laura Wheatley and BenBobowski; National Park Service [54]

Native Prairie Restoration in the Lower Rio GrandeValley of Texas Anthony D. Falk1, Timothy Fulbright1, PaulaMaywald2, Forrest Smith2, Stephen Benn3 and AlfonsoOrtega-Santos1; (1) Texas A&M, (2) South Texas Natives, (3)Texas Parks and Wildlife [55]

Effects of 10 Years of Fire and Climate Variability onPerennial Grass Cover in Shortgrass Steppe of theSouthern Great Plains Paulette L. Ford; US Forest Service[56]

Fire and Strategic Grazing Tools to Restore RoughFescue Native Range in Alberta, Canada Kevin A. Franceand Callum Sears; Sustainable Resource Development [57]

Fire Fuel Load Effects on Heat Dosage and PerennialPlant Response Kimberly F. Haile and Lance T. Vermeire;USDA ARS [58]

Effects of Biosolids Application on Establishment ofNative, Warm-Season Grasses in Abandoned Fields ofChihuahua, Mexico Pedro Jurado1, Mario Royo1, CarlosMorales1, Ruben Saucedo1 and Alicia Melgoza2; (1) CampoExperimental La Campana-Madera-INIFAP, (2) UniversidadAutonoma de Chihuahua [59]

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Establishment of Fourwing Saltbush Ecotypes inNorthern Mexico’s Oak-Bunchgrass Rangelands RubenSaucedo-Teran1, Jose Badillo-Almaraz2, Hector Rubio-Arias2

and Pedro Jurado-Guerra1; (1) Campo ExperimentalCampana-Madera-INIFAP, (2) Universidad Autonoma deChihuahua [60]

Promoting the Re-Establishment of Herbaceous NativePlants on Mixed Brush Plant Communities With RollerChopping Felix A. Ayala, J. Alfonso Ortega-S., Timothy E.Fulbright and G. Allen Rasmussen; Texas A&M University[61]

Analysis of the Morphological Variability in Populationsof Green Sprangletop [(Leptochloa dubia (Kunth) Nees)]to Use in Rangeland Restoration Carlos R. Morales-Nieto1,Alicia Melgoza2, Pedro Jurado1, Martin Martinez1 and OtiliaRivero2; (1) Camp Exp. Campana-Madera INIFAP, (2)University Autonoma de Chihuahua [62]

Effects of Different Management Practices on Soil SeedBank Composition in a Mixed-Grass Prairie of theNorthern Great Plains Lan Xu, Brent E. Turnipseed, RogerN. Gates, Patricia S. Johnson and Nels H. Troelstrup, Jr.;South Dakota State University [63]

Grass, Forb and Shrub Response on Four PrescribedBurns in N.E. California Joseph A. Wagner; BLM [64]

Patch-Burn Grazing in the Bluestem Flint Hills and theCentral States Cheryl K. Simmons, Reggie L. Blackwell,Marva L. Weigelt and Jane B. Koger; NRCS [65]

Forage Importance of Trees and Shrubs in GoatProduction Systems in Northeast Durango, Mexico CelsoM. Valencia-Castro, Jesús J. Quiñones-Vera, EdmundoCastellanos-Pérez and Gerardo Jiménez-González;Universidad Juárez del Estado de Durango [66]

Predicting Herbage Mass in Irrigated Orchardgrass(Dactylis glomerata L.) Pastures Glenn E. Shewmaker1,Laura K. Hooper1 and Thomas Griggs2; (1) University ofIdaho, (2) West Virginia University [67]

The Murphy Complex Wildfire Report on LivestockGrazing, Vegetation Type, and Fire Behavior MikePellant1, Karen Launchbaugh2, Matt Brooks3, Jay Davison4

and Steve Bunting2; (1) BLM, (2) University of Idaho, (3)USGS, (4) University of Nevada [68]

Kochia and Non-Natives for Restoration, Good or Bad?Kim Anderson and Richard D. Madril; BLM [69]

Cost Effectiveness of Fuel Break Treatments inCheatgrass-Dominated Landscapes Christopher A. Call1,Joel M. Diamond1, Nicole McCoy2 and Nora Devoe2; (1)Utah State University, (2) BLM [70]

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Response of Soil Microbial Communities to PrescribedFire in a Semi-Arid Grassland Carlton S. White1, MartinaStursova1, Rosemary L. Pendleton2 and Robert L.Sinsabaugh1; (1) University of New Mexico, (2) US ForestService [71]

Effect of Fire Season and Spring Grazing on SoilSeedbank in the Northern Great Plains Jennifer M.Muscha and Lance T. Vermeire; USDA ARS [72]

Effect of Prescribed Fire on Standing Crop Production inHalophilous Grassland of Durango, Mexico Jesús J.Quiñones-Vera, Celso M. Valencia-Castro, EdmundoCastellanos-Perez, Olvera Sanchez-Olvera, Juan J. Martinez-Rios and Gerardo Jimenez-Gonzalez; Universidad Juarez delEstado de Durango [73]

Effects of Seeding Rate and Season of Seeding onEstablishment of Ten Native Grasses in the Rio GrandePlains of Texas Forrest S. Smith1, William R. Ocumpaugh2,Paula D. Maywald1 and Jim Mutz1; (1) Texas A&MUniversity, (2) Texas Agrilife Research [74]

Effects of Prescribed Burning on Grazed ShortgrassSteppe David J. Augustine1, D.G. Milchunas2 and J.D.Derner3; (1) USDA ARS, Rangeland Resources ResearchUnit, (2) Colorado State University, (3) USDA ARS, HighPlains Grasslands Research Station [178]

Rangeland Cup Posters

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Tuesday Morning Technical Session

Vegetation Management and Restoration I

Chair: John BrockRoom: Tesuque

8:20 An Integrative Approach for Ecological Restora-tion in Rangelands of the Burgos Basin, NortheastMexico Mario G. Manzano; Tecnológico deMonterrey-ITESM

8:40 Tree Shearing to Control Douglas-FirEncroachment on Foothill Grassland Cindy M.Selensky1, Jeffrey C. Mosley1, Brent L. Roeder1,Tracy K. Brewer2 and Rachel A. Frost1; (1) MontanaState University, (2) Park County Extension,Montana State University

9:00 After Invasion: Genetic and Phenotypic Variationof Remnant Natives in Greenhouse ProductionKarin E. Bergum1, Ann L. Hild1 and Brian A.Mealor2; (1) University of Wyoming, (2) The NatureConservancy

9:20 Retaining Evolutionary Potential in RestoredPlant Populations Erin K. Espeland; USDA ARS

9:40 Vegetation Following Chemical Control of CanadaThistle: Native Recovery or Secondary Invasion?Amy J. Symstad; USGS

10:00 Break

10:20 Methods of Restoration and Improvement ofRangelands in Uzbekistan T. Mukimov1, S.Yusupov1 and D. Johnson2; (1) Uzbek ResearchInstitute of Karakul Sheep Breeding and DesertEcology, (2) USDA ARS

10:40 Vegetation Management in GreasewoodBottomlands Matthew M. Church, Mary I. Williams,Ann L. Hild and Ginger B. Paige; University ofWyoming

11:00 Plant Community Response Following Dry ForestEcosystem Restoration Timothy J. Ross1 and Reg F.Newman; (1) Range and Reclamation Services, (2)BC Ministry of Forests Research Branch

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Tuesday Morning Technical Session

Grazing I

Chair: Mark PetersonRoom: Santo Domingo

8:20 Effects of Irrigation and Grazing Systems on SteerPerformance and Plant Response in an Old WorldBluestem Pasture Gerardo Bezanilla1 and CarlosVillalobos2; (1) Universidad Autonoma deChihuahua, (2) Texas Tech University

8:40 Optimal Protein Feeding of Karakul Sheep inPremountan Wildlands of Uzbekistan ErachMamedov, Uzbek Research Institute of Karakul,Uzbekistan

9:00 Perennial Forage Kochia for Improved WinterGrazing Linden K. Greenhalgh1, Kenneth C. Olson2,Dale R. ZoBell1, Blair L. Waldron3, Alicia R.Moulton1 and Burke W. Davenport4; (1) Utah StateUniversity, (2) South Dakota State University, (3)USDA-ARS, (4) USDA-NRCS

9:20 Repeatable Environments: Understanding theRole of Traditional Public Lands Grazing Practicein Relation to Wolf-Livestock Conflicts in theRocky Mountains Timmothy J. Kaminski1, CharlesMamo2 and Sarah Dewey3; (1) Mountain LivestockCooperative, Montana, (2) Longview Conservation-Canada, (3) Northern Rockies ConservationCooperative, Wyoming

9:40 Cattle Habitat Selection and Associated Effects onDeciduous Tree Regeneration in Alberta JillianKaufmann1, Edward Bork1 and Mike Alexander2; (1)University of Alberta, Canada, (2) AlbertaSustainable Resource Development, Canada

10:00 Break

10:20 Grazing Management Effects on Soil AggregateSize Distribution and Stability in the MissouriCoteau Region Guojie Wang, Kevin Sedivec, PaulNyren and Anne Nyren; North Dakota StateUniversity

10:40 Cows, Bikes, Hikes and Kites: MinimizingConflict Between Public Recreation and GrazingLivestock Sheila J. Barry1 and David Amme2; (1)University of California-Davis, (2) East Bay RegionalPark District

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Tuesday Morning Symposium

Solutions to Locoweed Poisoning in New Mexico andthe Western US: Collaborative Research of NewMexico State University and USDA/ARS PoisonousPlant Lab

Moderator: Michael RalphsRoom: San Miguel

8:00 The Magnitude of Locoweed Poisoning in NewMexico and the Collaborative Research BetweenNew Mexico State University and the USDA/ARSPoisonous Plant Lab David Graham; New MexicoState University

8:15 Genetics of the Fungal Endophytes of LocoweedRebecca Creamer, Deana Baucom, Marie Romeroand Robert Belfon; New Mexico State University

8:30 Swainsonine Distribution in Locoweed Species,Plant Parts and the Endophyte Transmission toProgeny Daniel Cook, Dale Gardner, James Pfister,Michael Ralphs, Benedict T. Green, T. Zane Davisand Kevin D. Welch; USDA-ARS

8:45 Animal Susceptibility, Toxicity and ComparativePathology of Locoweed Poisoning in Livestock andWildlife Bryan L. Stegelmeier, T. Zane Davis, KevinWelch, Benedict T. Green, Dale R. Gardner andStephen T. Lee; USDA-ARS

9:00 Development of a Biomarker for LocoweedPoisoning Kevin Welch, Bryan Stegelmeier, KipPanter, Michael Ralphs, Dale Gardner and DanielCook; USDA-ARS

9:15 Effect of Locoweed (Oxytropis sericea) on Repro-duction and Maternal and Neonate Behavior inSheep James A. Pfister, Kip Panter, Ben Green, T.Zane Davis, S. T. Lee, Daniel Cook and Kevin D.Welch; USDA-ARS

9:30 Do Animal-to-Animal Variations in LocoweedIngestion Patterns Offer Opportunities to ReduceIntoxication Rates of Naive Yearling Cattle?Andres F. Cibils1, Kyle T. Jackson1, Jacob A. Martin1,J. David Graham1, Dale R. Gardner2 and RobertL.Wesley1; (1) New Mexico State University, (2)USDA-ARS

9:45 Grazing Management Recommendations toReduce Risk of Locoweed Poisoning Michael H.Ralphs1, David Graham2, James A. Pfister1 and DaleR. Gardner1; (1) USDA-ARS, (2) New Mexico StateUniversity

10:00 Break

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10:15 Managing Woolly Locoweed (Astragalusmollissimus) Toxicity of Grazing Beef Cattle inNortheastern New Mexico E. Manuel Encinias1, D.Calderon-Mendoza1, F. Loya1, C. Murdock1, D.Graham2 and M.H. Ralphs3; (1) NMSU ClaytonLivestock Research Center, (2) New Mexico StateUniversity, (3) USDA-ARS

10:30 Herbicide Control of Locoweeds Kirk McDaniel;New Mexico State University

10:45 Role of Native Insects in the Biological Control ofLocoweed David C. Thompson and Kevin T.Gardner; New Mexico State University

11:00 Discussion and Future Research Needs

Tuesday Morning Symposium

Rangeland Hydrology and Erosion TechnologyAdvancements

Moderator: Kenneth E. Spaeth Jr.Room: Laguna

8:00 Overview of Current and Future Technologies inRangeland Hydrology Mark A. Weltz, USDA ARS

8:15 Hydrologic Effects of Fire in Sagebrush PlantCommunities: Implications for RangelandHydrology and Erosion Modeling Frederick B.Pierson1, Peter R. Robichaud2, Corey A. Moffet1,Kenneth E. Spaeth3 and C. Jason Williams1; (1)USDA ARS, (2) US Forest Service, (3) USDA NRCS

8:30 Rangeland Hydrology and Erosion Model Mark A.Nearing1, Fred B. Pierson1, Mark A. Weltz1, KennethE. Spaeth2 and H. Wei3; (1) USDA ARS, (2) USDANRCS, (3) University of Arizona

8:45 New Technologies for Modeling Fire andDisturbed Conditions in Forest and RangelandWilliam J. Elliot1, Peter R. Robichaud1, Fred B.Pierson2 and Corey A. Moffett2; (1) US ForestService, (2) USDA ARS

9:00 Rangeland Hydrology and Erosion Modeling:Status and Challenges in Tropical RangelandsJames P. Dobrowolski1 and Thomas L. Thurow2; (1)USDA-CREES, (2) University of Wyoming

9:15 RAGWA: Rangeland Automated GeospatialWatershed Assessment Tool D.P. Guertin, D.C.Goodrich, G. Paige, M. Nearing, S.N. Miller, J. Stoneand G. Ruyle; University of Arizona

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9:30 Dominant Erosion Processes Associated with aGrassland State and Transition Model inSoutheastern Arizona Jeffry J. Stone1, Jared Buono2

and Gingber Paige3; (1) USDA ARS, (2) Universityof Arizona, (3) University of Wyoming

9:45 Concentrated Flow Experiments on Burned andUnburned Sagebrush Communities: Applicationsfor the Rangeland Hydrology and Erosion ModelCorey A. Moffet1, Fredrick B. Pierson1 and Peter R.Robichaud2; (1) USDA ARS, (2) US Forest Service

10:00 Break

10:15 Effect of Plant Species Composition on RangelandHydrology and Erosion Kenneth E. Spaeth1, F.B.Pierson2 and P.R. Robichaud3; (1) USDA NRCS, (2)USDA ARS, (3) US Forest Service

10:30 Improving Rangeland Hydrology and ErosionSimulation Models: Coarse Particle Movement inChannels and Sediment Yield in Small WatershedsMary H. Nichols; USDA ARS

10:45 Multiscale Variability of Soil Aggregate Stability:Implications for Rangeland Hydrology andErosion Michael C. Duniway1, Jeffrey E. Herrick1,Kenneth E. Spaeth2, Nichole Barger3, Justin VanZee1

and Jayne Belnap4; (1) USDA ARS, (2) USDANRCS, (3) University of Colorado-Boulder, (4) USGS

11:00 Rangeland Hydrology and Erosion Modeling inCEAP and NRI Activities Leonard W. Jolley1, MarkWeltz2, J. Jeff Goebel1 and Mariano Hernandez2; (1)USDA NRCS, (2) USDA ARS

Tuesday Morning Symposium

Rangeland Animal Behavior: Integration of Ethol-ogy and GPS/GIS/RS Technologies

Moderator: Pat Clark a.m.Ken Crane p.m.

Room: Santa Ana

8:00 Opening Remarks Morning Session Patrick Clark;USDA ARS

8:15 Beyond Collarin’ and Follerin’: Studying Ungu-late/Carnivore Interactions Craig G. White, GeorgePauley, Nathan Borg, Mark Hurley and Pete Zagar;Idaho Department of Game and Fish

8:50 Cutting-Edge Technologies: GPS/SatelliteCommunications-Based Tracking System PatrickE. Clark1, David F. Spencer2, Douglas E. Johnson3

and Fredrick B. Pierson1; (1) USDA ARS, (2) M2E,Inc., (3) Oregon State University

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9:25 A Time-Step Nonlinear Model of Cattle SitePreference in Northeastern Oregon and WesternIdaho M.D. Johnson1, K. D. Wilson2, P.E. Clark3,L.L. Larson2, A.L. Woerz4, M. Louhaichi5 and D.E.Johnson6; (1) University of California-Santa Barbara,(2) Eastern Oregon University, (3) USDA ARS, (4)Global Geomatic Solutions, Mülheim am der Ruhr,Germany, (5) International Center for AgriculturalResearch in the Dry Areas (ICARDA), Aleppo Syria,(6) Oregon State University

10:15 Effect of Lunar Phase on Summer ActivityBudgets of Rocky Mountain Elk (Cervus elaphusnelsonii) Gail J. Woodside1, Douglas E. Johnson1,Patrick E. Clark2, David C. Ganskopp2, MartinVavra3, Brian L. Dick3 and Mitchel G. Wilkinson1; (1)Oregon State University-Corvallis, (2) USDA ARS,(3) US Forest Service

10:50 Utilizing Resource Selection Modeling inRangeland Ecology Kenric J. Walburger1, MartinVavra2 and Timothy DelCurto3; (1) University ofSaskatchewan, (2) US Forest Service, (3) OregonState University

11:25 Use of GPS and GIS Technologies to Develop andEvaluate New Approaches to Manipulate CattleDistribution Derek W. Bailey; New Mexico StateUniversity

1:00 Opening Remarks Afternoon Session Douglas E.Johnson; Oregon State University

1:15 The Starkey Project: Long-Term Studies of Elk,Deer, and Cattle Martin Vavra, Michael J. Wisdomand Mary M. Rowland; US Forest Service

1:50 Intrinsic Movement Patterns of Grazing RockyMountain Elk (Cervus elaphus nelsonii) and BeefCattle (Bos taurus) M. D. Johnson1, P. E. Clark2,D.G. Ganskopp2, G. J. Woodside3, M. Vavra, M.Louhaichi4 and D. E. Johnson5; (1) University ofCalifornia-Santa Barbara, (2) USDA ARS, (3) USForest Service, (4) International Center forAgricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA),(5) Oregon State University

2:25 Distribution and Interaction of White-Tailed Deerand Cattle in South Texas Rangeland Susan M.Cooper1, Humberto L. Perotto-Baldivieso1 and M.Keith Owens2; (1) Texas AgriLife Research, (2)Oklahoma State University

3:00 Break

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3:15 Spatial Spread of a Cattle Herd as a Function ofPeriod of Day, Season and Activity in a Semi-AridRangeland in South Texas, USA Christopher E.Cheleuitte-Nieves, Humberto Perotto-Baldivieso, X.Ben Wu and Susan Cooper; Texas A&M University

3:50 Pre and Post-Burn Cattle Distribution Patterns:Sagebrush Steppe David C. Ganskopp1 and DaveBohnert2; (1) USDA ARS, (2) Oregon StateUniversity

4:25 Influence of Weather and Animal Related Factorson Grazing Distribution of Livestock Andres F.Cibils1, Christina M. Rubio1, Robert L. Wesley1,Mark K. Petersen1, Ed L. Fredrickson2, Miguel A.Brizuela3 and M. Silvia Cid3; (1) New Mexico StateUniversity, (2) USDA ARS, (3) Universidad Nacionaldel Mar del Plata, Argentina

5:00 Foraging Activity and Movements of GPS-Collared Cattle, Elk, Bison and Deer in the AspenParkland of Alberta, Canada Patrick O. Jones,Philip DeWitt and Evelyn Merrill; University ofArizona

Tuesday Morning Symposium

Ecology and Management of Invasive AnnualGrasses in the West: Current State of Knowledgeand Future Directions

Moderator: Jeremy JamesRoom: Mesilla

8:00 Opening Remarks Jeremy J. James; USDA-ARS

8:10 Invasion! Immigration and Spread of Bromustectorum Genotypes Across North America:Allozyme and Historical Evidence Richard N.Mack; Washington State University

8:35 Effects of Rainfall, Soil and Livestock Grazing onDominance of California Rangeland by an ExoticAnnual Bromus Species Carla M. D’Antonio andClaudia M. Tyler; University of California-SantaBarbara

9:00 Ranchers’ Perspectives on Invasive Annual GrassManagement in Sagebrush Steppe RangelandsDuston D. Johnson1, Kirk W. Davies2, Peter Schreder1

and Anna-Marie Chamberlain1; (1) Oregon StateUniversity, (2) USDA ARS

9:25 Social, Political and Practical Challenges ofManaging Annual Grass-Dominated LandscapesTyler J. Staggs; BLM

9:50 Break

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10:00 Linking Traits of Invasive Annual Grasses toDegradation of Ecological Processes Thomas A.Monaco; USDA ARS

10:25 Are We Overlooking the Value of Remnant NativePlants in Highly Invaded Communities? ElizabethA. Leger; University of Nevada

10:50 Soil Nitrogen and Annual Grass Invasion: Meta-Analysis, Mechanisms and Management OptionsJeremy J. James; USDA ARS

11:15 Soil Water Availability and Invasibility of GreatBasin Big Sagebrush Communities to CheatgrassBruce A. Roundy1, Alison Whittaker2 and Jeanne C.Chambers3; (1) Brigham Young University, (2) UtahDivision of Wildlife Resources, (3) US Forest Service

11:40 Impacts of Cheatgrass in the Snake River Birds ofPrey National Conservation Area John C. Sullivan;BLM

1:00 Ecological and Economical Impacts ofManagement Options for Medusahead ControlTheresa A. Becchetti, Stephanie Larson-Praplan, Dr.Jimin Zhang, Christine Dillard, Craig Schriefer,Corey Cherr and Dr. Emilio Laca; University ofCalifornia-Davis

1:25 Soil Nitrogen Management and InvasionResistance Edward A. Vasquez, Roger L. Sheley,Tony J. Svejcar and Brenda S. Smith; USDA ARS

1:50 Growth Regulator Herbicides Reduce InvasiveAnnual Grass Seed Production Matthew J. Rinella1

and Robert A. Masters2; (1) USDA ARS, (2) DowAgroSciences

2:15 Spatial Distribution and Scaling of Impacts ofInvasive Grasses Corey M. Cherr and Emilio A.Laca; University of California-Davis

2:40 Break

2:50 Toward Ecologically-Based Integrated WeedManagement Roger L. Sheley, Ed Vasquez, BrendaSmith and Tony Svejcar; USDA ARS

3:15 Management of Invasive Annual Grasses in theWest: A Synthesis of Current State of Knowledgeand Future Directions Thomas A. Monaco; USDAARS

3:40 Closing Remarks Jeremy James; USDA ARS

3:50 Panel Discussion

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Tuesday Afternoon Technical Session

Ecology II

Chair: Sam FuhlendorfRoom: Laguna

1:00 Plant Community Response to the Interaction ofSmall-Scale and Large-Scale Disturbance in MesicMixed Prairie Ryan F. Limb1, David M. Engle1,Terrance G. Bidwell1, Donald P. Althof2 and Philip S.Gipson3; (1) Oklahoma State University, (2)University of Rio Grande, (3) Texas Tech University

1:20 Grazing and Burning Effects on Plant CommunityDiversity and Heterogeneity in Fescue PrairieNadia Mori, Ken J. Walburger and Jim T. Romo;University of Saskatchewan

1:40 Ecological Responses Following Harvest ofMesquite for Bioenergy Uses James R. Ansley,Mustafa Mirik and Roy Stanford; Texas AgriLifeResearch

2:00 Shrub Expansion in Northern Chihuahuan DesertGrasslands: Spatial Patterns of Transition andBiophysical Constraints Darroc P. Goolsby1,Brandon Bestelmeyer2 and Steve Archer3; (1) NewMexico State University, (2) USDA ARS, (3)University of Arizona

2:20 Landscape Function Changes Along LajanePiosphere Eahsan Shahriary1, Michael W. Palmer1,David Tongway2, Hossein Azarnivand3, MohammdJafari3 and Vahid Habibi3; (1) Oklahoma StateUniversity, (2) CSIRO, (3) University of Tehran

2:40 Initial Analysis of Native Bee CommunitiesPresent on Two Sagebrush Steppe Sites inSouthern Idaho Stephen P. Cook, Sara Birch andCarrie Caselton Lowe; University of Idaho

3:00 Break

3:20 Genetic Diversity Patterns and Adaptation ofAllium acuminatum in the Great Basin Richard C.Johnson and Babara Hellier; USDA ARS

3:40 Pyric-Herbivory and Patch Burning: What AboutNumber and Size? Brady W. Allred1, Ryan Limb1,Sam Fuhlendorf1 and Bob Hamilton2; (1) OklahomaState University, (2) The Nature Conservancy

4:00 Survival of Eleven Alfalfa Populations in SemiaridRangeland Chris G. Misar, Lan Xu, Roger Gates,Arvid Boe and Patricia Johnson; South Dakota StateUniversity

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Tuesday Afternoon Technical Session

Vegetation Management and Restoration II

Chair: Chad CummingsRoom: Tesuque

1:00 Use of Tebuthiuron to Restore Remnant Warm-Season Prairie Grasses in Degraded GrasslandsRobert A. Masters1, Byron B. Sleugh1 and Walter H.Schacht2; (1) Dow AgroSciences, LLC, (2) Universityof Nebraska

1:20 Use of Aminopyralid in Habitat RestorationProjects Vanelle Peterson1, Byron Sleugh1, DeanGaiser2, Jerry Benson3 and Mike Finch4; (1) DowAgroSciences, (2) Eco-Logical Management, (3) BFINative Seeds, (4) Washington Dept of Fish andWildlife

1:40 Wet Thermal Accumulation Modeling of FieldGermination of Several Rangeland SpeciesJennifer K. Coleman1, Bruce A. Roundy1, BradJessop2 and April Hulet1; (1) Brigham YoungUniversity, (2) BLM

2:00 Caucasian Bluestem Control Using Glyphosateand Imazapyr Walter H. Fick; Kansas StateUniversity

2:20 Soil CO2 Emissions in Masticated Woodlands of

Juniperus osteosperma Kert Young, Bruce Roundyand Richard Terry; Brigham Young University

Tuesday Afternoon Technical Session

Grazing II

Chair: Justin DernerRoom: Santo Domingo

1:00 Comparison of Active and Historic LivestockGrazed Sites on the Colorado Plateau Shannon M.Moore1, Steven Bekedam2 and Ben Baldwin1; (1)Utah State University, (2) National Park Service

1:20 Relationship Between Forage Allowance andGrazing Efficiency in the Great Plains:Implications for Managing Rangelands for BothLivestock Production and Desired EcosystemGoods and Services Alexander Smart1, JustinDerner2, Barry Dunn3, Eric Mousel1, Kevin Sedivec4,Keith Harmoney5, Jerry Volesky6, Robert Gillen5 andJohn Hendrickson2; (1) South Dakota StateUniversity, (2) USDA ARS, (3) Texas A&MUniversity, (4) North Dakota State University, (5)Kansas State University, (6) University of Nebraska

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1:40 Potential for Amendments to Improve In-VitroFermentation of Diets Containing Honey MesquiteBarbara K. Witmore, Derek W. Bailey and Mark K.Petersen; New Mexico State University

2:00 Comparison of Stocker Calf Placement on NativeRangeland vs. Direct Feedlot Finishing Keith R.Harmoney and John R. Jaeger; Kansas StateUniversity

2:20 Diet Quality and Composition of Cattle (Bos spp)and Elk (Cervus elaphus) Grazing Pinyon-JuniperRangeland in Central Arizona Douglas R.Tolleson1, Larry D. Howery1, Lacy E. Halstead1,George B. Ruyle1, David W. Schafer1, John A. Kava1,Kris K. Williams2 and Stephen D. Prince2; (1)University of Arizona, (2) Texas A&M University

2:40 Nutritional Quality and Yield of Aspen SuckersUnder Simulated Browsing Koketso Tshireletso1,John C. Malechek2 and Dale L. Bartos2; (1) BotswanaCollege of Agriculture, (2) Utah State University

3:00 Break

3:20 Does Repeated Intensive Defoliation InfluenceCool- and Warm-Season Plant Cover in Short-grass Steppe and Northern Mixed-Grass Prairie?Jordana J. LaFantasie1, Justin D. Derner2 and StephenF. Enloe3; (1) Fort Hays State University, (2) USDAARS, (3) Auburn University

3:40 Influence of Supplemental Legumes that ContainTannins and Saponins on Intake and Diet Digest-ibility in Sheep Fed Grasses that Contain Alka-loids Jacob M. Owens, Frederick D. Provenza, JuanJ. Villalba and Randy W. Wiedmeier; Utah StateUniversity

4:00 There’s More to Diet Selection than Protein andEnergy: The Role of Secondary Compounds inAnimal Grazing Behavior Tiffanny D. Lyman,Fedrick D. Provenza, Juan J. Villalba and Randall D.Weidmeir; Utah State University

4:20 Searching for the Holy Grail - Questions, Myths,Realities Kevin Guinn; USDA NRCS

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Tuesday Afternoon Symposium

Conservation Effects Assessment Project RangelandLiterature Synthesis: An Initial Report

Moderator: Leonard JolleyRoom: Ruidoso

1:00 Rangeland CEAP Literature Synthesis: Objectivesand Goals Leonard W. Jolley; USDA NRCS

1:10 Assessment of Prescribed Grazing as aConservation Practice David D. Briske1, Justin D.Derner2, Daniel G. Milchunas3 and Ken W. Tate4; (1)Texas A&M University, (2) USDA ARS, (3) ColoradoState University, (4) University of California-Davis

1:30 Brush Management and Conservation: NewPerspectives on an Old Problem Steven R. Archer1,Kirk W. Davies2, Timothy E. Fulbright3, KirkMcDaniel4 and Bradford P. Wilcox3; (1) University ofArizona, (2) USDA ARS (3) Texas A&M University,(4) New Mexico State University

1:50 Assessment of Prescribed Fire as a ConservationPractice Samuel D. Fuhlendorf1, David M. Engle1,Ryan Limb1 and Rick Miller2; (1) Oklahoma StateUniversity, (2) Oregon State University

2:10 Assessment of Range Planting as a ConservationPractice Stuart P. Hardegree1, Bruce A. Roundy2,Nancy L. Shaw3, Corey A. Moffet1, Thomas A.Monaco1, Thomas A. Jones1 and Edward F. Redente4;(1) USDA ARS, (2) Brigham Young University, (3)US Forest Service, (4) Colorado State University

2:30 Assessment of Rangeland Practices to EnhanceWildlife Paul R. Krausman1, Vernon C. Bleich2, BillBlock3, David Naugle1 and Mark C. Wallace4; (1)University of Montana, (2) California Department ofFish and Wildlife, (3) US Forest Service, (4) TexasTech University

2:50 Break

3:10 Invasive Plant Management Roger L. Sheley1, DanaBlumenthal1, Joe Di’Tomaso2 and Matthew Rinella1;(1) USDA ARS, (2) University of California-Davis

3:30 Evaluating the Influence of Riparian ManagementPractices on Ecosystem Services Melvin R.George1, Chad Boyd2, Randall Jackson3 and KenTate1; (1) University of California-Davis, (2) USDAARS, (3) University of Wisconsin

3:50 Assessment of the Landscape Aspects ofConservation Practices Ben X. Wu1, BrandonBestelmeyer2, Joel Brown3 and Sam Fuhlendorf4; (1)Texas A&M University, (2) USDA ARS, (3) USDANRCS, (4) Oklahoma State University

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4:10 Assessment of the Economic and Social Aspects ofConservation Practices John A. Tanaka1, Mark W.Brunson2 and L. Allen Torell3; (1) Oregon StateUniversity, (2) Utah State University, (3) NewMexico State University

4:30 Discussion Leonard W. Jolley, Moderator; USDANRCS

Tuesday Afternoon Forum

Producers’ Forum: Tales of Tradition and Innova-tion on the New Mexico Range

Moderator: Jim ThorpeRoom: Pecos

1:00 The Native Way John Romero; Laguna SedilloGrazing Association, Laguna, NM

1:30 Generations of Genizaro Virgil Trujillo; AbiquiuGenizaro, Abiquiu, NM

2:00 135 Years of Ranching in Colfax County NM -Things We’ve Learned So Far! Bruce Davis; CSRanch, Cimmaron, NM

2:30 Break

3:00 The Good, the Blond, and the Ugly Alisa Ogden;Ogden Farms and Cattle Co., Loving, NM

3:30 Riding the Express Mike Hobbs; Express UU BarRanch, Cimmarron, NM

4:00 Landscape Architecture: Right or Wrong? SidGoodloe; Carrizo Valley Ranch, Capitan NM

4:30 Panel Discussion: Ranching Challenges andOpportunities in the Land of Enchantment

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Poster Session B

Tuesday Afternoon (1:00 pm - 6:00 pm) andWednesday Morning (8:00 am - 10:00 am)

Poster take down (10:00 am - 11:00 am)

Room: Aragon

Economics, Sociology and Education Posters

Systematically Improving Ecological Site DescriptionDelivery in New Mexico John E. Tunberg and MichaelCarpinelli; USDA NRCS [75]

Ecological and Social Dimensions of Using ExtremePrescribed Fire to Restore Rangeland Ecosystems inTexas David Toledo, Urs P. Kreuter, William E. Grant andDirac Twidwell; Texas A&M University [76]

Communication, Conflict and Science in NaturalResource Collaboration: A Case Study of an InactiveCollaborative Group Aleta K. Rudeen, Maria Fernandez-Gimenez, Jessica Thompson and Paul Meiman; ColoradoState University [77]

Understanding the Impacts of the Memorial MiddleSchool Ag Science Center on Youth Development PeterSkelton and Tom Dormody; New Mexico State University[78]

Managing Your Piece of Texas Mark E. Moseley; USDANRCS [79]

Public Use Hiking Trail at Smoky Valley Ranch Robert A.Nicholson and Mike Goodwin; Kansas Trails Council [80]

Meat Goats in South Dakota Irene Graves; South DakotaState University [81]

Ecology and Management of Grazing, an Online CourseMelvin R. George, Cody M. Sheehy, Stephanie Larson, JohnHarper, Neil McDougald and Roger Ingram; University ofCalifornia [82]

Economic Impact of Toxic Plants on Livestock Produc-tion in Sonora, Mexico Fernando A. Ibarra, MorenoSalomon, Francisco G. Denogean Ballesteros, Martha H.Martin and Arturo Baldenegro; Universidad De Sonora [83]

Creep Feeding and Early Weaning to Increase CalfProduction and Ranch Profitability in Sonora, MexicoFernando A. Ibarra, Cyrene Y. Moreno, Jesus J. Fimbres,Salamon Moreno, Fransico G. Denogean Ballesteros andFernanda L. Leon; Universidad De Sonora, Santa Ana [84]

Is Early Weaning an Option to Increase Calf Productionin Sonora, Mexico? - Ranchers Perceptions Fernando A.Ibarra, Fernanda L. Leon, Martha H. Martin, Francisco G.Denogean, Salomon Moreno and Cyrene Y. Moreno;Universidad de Sonora. [85]

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Satellite Technology Provides Livestock Producers withNew Tools in Tracking Livestock Water Supplies TimothyL. Deboodt; Oregon State University [86]

Perceptions of Oklahoma Residents to Prescribed FireRobert D. Elmore, Brett Cooper, Terrence G. Bidwell andJohn R. Weir; Oklahoma State University [87]

Rangelands: Changes to Improve the Quality andPerformance of an Important SRM Journal Joel R.Brown1 and Ed Fredrickson2; (1) USDA NRCS, (2) USDAARS [88]

Exploring the Relationship Between Community-BasedRangeland Management and Social-Ecological Resilienceof Rural Mongolian Communities Batkhishig Baival andMaria Fernandez-Gimenez; Colorado State University [89]

Transforming Conflict into Collaboration for ImprovedStewardship of Public Rangelands Jennifer S. Arnold1,George Ruyle2, Ginger Cheney3, Wink Crigler4, DougDressler and Wilma Jenkins5, Jim and Clarice Holder6 ,Barbara Marks3 , Macky Trickey7 and Sam Udall8 (1)University of Florida, (2) University of Arizona, (3) MarksRanch, (4) X Diamond Ranch, (5) Double Circle Ranch, (6)Holder Ranch, (7) H-V Ranch and (8) X Cross Ranch [90]

University Science and a Third Party Role inParticipatory Adaptive Management Adriana Sulak, LynnHuntsinger; University of California-Berkeley [91]

Wildlife Posters

Birds at Home on the Range: South Dakota GrasslandCoalition Bird Watching Tour Kyle Schell and AlexanderSmart; South Dakota State University [92]

Evaluating the Extent of Coyote Depredation on IllinoisCattle and Sheep Operations Justin W. Rickard1, B.R.Wiegand1 and K.R. Brooks2; (1) University of Missouri, (2)Oklahoma State University [93]

The Dark Kangaroo Mouse: Microdipodopsmegacephalus, an Endemic Species to North AmericaRuth Walker, Ashley Haug, Loreen Woolstenhulme, HalBlack, Janene Auger and Steven Petersen; Brigham YoungUniversity [94]

Predicting Sage-Grouse Nesting Habitat at MultipleSpatial Scales in Southeastern Oregon Steven L. Petersen1,Andrew Yost2, Michael Gregg3 and Richard F. Miller4; (1)Brigham Young University, (2) Ecological Consultant, (3)Mid-Columbia River National Wildlife Refuge Complex, (4)Oregon State University [95]

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Evaluation of Diet Quality Predictions for PronghornAntelope (Antilocapra americana) Using Fecal NIRSCalibrations from Surrogate Species John A. Kava1,Douglas R. Tolleson1, Stephen D. Prince2, Kris K. Banik2 andLarry R. Bright3; (1) The University of Arizona, (2) TexasA&M University, (3) US Forest Service [96]

Velocity of Rocky Mountain Elk (Cervus elaphus nelsonii)Grazing a Northeast Oregon Pasture Gail J. Woodside1,Douglass E. Johnson1, Patrick E. Clark2, David C.Ganskopp2, Martin Vavra3, Brian L. Dick3 and Mitchel G.Wilkinson1; (1) Oregon State University, (2) USDA ARS, (3)US Forest Service [97]

Grazing Posters

Changes in Digestibility of Mature Forage with Additionof Juniperus monosperma or alpha-Pinene Christine Roof,Laura Dawdy, Shanna L. Lodge-Ivey and Mark K. Petersen;New Mexico State University [98]

Effect of Juniperus monosperma on Rumen BacterialDiversity Laura Dawdy, Shanna L. Lodge-Ivey, JohnetteBrowne-Silva, Christine Roof and Mark K. Petersen; NewMexico State University [99]

How Holistic Planned Grazing Differs from RotationalGrazing Richard J. King; USDA-NRCS [100]

Gathering Cows Using Virtual Fencing MethodologiesDean M. Anderson1 and Daniela Rus2; (1) USDA-ARS, (2)MIT Computer Science and Artificial IntelligenceLaboratory [101]

Are “As Excreted Values” Valid in Phosphorus Budgetsfor Grazing Beef Cattle? Peter B. Deal1, John J. White2 andC. Randy Bateman3; (1) USDA-NRCS, (2) Osceola CountySoil and Water Conservation District, (3) Osceola CountyCooperative Extension Service [102]

Management Approaches to Accomplish ContemporaryLivestock Production-Conservation Objectives in theShortgrass Steppe Justin D. Derner1, David J. Augustine1,Paul Stapp2 and William K. Lauenroth3; (1) USDA-ARS, (2)California State University-Fullerton, (3) University ofWyoming [103]

Long-Term Grazing Management Impacts on PlantCommunity Diversity in the Missouri Coteau RegionGuojie Wang, Kevin Sedivec, Paul Nyren and Anne Nyren,North Dakota State University [104]

Sheep Grazing Effects on Tall Forb Vegetation Keith D.Klement1 and Corey A. Moffet2; (1) The Noble Foundation,(2) USDA-ARS [105]

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Monitoring Spring Use of Pinyon Juniper Woodlands byCattle in Relation to Tree Canopy Cover Jairo R. MoraDelgado1, Andres F. Cibils2, Christy M. Rubio2, Raul HPeinetti3, Brad F. Cooper2, Mark K. Petersen2 and Shad H.Cox2; (1) Universidad Nacional del Tolima, (2) New MexicoState University, (3) USDA-ARS [106]

Comparing Beef Cow Behavioral Syndromes to Measuresof Productivity and Spatial Use of Rangelands Robert L.Wesley1, Andres F. Cibils1, Emily R. Pollak1, Shad H. Cox1,J. Travis Mulliniks1, Mark K. Petersen1 and Ed L.Fredrickson2; (1) New Mexico State University, (2) USDA-ARS [107]

Livestock GPS Collar Technology Shows Seasonality ofLivestock Grazing Behaviour on Complex Landscapes inthe Montane Region of Southwestern Alberta Michael J.Alexander1, Joann Skilnick2 and Craig DeMaere1; (1) AlbertaSustainable Resource Development, (2) University ofCalgary, Calgary [108]

Integrating Livestock Grazing and Timber Productionwithin Forested Lands of Alberta Jillian Kaufmann1,Edward Bork1 and Mike Alexander;2 (1) University ofAlberta, (2) Alberta Sustainable Resource Development[109]

Protein Supplement Placement Affects Utilization ofWeeping Lovegrass by Cattle in Central ArizonaChristine A. Thiel1, John A. Kava2, Doug Tolleson2, JimSprinkle2, Vanessa J. Prileson1 and William Barcus1; (1) USForest Service, (2) The University of Arizona [110]

Botanical Composition of the Diet of Goats and Sheep inNative Caatinga, Ceara, Brazil Antonia Edna DoNascimento and J. Maurice Shelton; Universidade Estadualdo Cerá [111]

Seasonal Forage Production, Quality, and LivestockUtilization Dynamics in Meadows and Adjacent AspenStands Bobette E. Jones1, Kenneth W. Tate2 and David F.Lile3; (1) US Forest Service, (2) University of California-Davis, (3) University of California [112]

DNA Fecal Analysis as a Tool for Cattle DietDetermination in Rangelands Jose Alberto Perez-Amaro,Ricardo Mata-Gonzalez and Oscar Riera-Lizarazu; OregonState University [113]

Developing Pasture Growth Curves Using Hay YieldTrials and Climatic Data Edward A. Petersen; USDA-NRCS [114]

Clinoptilolite as a Supplement to Reduce the ToxicEffects of High-Sulfate Water Heather A. Richter, KennethOlson, Patricia Johnson and Cody Wright; South DakotaState University [115]

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Patch-Grazing to Promote Structural HeterogeneityAlexander Smart1 and Kyle Kelsey2; (1) South Dakota StateUniversity, (2) US Fish & Wildlife Service [116]

Riparian Systems, Water, Climate Posters

Infiltration and Runoff Influenced by Grassland in theMedian and Low Chihuahua Conchos River WatershedsOscar Viramontes-Olivas, Carmelo Pinedo-Alvarez, VictorReyes-Gomez, Alfonso Sánchez-Muñoz, Carlos Ortega-Ochoa and Gerardo Bezanilla-Enriquez; UniversidadAutonoma de Chihuahua [117]

Under-Canopy and Interspace Soil Moisture andTemperature of One-Seed Juniper Stands Hector Ramirez,Sam Fernald and Andres Cibils; New Mexico StateUniversity [118]

Evapotranspiration in Western Juniper of CentralOregon Candy Mollnau1, Mike Newton1 and TamzenStringham2; (1) Oregon State University; (2) University ofNevada [119]

Scaling Snow Accumulation Patterns about Big MountainSagebrush Molly E. Tedesche, Steven R. Fassnacht and PaulMeiman; Colorado State University [120]

Hydrologic Responses to Western Juniper Removal: TheCamp Creek Paired Watershed Study Timothy L.Deboodt1, Michael P. Fisher2, John C. Buckhouse1 and JohnSwanson3; (1) Oregon State University, (2) Central OregonCommunity College, (3) BLM [121]

Interpretation of Hummocks Relative to the Condition ofWetlands in Colorado Andrew W. Don Carlos, Alan D.Bright, Paul J. Meiman, Joe E. Brummer and David J.Cooper; Colorado State University [122]

Wild Ungulate Herbivory of Willow Outside of NationalParks is a Significant Management Consideration Paul J.Meiman1, Mark S. Thorne2, Quentin D. Skinner3, Michael A.Smith3 and Jerrold L. Dodd4; (1) Colorado State University,(2) University of Hawaii at Manoa, (3) University ofWyoming, (4) Cameron University [123]

Twenty Years of Channel Cross-Section Monitoring onCedar Creek: Implications for Restoration andMonitoring David F. Lile, Kenneth W. Tate, Missy Merrill-Davies and Donald L. Lancaster; University of California[124]

Impact of Urbanization on Decomposition and Climate ofEphemeral Riparian Areas in South Central ArizonaAmy Hutmacher-Glancy1, Douglas Green1, Jonthan Martin2,Michael Crimmins2 and George Zaimes2; (1) Arizona StateUniversity, (2) University of Arizona [125]

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Adaptive Phenotypic Plasticity of Pseudoroegneriaspicata: Response of Stomatal Density, Leaf Area andBiomass to Changes in Water Supply and IncreasedTemperature Amber L. Greenall1, Lauchlan H. Fraser1,Cameron Carlyle2, Roy Turkington2 and Cynthia RossFriedman1; (1) Thompson Rivers University, (2) Universityof British Columbia [126]

Impact of Oil and Gas Infrastructure Development in LaManga Canyon, NM Shawn W. Salley1 and Joel R. Brown2;(1) New Mexico State University, (2) USDA NRCS [127]

Walter Diagrams of Oregon Corinne M. Duncan1, Adele L.Woerz2 and Douglas E. Johnson1; (1) Oregon StateUniversity, (2) Global Geomatic Solutions [128]

Effects of Acequias and Groundwater Levels on RiparianVegetation, Evapotranspiration, and Restoration Ciara J.Cusack, Alexander Fernald and Steve Guldan; New MexicoState University [129]

A Decision Support System for Assisting with StockingRate Decisions During and Following Drought LoriWiles1, Gale Dunn1, Arnold Norman2 and Jeff Printz2; (1)USDA ARS, (2) USDA NRCS [130]

Adapting Private Forest and Ranch Management toMitigate Climate Change: Policies and Practices HannahGosnell1 and Susan Charnley2; (1) Oregon State University, (2)US Forest Service [131]

Assessment and Monitoring Posters

The Role of GIS in Natural Resource Management onMilitary Training Installations Across North Dakota CarlE.A. Piper1, Kevin K. Sedivec2, Dennis Whitted2 and JimBennington3; (1) Piper Land Resource Services, L.L.C., (2)North Dakota State University, (3) Camp Gilbert C. Grafton,North Dakota National Guard [132]

Floristic Quality of Native Northern Tallgrass PrairiePastures in Eastern South Dakota Matthew Nelson andAlexander Smart; South Dakota State University [133]

Rangeland Assessment Methods Guide: from the Field toRemote Sensing Karen E. Colson, Heather Swartz and JasonKarl; The Nature Conservancy [134]

Landscape-Scale GIS Modeling of Utah Native ForbPopulations D. Bracken Davis and Steven L. Petersen;Brigham Young University [135]

A GIS Model for Mechanized Maneuver TrainingCapability on US Army Installations in Alaska Erik C.Jackson; Colorado State University [136]

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Comparison of Pinyon and Juniper Cover and DensityMeasurements Obtained Through Remotely SensedImagery and Field Based Rangeland Studies Matthew D.Madsen1, Bracken D. Davis2, Steven L. Petersen1 and DanielL. Zvirzdin1; (1) Brigham Young University, (2) UtahDivision of Wildlife Resources [137]

Rangeland Analysis by LANDSAT TM and IRS-1CImage Fusion in Chihuahua, Mexico Carmelo Pinedo-Alvarez, Nathalie Hernandez-Quiroz, Oscar Viramontes-Olivas, Alfonso Sánchez-Muñoz and Rey Quintana-Martínez; Universidad de Chihuahua, Mexico [138]

Reflectance Measurements of Vegetation Communities inArid Rangelands of New Mexico Jerry C. Ritchie1, AlRango1 and Thomas J. Schmugge2; (1) USDA ARS, (2) NewMexico State University [139]

Drivers of Dissolved Oxygen in Rangeland Streamswithin the Upper Feather River Watershed Holly A.George, K.W. Tate and K.N. Schmidt; University ofCalifornia-Davis [140]

Climate Information for ESDs when Climate Stations DoNot Fit Robert L. Gillaspy and Ian Reid; USDA NRCS[141]

Almanac Proves an Accurate Tool for Simulating PlantProductivity in Sagebrush Steppe Sites in the WesternUnited States Mari-Vaughn V. Johnson1, James R. Kiniry1,Mark Weltz1, Lucrecia Rodriguez2 and Kimberly Rollins2;(1) USDA ARS, (2) University of Nevada [142]

Ecological Site Descriptions from Paper Copy (Hidden ona Shelf in the Office) to Web-Based Technology (AvailableAnytime)! Justin D. Clary; USDA NRCS [143]

Correlating Hyperthermic Soils and Ecological Sites inthe Chihuahuan Desert of West Texas Michael R. Margoand Nelson A. Rolong; USDA NRCS [144]

Post Fire Monitoring Using Remote Sensing for theSouthern Nevada Complex Randy A. McKinley1, KarenPrentice2, Neil Frakes3, Matt Brooks4 and John R. Matchett4;(1) ASRC Research and Technology Solutions, (2) BLM, (3)Eastern Nevada Landscape Coalition, 4) USGS [145]

Comparing Herbaceous Vegetation Sampling Methods onthe Coconino National Forest, Arizona, USA Edward C.Rhodes, Doug Tolleson, William Shaw, Eric Twombly, JohnKava and Tim Brown; Texas A&M University [146]

Changes in Methodology for Monitoring Long-TermVegetation Quadrats on the Jornada Experimental RangeAmalia L. Slaughter1, Connie J. Maxwell1, Valerie K.LaPlante1 and Caiti M. Steele2; (1) USDA ARS, (2) NewMexico State University [147]

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Comparing Sagebrush Ecosystem Health AcrossGradients of Habitat Fragmentation Mae L. Smith, HollyCopeland, Ivan Dario Valencia, Amy Pocewicz, BrianMealor and Joseph Kiesecker; The Nature Conservancy[148]

How to Document Soil Change Without Monitoring: AMulti-Scale Inventory Procedure for Dynamic SoilProperties, Soil Change, and Plant Community DynamicsArlene J. Tugel1, Skye A. Wills2, Jeffrey E. Herrick2 and PeteBiggam3; (1) USDA NRCS, (2) USDA ARS, (3) NationalPark Service [149]

Challenges in the Setup and Analysis of a PairedWatershed Study in Oregon’s High Desert Michael P.Fisher1, Tim Deboodt2, John C. Buckhouse2 and JohnSwanson3; (1) Central Oregon Community College, (2)Oregon State University, (3) BLM [150]

BLM Vale District Ecological Site Inventory (ESI):Correlating Percent Foliar Cover with Digital ImageryCharles D. Tackman and Michael B. Hale; BLM [151]

Cumulative Landscape Assessment and RestorationPlanning Using the Landscape Toolbox Don J. Major,BLM; The Nature Conservancy [152]

Rangeland Health and Monitoring, Basis for aRangeland Management and Rehabilitation Plan: A CaseStudy, “El Uno” Ranch, Janos, Chihuahua Mario H.Royo1, P. Jurado1, J. S. Sierra1, A. Melgoza2 and M.Martinez; (1) INIFAP, (2) Universidad Autonoma deChihuahua [153]

Effect of Season on Spatial Utilization by Cattle (Bos spp)on Rangeland in South Florida Brandee N. Williams andMimi Williams; USDA NRCS [154]

Ecological Status of Protected and UnprotectedRangelands in Syria: Monitoring the Impact of Grazingon Rangeland Vegetation Dynamics in ThreeClimatological Zones Adrienne Tastad, Mounir Louhaichi,Nabil Battikha, Amin Khatib and Rajender Parsad;University of Saskatchewan [155]

A Spatial Modeling Approach to Map Greater Sage-Grouse Habitat Jerry Barker1, Jim Robb1, Ryan Stage1 andNoreen Roster2; (1) Walsh Environmental Scientists andEngineers LLC and the University of Colorado, (2) Ecologyand Environment, Inc [156]

Techniques for Developing Plant Parameters forSimulating Native Plants with the Almanac Model JamesR. Kiniry, Mari-Vaughn V. Johnson and Mark Weltz; USDAARS [157]

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Geospatial Analysis of Aerial Photography to IdentifyPatterns of Grazing on Northern Great PlainsRangelands Joshua M. Peterson1, Mindy Hubert1, AmandaGearhart1, Kenneth C. Olson1, Christopher Schauer1, PatriciaS. Johnson1 and D. Terrance Booth2; (1) South Dakota StateUniversity, (2) USDA ARS [158]

Excellence in Range Management Posters

Haleakala Ranch: Managing for Resource Stability,Economic Productivity, and Community Well Being inHawaii Greg Friel1, Mark S. Thorne2, and Matt Stevenson2;(1) Haleakala Ranch, (2) University of Hawaii at Manoa[159]

Cooperative Sagebrush Steppe Restoration Initiative/Implementation in California Thomas Esgate; Pit RiverResource Conservation District, California [160]

Willis Ranch, Hendry Co. Florida George Poole; NRCS[161]

Lykes Ranch, Glades & Highland Co, Florida Chad R.Ellis; NRCS [162]

Walpole Ranch, Okeechobee Co., Florida Chad George;NRCS [163]

Range Manager of the Year Poster Lee E Hughes; BLM[164]

Roaring Springs Ranch: Excellence in RangeManagement and Education Stacy Davies1 and TamzenStringham2; (1) Roaring Springs Ranch, (2) University ofNevada, Reno [165]

Canadian Cattlemen’s Association NationalEnvironmental Stewardship Award Peggy Strankman,Canadian Cattlemen’s Association [166]

The Clarence Burch Award: Building Bridges from theRadical Center Craig Conley and Michael Bain; TheQuivira Coalition, NM [167]

Arizona’s Ranch Manager of the Year, Les Shannon ofthe Sands Ranch - Arizona Section SRM; RangeManager of the Year Recipient Dean Fish1, Emilio ECarrillo2, and Katie E Cline2; (1) University of Arizona, (2)USDA-NRCS [168]

A Range of Opportunity Cheryl Nielsen1, Roger Gates2,Matthew Odden1, Tate Lantz3, Jeff Smeenk4, and YvetteKing5; (1) NRCS, (2) South Dakota State University WestRiver Ag Center, (3) Rapid City Field Support Office, (4)Center of the Nation Cattle Company, (5) Butte CountyConservation District, SD [169]

JX Cattle Company: Excellence in New Mexico RangeManagement Mimi Sidwell and Tom Sidwell; JX CattleCo., NM [170]

Philmont Scout Ranch: Managing Rangelands,Livestock, and Boy Scouts Since 1938 Terrell Baker; NewMexico State University [171]

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Oswald Ranch Excellence in Grazing Management DanNosal [172]

New Mexico State Lands Stewardship Ann Demint, ShawnKnox, and Thaddeus Kostrubala; New Mexico State LandOffice [173]

Rangeland Management in Southern Brazil: A Case fromSanta Catarina Pasture Outreach Program AbdonSchmitt1, Bill Murphy2, and Juan Pablo2;(1) University ofSanta Cararina, Brazil, (2) The University of Vermont [174]

Restoration on the Landscape Scale: Breaking ThroughRoadblocks to Implementation Don Ellsworth; BLM [175]

Johnson Ranch Company: Snapshot of Wyoming’sExcellence in Rangeland Stewardship John Johnson1,Reese Johnson1 and Marji Patz2; (1) Johnson RanchCompany, (2) NRCS [176]

Integrated Approach to Improve the Health, Vigor, andProduction of Their Rangeland Resource Base WhileMarketing A Natural Beef Product to the Public Kim-berly Diller, Ben Berlinger and Harvey Sprock; USDA-NRCS [177]

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“Caring for the Land and Serving People”

The objectives for rangeland management within national forests and national grasslands are to:• Protect basic soil and water resources, provide

for ecological diversity, maintain environmental quality, and meet public needs for interrelated resource uses.

• Integrate management of range vegetation with other resource programs to achieve multiple use objectives.

• Provide forage for livestock, wildlife food and habitat, outdoor recreation, and other resource values dependent on range vegetation.

• Contribute to the economic and social well-being of people by providing opportunities for economic diversity and by promoting stability for communities that depend on range resources for their livelihood.

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Wednesday Morning Technical Session

Undergraduate Papers

Chair: Loreen WoolstenhulmeRoom: Santa Ana

8:00 Prescribed Fire Impacts on Red Imported FireAnt (Solenopsis Invicta) Densities Across ThreeEcoregions in Texas Charles J. Turney, DiracTwidwell, William E. Rogers; Texas A&M University

8:20 Why is There a Burn Ban? An Evaluation ofIndices Used for Their Establishment JordanHerrin, Dirac Twidwell, Charles Taylor; Texas A&MUniversity

8:40 A Methodology for Developing Ecological SiteDescriptions Jamin K. Johanson1 and Shane A.Green2; (1) Utah State University, (2) USDA-NRCS

9:00 Dual-Purpose Utilization of SAT System: RangeReclamation During Drought and Waste Treat-ment Parvaneh Peykanpour, Hadi Radnezhad,Maryam Foroughi Abari, Mohammad Nejati; IslamicAzad University of Science and Research, Iran

9:20 Effects of Stratification, Warm Treatment,Scarification on the Emergence of Yellow-Flowered Alfalfa (Medicago Sativa Subsp. Falcata)Seeds Diane M. Narem, Lan Xu, Roger N. Gates,Arvid Boe, Patricia S. Johnson; South Dakota StateUniversity

9:40 Common Goals, Different Backgrounds: AStudents Perspective on Working Together HaileyCrozier; Utah State University

10:00 Break

10:20 Seedling Recruitment of Wyoming Big Sagebrushafter Harrowing Cortnie Prestwich, Jim Davis,Loreen Woolstenhulme; Brigham Young University

10:40 The Effect of Environmental Factors Versus LifeHistory Strategy on Reproductive Success ofLupinus Spp Across the Western United StatesKassie L Puckett, Loreen Woolstenhulme, DelbertWiens; Brigham Young University

11:00 Effect of Topographical Position on BotanicalComposition in the Nebraska Sandhills Jessica L.Milby, Mitchell B. Stephenson, Walter H. Schacht,Jerry D. Volesky, Eric M. Mousel; University ofNebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln

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11:20 Nest Site Selection by Pleskes Ground Jay HadiRadnezhad1, Mohammad Kaboli2, MahmoudKarami2, Maryam Foroughi1, Parvaneh Peykanpour1;(1) Islamic Azad University of Science and Research,(2) Tehran University, Iran

11:40 Grizzly Bear Use of Managed and UnmanagedForests Jessica D. Humes; Brigham Young Univer-sity

Wednesday Morning Technical Session

Range Plants

Chair: Carlos VillalobosRoom: Sandia

8:40 Western and Searls Prairie Clover: NorthAmerican Legumes for Rangeland Restoration inthe Western US Douglas A. Johnson1, KishorBhattarai2, B. Shaun Bushman2 and Kevin J.Connors2; (1) USDA ARS, (2) Utah State University

9:00 Environmental Effects on Concentrations of PlantSecondary Compounds: Finding a HealthyBalance Andrea K. Clemensen and Fred Provenza;Utah State University

9:20 Germination Rates of Hulled and Dehulled Ww-B.Dahl [Bothriochloa bladhii (Retz) S.T. Blake]Seed Exposed at Different Storage Times JoseFrancisco Villanueva

1, Carlos Villalobos

2, Carlton M.

Britton2 and Miguel Luna-Luna

1; (1) INIFAP,

Mexico, (2) Texas Tech University

9:40 Developmental Morphology of Ww-B.Dahl[Bothriochloa bladhii (Retz) S. T. Blake] Grass atThree Growth Stages Jose Francisco Villanueva1,Carlos Villalobos2, Carlton M. Britton2 and MiguelLuna-Luna1; (1) INIFAP, Mexico, (2) Texas TechUniversity

10:00 Break

10:20 Defoliation Patterns and DevelopmentalMorphology on Regrowth Rates, Forage Yield,and Quality in Ww-B.Dahl [Bothriochloa bladhii(Retz) S.T. Blake] at Three Growth Stages JoseFrancisco Villanueva1, Carlos Villalobos2 and CarltonM. Britton2; (1) INIFAP, Mexico, (2) Texas TechUniversity

10:40 Monitoring Update of the Five Listed Plants and aCandidate Plant on the Arizona Strip 1986-2008Lee E. Hughes; BLM

11:00 Developing a Bio-herbicide to Control AnnualBrome Grasses Thomas Stewart, Susan E. Meyer,Phil S. Allen; Brigham Young University

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Wednesday Morning Technical Session

Weed Management with Herbivory

Chair: Ed FredricksonRoom: Cochiti

8:40 Consumption of Salt Cedar and Willow Baccharisby Boer-Cross Goats Alfredo Munoz, Cody B. Scott,Corey J. Owens and Chad H. George; Angelo StateUniversity

9:00 Establishment of Broom Snakeweed FollowingGrazing for Biocontrol Michael H. Ralphs; USDAARS

9:20 Recovery of Sulfur Cinquefoil Seed Ingested bySheep and Goats Rachel A. Frost, Jeffrey C. Mosleyand Brent L. Roeder; Montana State University

9:40 Effects of Goat Grazing on Yellow StarthistleBrianna J. Goehring and Karen L. Launchbaugh;University of Idaho

10:00 Break

10:20 Effect of Juniper Consumption on Meat Quality inMeat Goats Matthew W. Menchaca, Cody B. Scott,Kirk Braden, Loree Branham and Corey J. Owens;Angelo State University

10:40 Reducing Fuel Load of Key Cheatgrass [Bromustectorum L] Dominated Range Sites by the Use ofLivestock Grazing L. Schmelzer1, B.L. Perryman1,K. Conley1, B. Bruce1, T. Wuliji1, K.L. Piper1, S.R.Swanson1, B.W Schultz2 and R.C. Torell2; (1)University of Nevada Reno, (2) University of Nevada

11:00 Weed Management Using Goats: Effects on WaterInfiltration Rate Sandy Tartowski and DarrenJames; USDA ARS

Wednesday Morning Technical Session

Climate and Climate Change

Chair: Sam FernaldRoom: Jemez

8:40 Climatic Regulation of Seasonal and Inter-AnnualVariability in Net Ecosystem Exchange of CO2 onRangelands H. Wayne Polley, W. Emmerich, JamesA. Bradford, Douglas A. Johnson, Tony Svejcar,Raymond Angell, Rebecca Phillips, Keirith Snyderand Jack A. Morgan; USDA ARS

9:00 Climate Change, Spring Snow, and the Future ofBluebunch Wheatgrass Populations Harmony J.Dalgleish and Peter B. Adler; Utah State University

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9:20 Chihuahua Cattle Industry and a Decade ofDrought: Economical and Ecological ImplicationsCarlos Ortega-Ochoa1, Carlos Villalobos2 and JavierMartinez-Nevarez1; (1) Universidad Autonoma deChihuahua, Mexico, (2) Texas Tech University

9:40 Pasture Type and Site Effects on Annual NitrousOxide Emission Rate Vern S. Baron, Reynald L.Lemke, David G. Young, J.A. Basarab, M. AnneNaeth and Alan D. Iwaasa; Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

10:00 Break

10:20 Simulation of Drought and Grazing Effects onForage Growth in the Northern Mixed Grass Zoneof the USA Using the GPFarm-Range ModelSamuel Adiku1, Gale Dunn2, Lajpat Ahuja2, JenniferMuscha2, Allan Andales1, Luis Garcia1, LanceVermeire2 and Melissa Reyes-Fox2; (1) ColoradoState University, (2) USDA ARS

10:40 Responding to Climate Change, Range Manage-ment that Promotes Resilient Habitat James C.Catlin; Wild Utah Project

11:00 Testing the Effects of Climate Change on theCompetitive Ability of Two Invasive GrasslandSpecies: Spotted Knapweed and Yellow ToadflaxAmber L. Greenall and Lauchlan H. Fraser; Thomp-son Rivers University

Wednesday Morning Symposium

Development of Comprehensive Grazing PolicyGuidelines: A Case for Adaptive Collaborationwithin the Rangeland Profession

Moderator: David BriskeRoom: Zuni/Tesuque

8:30 Development of Comprehensive Grazing PolicyGuidelines: Context and Objectives David D.Briske; Texas A&M University

8:50 The Respective Roles of Science and ManagementWithin the Rangeland Profession Nathan F. Sayre;University of California-Berkeley

9:10 Experimental Evidence for Grazing SystemResearch: What Does it Tell Us? Justin D. Derner1,David D. Briske2, Daniel G. Milchunas3 and Ken W.Tate4; (1) USDA ARS, (2) Texas A&M University, (3)Colorado State University, (4) University ofCalifornia-Davis

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9:30 Experimental Evidence from Grazing SystemResearch: What Are Its Limits? Frederick D.Provenza; Utah State University

9:50 Break

10:10 A Management Perspective of Prescribed GrazingBob Budd; Wyoming Wildlife and Natural ResourceTrust

10:30 Grazing Management in the Context of Social andEcological Systems Lynn Huntsinger; University ofCalifornia-Berkeley

10:50 Strengthening Science-Management LinkagesThrough Collaborative Adaptive ManagementMaria E. Fernandez-Gimenez; Colorado StateUniversity

11:10 Discussion David Briske (Moderator)

Wednesday Morning Symposium

Wildlife Habitat Management on Rangelands UsingUSDA NRCS Conservation Innovation Grants

Moderator: Wendell GilgertRoom: Ruidoso

8:00 Opening Remarks Wendell Gilgert, USDA-NRCS

8:10 A Community-based Approach to ApplyingInnovative Technologies for Monitoring andRestoring Sagebrush Habitats in Wyoming PhilGonzales and Kikki Lohse; NRCS

8:30 Ecological, Economic, and Social Dimensions ofUsing Summer Fire to Restore Ecosystems in theSouthern Plains of the US Urs Kreuter1, W. RichardTeague1, William E. Rogers1, C. A. Taylor1 and D.Lynn Drawe2; (1)Texas A&M University, (2) WelderWildlife Foundation

8:50 Community-supported Conservation of GrizzlyBears on Private Agricultural Lands, MontanaSeth Wilson; The Blackfoot Challenge, Montana

9:10 Adoption of Oak Savannah Management onPrivate Lands in the Willamette Valley, OregonDrue De Berry; American Forest Foundation

9:30 Panel Discussion

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Wednesday Morning Forum

Linking Restoration of Rangeland Communities andProcesses to Societal Outcomes: The Whys and theHows

Moderator: Lori HidingerRoom: Picuris

8:00 Opening Remarks Mark Neff; Arizona StateUniversity

8:10 Changing the Model of Science and Society: TheNeed to Design Restoration to Address SocietalNeeds Clark Miller, Dan Sarewitz and Lori Hidinger;Arizona State University

8:40 Prioritizing Rangeland Research and RestorationBased on Societal Outcomes Jeffrey E. Herrick1,Dennis Thompson2, Brandon T. Bestelmeyer1, Joel R.Brown2 and Kris M. Havstad1; (1) USDA ARS, (2)USDA NRCS

9:10 Fire, Sagebrush, and People David A. Pyke; USGS

9:40 Post-Fire Restoration of Grazing Lands Invadedby Cheatgrass: Integrating Multiple Values RonaldT. Sieg1, Carolyn Hull Sieg2 and Andi S. Rogers1; (1)Arizona Game and Fish, (2) US Forest Service

10:10 Break

10:20 Restoring Rangelands, Restoring Trust: FactorsInfluencing Citizen Acceptance of ManagedChange Mark W. Brunson; Utah State University

10:50 Panel and Audience Discussion

11:20 Summary Lori Hidinger; Arizona State University

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Thursday Morning Technical Session

Invasive Species/Weed Management

Chair: James AnsleyRoom: Santa Ana

8:00 Assessing Competitiveness of Alkali SacatonGenotypes Exposed to Invasive Weeds Franklin P.Bartlett1, Ann L. Hild1, Karin E. Bergum1, Brian A.Mealor2 and Thomas Smith3; (1) University ofWyoming, (2) The Nature Conservancy, (3) U.S.Army Corps of Engineers

8:20 Use of Imazapic to Control Cheatgrass andImprove Rangeland Seedings Christo Morris,Thomas A. Monaco and Craig W. Rigby; USDA ARS

8:40 Will Supplementation with Onions Reduce theLikelihood of Bitterweed Toxicity in Sheep? CodyJ. Bundick1, Cody B. Scott1, Corey J. Owens1, ErikaS. Campbell2 and Richard Brantely3; (1) Angelo StateUniversity, (2) Texas Agrilife Research Center, (3)University of Texas

9:00 Investigating Possible Mechanisms RegulatingBluegrass Abundance in Rough Fescue GrasslandsSteven C. Tannas1, Edward W. Bork1 and Walter D.Willms2; (1) University of Alberta, (2) Agricultureand Agri-Food Canada

9:20 Effect of Aminopyralid on Non-Target VegetationAfter Aerial Application Celestine Duncan1, AndyKulla2, Mary Halstvedt3 and Robert A. Masters3; (1)Weed Management Services, (2) US Forest Service,(3) Dow AgroSciences

9:40 Competitive and Complementary ForageDynamics of Weed Control in EstablishedPastures Containing Mixed Swards Erin M.McLeod, Edward W. Bork, Jane R. King and LindaM. Hall; University of Alberta

10:00 Break

10:20 Control of Invasive Malta and Yellow Starthistlesin Central Arizona John H. Brock; Arizona StateUniversity

10:40 Forage Quality and Production of LehmannLovegrass (Eragrostis lehmanniana) in InvadedRangelands of Central Chihuahua, MexicoAlfonso Sánchez-Muñoz1, Karen R. Hickman2 andDaren Redfearn2; (1) Universidad Autónoma deChihuahua, (2) Oklahoma State University

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11:00 Growth in Mixtures of Bluebunch Wheatgrass,Cheatgrass, and Squarrose Knapweed UnderFactorial Nitrogen and Phosphorus Additions to aLow-Nutrient Soil Jeffrey Burnham1, EugeneSchupp1 and Thomas Monaco2; (1) Utah StateUniversity, (2) USDA ARS

11:20 Mapping Medusahead Coverage Across theCalifornia Central Valley Using LANDSAT 7Imagery Corey M. Cherr and Emilio A. Laca;University of California-Davis

11:40 Patterns of Guineagrass Invasion Dean W.Wiemers1, Timothy E. Fulbright1, Alfonso Ortega-Santos1, William P. Kuvlesky1, George A. Rasmussen1

and Richard R. Riddle2; (1) Texas A&M University-Kingsville, (2) United States Navy

Thursday Morning Technical Session

Wildlife I

Chair: Jeff BeckRoom: Taos

8:00 Spatial and Temporal Habitat CharacteristicsDriving Greater Sage-Grouse (Centrocercusurophasianus) Habitat Use in Central OregonMark T. Freese1, Richard F. Miller1, Steven L.Petersen2 and Andrew C. Yost1; (1) Oregon StateUniversity, (2) Brigham Young University

8:20 Trajectory of Avian Habitat Structure in aGrassland With Recent Reductions in Fire ReturnInterval and Stocking Rate Sherry A. Leis1, DavidG. Peitz2 and Kevin M. James2; (1) Missouri StateUniversity, (2) National Park Service

8:40 Effects of Supplemental Feeding and Density ofWhite-Tailed Deer on the Spatial Distribution ofSmall Mammals William A. Moseley1, Susan M.Cooper2, David G. Hewitt1, Timothy E. Fulbright1 andCharles A. DeYoung1; (1) Texas A&M University, (2)Texas AgriLife

9:00 Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus colchicus)Production and Nest Site Selection on Post-Contract Conservation Reserve Program LandsBenjamin A. Geaumont, K.K. Sedivec and C.S.Schauer; North Dakota State University

9:20 Waterfowl Production and Nest Site Selection onPost-Contract Conservation Reserve ProgramLands in Southwest North Dakota B.A. Geaumont,C.S. Schauer and K.K. Sedivec; North Dakota StateUniversity

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9:40 Comparison of Two Nest Searching TechniquesUsed in Ring-Necked Pheasant Nesting StudiesB.A. Geaumont, K.K. Sedivec and C.S. Schauer;North Dakota State University

Thursday Morning Technical Session

Economics, Sociology and Policy

Chair: Rhonda SkaggsRoom: Cochita

8:00 Leopold, Stegner, and the Foundation of a NewAgrarianism Courtney White; The Quivira Coalition

8:20 Exploring the Linkages Between Socio-Economicand Ecological Processes in RangelandLandscapes Rhonda K. Skaggs1 and BrandonBestelmeyer2; (1) New Mexico State University, (2)USDA ARS

8:40 Rangelands of Band-I-Amir and Ajar Valley,Bamian Province, Afghanistan Donald J. Bedunah;University of Montana

9:00 An Integrated Social, Economic and EcologicConceptual (ISEEC) Framework for ConsideringRangeland Sustainability William E. Fox1, Urs P.Kreuter1, Dan W. McCollum2, John E. Mitchell2 andLouis E. Swanson3; (1) Texas A&M University, (2)Rocky Mountain Research Station, (3) ColoradoState University

9:20 Development of a Grazing Fee Formula for UtahTrust Lands: Analysis and Recommendations NeilR. Rimbey1, Ron Torgerson2, Scott Chamberlain2,Kim Christy2 and E. Bruce Godfrey3; (1) Universityof Idaho, (2) Utah Trust Lands, (3) Utah StateUniversity

9:40 Measuring Total Sustainable Income fromCalifornia Ranches: An Economic Analysis ofNatural and Human Resources Management LarryC. Forero1, Jose L. Oviedo2, John M. Harper1,William E. Frost1 and Lynn Huntsinger2; (1)University of California Cooperative Extension, (2)University of California-Berkeley

10:00 Break

10:20 Historic Forage Productivity and Cost of Capitalfor Cow-Calf Ranches in California PhilipBrownsey, Barbara Allen-Diaz, Jose Luis Oviedo,Lynn Huntsinger and Amy Romanek; University ofCalifornia-Berkeley

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10:40 Farmer’s Perception about the Effect ofRangeland Management on Dairy Herd HealthAbdon L. Schmitt1, Alan Rizzoli2, Giliane Basco2,Rafael Knabem1 and Juan Pablo3; (1) University ofSanta Catarina, Brazil, (2) Companhia Integrada deDesenvolvimento AgrÌcola de Santa Catarina, (3)Gund Institute, University of Vermont

11:00 Landowner Perceptions of Fire, Grazing, andInvasive Species in a Prairie LandscapeFragmented by Cropland and Trees Elise Regen1,Lois Wright Morton1, Dave Engle2 and James Miller3;(1) Iowa State University, (2) University ofOklahoma, (3) University of Illinois

11:20 Out of the Past: A Journey Through the Land-scapes of Livestock Production Cody M. Sheehyand Melvin R. George; University of California-Davis

Thursday Morning Technical Session

Assessment and Monitoring

Chair: Ken BoykinRoom: Zuni/Tesuque

8:20 Lessons From a Decade of Rangeland Monitoringin Washington State L.H. Hardesty1, S. Canwell1

and W. Keller2; (1) Washington State University, (2)USDA NRCS

8:40 Wetland Condition Assessment Using the NorthDakota Rapid Assessment Model and the Index ofPlant Community Integrity Edward S. DeKeyser1,Christina L.M. Hargiss1, Donald R. Kirby1 andMichael J. Ell2; (1) North Dakota State University, (2)North Dakota Department of Health

9:00 Relationship of Ecological Site Plant CommunityStructure to Shrubsteppe Songbirds Mary I.Williams1, Ginger B. Paige1, Ann L. Hild1, Thomas L.Thurow1 and Rachel Lauhban2; (1) University ofWyoming, (2) US Fish and Wildlife Service

9:20 Developing a Framework and the TrainingRequired to Expand Cooperative PermitteeMonitoring in Nevada Gary L. McCuin1, BradSchultz2, J. Kent McAdoo3, Bill Dragt3, Ben Bruce4,Barry Perryman4 and Sherm Swanson4; (1) Universityof Nevada Cooperative Extension, Eureka County, (2)University of Nevada Cooperative Extension,Humboldt County, (3) BLM, (4) University ofNevada

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9:40 Comparison of Ground and Aerial SurveyMethods on the Grand River National GrasslandsAmanda L. Gearhart1, D. Terrence Booth2, Kevin K.Sedivec1, Samuel E. Cox2 and Christopher S.Schauer3; (1) North Dakota State University, (2)USDA ARS

10:00 Break

10:20 New and Improved: Montana’s Ecological SiteClassification System Barbara Landgraf Gibbons;USDA NRCS

10:40 Inference Space vs. Sampling Requirements: ASimulation Study of Soil Properties on RangelandEcosites Skye A. Wills1, Jeffery E. Herrick1 andArlene Tugel2; (1) USDA ARS, (2) USDA NRCS

11:00 The Ecosite Picker: A Tool to Field SelectAppropriate Ecological Sites During RangeInventory Cici B. Brooks1 and Kate Peterson2; (1)USDA NRCS, (2) Utah State University

Thursday Morning Symposium

Rangeland Ecohydrology: Key Concepts andApplication to State and Transition Model Develop-ment

Moderators: Jeff Herrick, Sam Fernald,and Brad Wilcox

Room: San Miguel

8:00 Describing Indicators of Rangeland Health: AnInternational Approach to CharacterizingRangeland Ecohydrology Jeffrey E. Herrick1, B.T.Bestelmeyer1, Fee Busby2, Bolormaa Damdinsuren3,Francisco Echavarría Cháirez4, Guodong Han5, MarkMiller6, Mike Pellant7, David Pyke and Pat Shaver8;(1) USDA ARS, (2), Utah State University, (3)Mongolian Research Institute, (4) INIFAP, Mexico,(5) Inner Mongolia University, (6) USGS, (7) BLM,(8) USGS and NRCS

8:20 Ecohydrology of Vegetation Conversion andEcosystem Consequence Travis E. Huxman andSujith Ravi; University of Arizona

8:40 Soil Moisture Response to Tree Thinning inCentral New Mexico Alexander Fernald1, FerhatGokbulak2, Hector Ramirez1 and DawnVanLeeuwen1; (1) New Mexico State University, (2)Istanbul University

9:00 Woody Plant Encroachment: Rainfall, SoilMoisture and Patterns of Plant Water Use KeirithA. Snyder and Michael C. Duniway; USDA ARS

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9:20 Grassland to Woodland Transitions: LinkingHydrology and Vegetation Dynamics Samuel D.Fuhlendorf1, David M. Engle1, Brad Wilcox2, RodneyE. Will1 and Chris Zou1; (1) Oklahoma StateUniversity, (2) Texas A&M University

9:40 Isotopic Records of Plant Water Use – Insightsfrom Archaeological Maize and Columnar CactusSpines David G. Williams; University of Wyoming

10:00 Break

10:20 Potential Impacts of a Changing Climate on PlantCommunity Distribution in the IntermountainWestern USA Mark S. Seyfried1, Danny Marks1,Dave Chandler2 and Anurag Nayak3; (1) USDA ARS,(2) Kansas State University, (3) Boise StateUniversity

10:40 Multiple Ecosystem State Changes Since AD 1700on a Semiarid Hillslope in New Mexico:Cascading Ecohydrological Transitions Craig D.Allen; USGS

11:00 On the Dynamics of Rangeland Management:Fixed Versus Adaptive Stocking Susan Schwinning;Texas State University

11:20 Changing Streamflow in the Edwards PlateauRegion of Central Texas: The Role of WoodyPlants and a Legacy of Overgrazing Bradford P.Wilcox1 and Yun Huang2; (1) Texas A&M University,(2) LBG Guyton

11:40 The Spatial Pattern of Transition (Spot): LinkingPattern, Process, and Scale to State-And-Transition Models Brandon T. Bestelmeyer1, DarrocGoolsby2 and Steven R. Archer3; (1) USDA ARS, (2)New Mexico State University, (3) Arizona StateUniversity

Thursday Morning Symposium

Grazing Systems Research: Focusing on the Managers

Moderator: Joel BrownRoom: Mesilla

8:00 Grazing Systems Research: Focusing on theManagers-Introduction Joel R. Brown1 and Kris M.Havstad2; (1) USDA NRCS, (2) USDA ARS

8:10 The Importance of Rotational Grazing Systems inthe Implementation of NRCS ConservationPolicies and Programs William Puckett and DennisW. Thompson; USDA NRCS

8:20 Relevant Hypotheses and Statistical Approachesfor Investigating Rotational Grazing in a Range-land Context Brien E. Norton; Utah State University

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8:40 Land Managers’ Decisions about GrazingSystems: Understanding the Contexts of ChangeMark W. Brunson; Utah State University

9:00 How Can We Test Management at the RanchScale? John A. Tanaka; Oregon State University

9:20 Management Effectiveness and the Measurementof Multiple Ecological Attributes at BroaderSpatial Scales Mark E. Miller; USGS

9:40 Resources for Conducting Grazing ManagementResearch James P. Dobrowolski; USDA-CSREES

10:00 Break

10:20 Discussion and Feedback

Thursday Morning Forum

Riparian Ecological Site Descriptions and State-and-Transition Models/Grazing Management Processesand Strategies for Riparian-Wetland Areas

Moderator: Patty Novak AM,Ken Crane PM

Room: Pecos

Part I: Riparian Ecological Site Descriptions andState-and-Transition Models Patti Novak, Moderator

8:30 Ecological Site Descriptions: An Overview HomerSanchez and Jeff Repp; USDA NRCS

9:00 Physical Components of Riparian Ecosystems:Valley Types and Associated Stream Types JaniceW. Staats; US Forest Service

9:30 Vegetation Associated With Functional StreamTypes: Riparian Complex Concepts Sarah E.Quistberg1 and Tamzen K. Stringham2; (1) OregonState University, (2) University of Nevada-Reno

10:00 Break

10:30 Vegetation Succession and GeomorphicThresholds Tamzen K. Stringham; University ofNevada

11:00 State-and-Transition Model Components forRiparian Ecosystems Tamzen K. Stringham;University of Nevada

11:30 Challenges in Developing Ecological SiteDescriptions for Riparian Areas Kendra Moseley1

and Jack D. Alexander2; (1) USDA NRCS, (2)Synergy Resource Solutions, Inc.

Part II: Grazing Management Processes and Strategiesfor Riparian-Wetland Areas Ken Crane, Moderator

1:30 Introduction Sandra K. Wyman; National RiparianService Team

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2:00 Developing Riparian Management ObjectivesSherman R. Swanson; University of Nevada

2:30 Strategies to Manage Livestock Grazing to MeetRiparian Objectives Sandra K. Wyman; NationalRiparian Service Team

3:00 Break

3:30 Livestock Grazing Management Systems forRiparian-Wetland Areas Jimmy Eisner; NationalRiparian Service Team

4:00 Monitor and Evaluate Progress - AdaptiveManagement Eric M. Peterson; University ofWyoming

4:30 Summary and Feedback Ken Crane

Thursday Afternoon Technical Session

Wildlife II

Chair: Laurie AbbottRoom: Taos

1:20 Predicting Elk Feeding Site Selection in Foothilland Mountain Rangeland Habitat Rachel A. Frost1,Kelley K. Crane2, Tracy K. Brewer1 and Jeffrey C.Mosley1; (1) Montana State University, (2) Universityof Idaho

1:40 The Impacts of Deer Density and SupplementalFeeding on Vegetation Eric D. Grahmann1, ReaganT. Gage1, Ryan L. Darr1, Timothy E. Fulbright1,David G. Hewitt1, Charles A. DeYoung1 and Don A.Draeger2; (1) Texas A&M University-Kingsville, (2)Comanche Ranch, Texas

2:00 Physiological Effects of the North Kaibab WinterHabitat on Mule Deer Matthew W. Acton, WilliamH. Miller and Ann Steffler; Arizona State University

2:20 Active Vegetation Management for Sagebrush-Grass Community Resilience and WildlifeDiversity J. Kent McAdoo, Brad W. Schultz andSherman R. Swanson; University of Nevada

2:40 Songbird Response to Habitat Heterogeneity andGrazing at Grasslands National Park of CanadaBarbara I. Bleho and Nicola Koper; University ofManitoba

3:00 Break

3:20 Cattle Drive the Development of Wildlife Hotspotsin an East African Rangeland Kari E. Veblen;University of California-Davis

4:00 Development of a Regional Scale Wind Power SiteBlueprinting Tool Julie L. Conley, Betsy Bloomfieldand Brian Martin; The Nature Conservancy

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4:20 Bighorn Sheep Diet Reconstruction andComparison Using Stable Isotopes Joshua M.Whitaker1, Todd F. Robinson1 and Jericho C.Whiting2; (1) Brigham Young University, (2) IdahoState University

Thursday Afternoon Technical Session

Remote Sensing and Technology

Chair: D. Terrence BoothRoom: Sandia

1:20 Monitoring Rangeland Health Indicators byRemote Sensing Raymond E. Hunt and D. TerranceBooth; USDA ARS

1:40 Landscape Scale Change Detection of AspenWoodlands in Central Idaho Eva K. Strand1,Stephen C. Bunting1 and Mary Tess O’Sullivan2; (1)University of Idaho, (2) Lava Lake Institute forScience and Conservation

2:00 Making Better Use of Remote Sensing for Design-ing Rangeland Field Studies: An Application ofObject-Based Image Analysis Jason W. Karl andBrian A. Maurer; Michigan State University

2:20 Dual-Resolution Aerial Assessments of PipelineRevegetation D. Tarrence Booth and Samuel E. Cox;USDA ARS

2:40 Modeling Potential Species Distributions in RichCounty, Utah Kathryn Peterson and R. DouglasRamsey; Utah State University

3:00 Break

3:20 Estimating Annual Net Primary Productivity ofTallgrass Prairie (1989-2007) at Regional ScaleUsing Satellite Remotely Sensed MeasurementsKevin P. Price, Nan An and John M. Blair; KansasState University

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Thursday Afternoon Technical Session

Education

Chair: Shannon WilliamsRoom: Zuni/Tesuque

1:20 Merging Experience and Science for Innovationand Educational Outcomes John Taylor; Universityof Queensland

1:40 Youth Experience Science at Science Days ShannonK. Williams1, Jeanne Withers2 and Arlene Wolfe3; (1)University of Idaho Extension, (2) Cummings CenterEducation Committee, (3) Salmon High School

2:00 The Development of Participative MethodologyResponsible for 632 Grass Based AgroecologicDairy Projects Planned and Implemented byUndergraduate Students on Rangelands of SantaCatarina, Brazil Abdon Schmitt1, Fabiam Busnardo2,Alden Nascimento2, Joao Da Ros2, Fernando Back2,Giselle Alves2, Felipe Franscisco2 and Juan Pablo3;(1) University of Santa Catarina, (2) GPVoisin Group,(3) Gund Institute, University of Vermont

Thursday Afternoon Symposium

Holistic Management: A Perspective on MergingCulture, Science and Innovation

Moderator: Peter HolterRoom: Cochiti

1:00 Introduction Peter Holter; HMI

1:10 25 Years of History with Holistic ManagementKirk Gadzia; Resource Management Services, LLC

1:55 Effect of Grazing Treatment on Soil Moisture inSemi-Arid Rangelands Keith T. Weber and BhushanS. Gokhale; ISU GIS Training and Research Center

2:40 Holistic Management and The New RanchCourtney White; The Quivira Coalition

3:25 Break

3:45 The Adaptation of Holistic Management onCarrizo Valley Ranch Sid A. Goodloe; Rancher,Capitan, NM

4:30 Holistic Management Research Frank Aragona;Agricultural Innovations

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Thursday Afternoon Symposium

Borderlands Watershed Management: A Collabora-tive Approach to Resource Management

Moderator: Herman GarciaRoom: Mesilla

1:00 Opening Remarks Herman Garcia; USDA NRCS

1:15 Bi-National Borderlands Ecological RestorationInitiative Rosendo Treviño III1 and Ing. Jose ManuelPerez Cantu2; (1) USDA NRCS, (2) Pronatura N.E.,Mexico

1:45 Renovation of Degraded Ecosystems in NorthernMexico Jose Manuel Perez Cantu; Pronatura Noreste,A.C. Mexico

2:15 Partners in Plant Solutions: A Case Study inCollaborative Approaches to Resource ManagementForrest S. Smith1, John Lloyd-Reilley2 and Paula D.Maywald1; (1) Texas A&M University-Kingsville, (2)USDA NRCS, (3) Texas A&M University-Kingsville

2:45 Break

3:00 Advances in Evaluation of Rangeland Health inNorthern Mexico Alicia Melgoza1, Mario H. Royo,Pedro Jurado2, Carlos Ortega2, Gerardo Bezanilla1

and Jose Quiñones1; (1) Fac. de Zootecnia, UACH,(2) Campo Exp. Camapan-Madera, INIFAP

3:45 Potential for Extending Major Land ResourceAreas into Northern Mexico Roy S. Mann1, PhilipHeilmann2 and Jeffry Stone2; (1) USDA NRCS, (2)USDA ARS

Thursday Afternoon Symposium

Wildland Invasive Species Restoration

Moderator: Heidi OlbertRoom: LaCienega

1:00 Is Crested Wheatgrass Here to Stay? ADiversification Study of Crested WheatgrassStands in Utah April Hulet1, Bruce A. Roundy1 andBrad Jessop2; (1) Brigham Young University, (2)BLM Salt Lake Field Office

1:25 Restoring Land Health on a Landscape Level LuBurger, Don Ellsworth and Eddie Williams; BLM

1:50 An Internet-Available System for Estimating Site-Specific Invasive Weed Impacts Mathew J. Rinella;USDA ARS

2:15 Working with Conservation Districts on FireRehabilitation Efforts Ray Beck; Montana DNRC

2:40 Escalante River Watershed Restoration Amber L.Hughes; BLM

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Author IndexNote: There may be multiple listings for an author on a page

AAbari, M.Foroughi 65Abbott, L.B. 37Acton, M.W. 78Adiku, S. 68Adler, P.B. 67Aguado-Santacruz, A. 39Ahuja, L. 68Alexander, J.D. 77Alexander, K. 35Alexander, M.J. 35, 43, 58Allen, C.D. 76Allen, P.S. 66Allen-Diaz, B. 73Allred, B.W. 50Allred, K. 25Althoff, D.P. 50Alves, G. 80Amme, D. 43An, N. 79Andales, A. 68Anderson, D.M. 57Anderson, E.N. 30Anderson, K. 40Anderson, V.Jo 51Angell, R. 67Ansley, J.R. 50Aragona, F. 80Archer, S.R. 50, 53, 76Arévalo-Gallegos, S. 39Arnold, J.S. 56Arzola, V.Aguirre 39Asay, K.H. 31, 32Atwill, E.R. 27Auger, J. 56Augustine, D.J. 41, 57Ayala, F.A. 40Azarnivand, H. 50

BBack, F. 80Badillo-Almaraz, J. 40Bailey, D.W. 47, 52Bain, M. 63Baival, B. 34, 56Baker, T.T. 26, 63Balbach, H.E. 33Baldenegro, A. 55Baldwin, B. 51Ballard, W. 31Banik, K.K. 57Barclay, S. 26Barcus, W. 58Barger, N. 46

Barker, J. 62Barnes, M.K. 34Baron, V.S. 68Barry, S.J. 43Bartlett, F.P. 71Bartos, D.L. 52Basarab, J. 68Basco, G. 74Bashore, T.L. 31Bassett, E.R. 34Bateman, C.Randy 57Bates, J.D. 28Battikha, N. 62Baucom, D. 44Becchetti, T.A. 49Beck, R. 81Bednarek, R. 36Bedunah, D.J. 73Bekedam, S. 51Belew, G.L. 31Belfon, R. 44Belnap, J. 46Benn, S. 39Bennington, J. 60Benson, J. 51Bergum, K.E. 42, 71Berlinger, B. 64Best, E.P. 32Bestelmeyer, B.T. 36, 50, 54,70,

73, 75, 76Bezanilla, G. 36, 43, 59, 81Bhattarai, K. 34, 66Bidwell, T.G. 50, 56Biggam, P. 36, 62Birch, S. 50Black, H. 56Blackwell, R.L. 40Blair, J.M. 79Bleho, B.I. 78Bleich, V.C. 53Blinman, E. 25Block, B. 53Bloomfield, B. 78Blumenthal, D. 53Bobowski, B. 39Boe, A. 50, 65Bohnert, D. 48Boltz, S.C. 36Booth, D.Terrence 63, 75, 79Borg, N. 46Bork, E.W. 38, 43, 58, 71Bottomley, T. 36Boyd, C.S. 36, 39, 53Braden, K. 67Bradford, J.A. 67

84

Branham, L. 67Brantely, R. 71Branum, K.S. 37Breck, S.W. 30, 33Brewer, T.K. 42, 78Bright, A.D. 59Bright, L.R. 57Briske, D.D. 53, 68Britton, C.M. 26, 66Brizuela, M.A. 48Brock, J.H. 37, 71Brooks, C.B. 75Brooks, K.R. 56Brooks, M. 38, 40, 61Brown, C. 37Brown, J.R. 35, 54, 56, 60, 70, 76Brown, T. 61Browne-Silva, J. 57Brownsey, P. 73Bruce, B. 67, 74Brummer, J.E. 59Brunson, M.W. 35, 54, 70, 77Buckhouse, J.C. 59, 62Budd, B. 69Bulla, E. 35Bundick, C.J. 71Bunting, S.C. 26, 40, 79Buono, J. 46Burger, L. 81Burke, T. 24Burnham, J. 72Busby, F. 75Bushman, B.Shaun 34, 66Busnardo, F. 80Butler, J.L. 34

CCalderon-Mendoza, D. 45Call, C.A. 40Campbell, E.S. 71Cantu-Brito, J.Enrique 39Canwell, S. 74Carlyle, C. 60Carman, J.G. 34Carney, V.A. 32Carpinelli, M. 55Carrillo, E.E 63Cary, T.J. 31, 32Cashman, M.J. 28Casler, C.Long 29Castellanos-Pérez, E. 40, 41Catlett, L. 25Catlin, J.C. 68Cevik, Y. 27Cháirez, F.EchavarrÌa 75Chamberlain, A. 48Chamberlain, S. 73Chambers, J.C. 49

Chandler, D. 76Channell, R. 35Charnley, S. 60Cheleuitte-Nieves, C.E. 48Cheney, G. 56Cherr, C.M. 49, 72Childers, C.D. 27Childress, M. 34Christy, K. 73Church, M.M. 42Cibils, A.F. 44, 48, 58, 59Cid, M.Silvia 48Clark, M. 36Clark, P.E. 30, 46, 47, 57Clarke, J.M. 35Clary, J.D. 61Clemensen, A.K. 66Clements, C.D. 36, 39Cline, K.E 63Cline, N.L. 39Coates-Markle, L. 38Coldren, C. 34Coleman, J.K. 51Colson, K.E. 60Conard, J.M. 32Conley, C. 63Conley, J.L. 29,78Conley, K. 67Connors, K.J. 66Cook, D. 44Cook, S.P. 50Cooper, B. 56Cooper, B.F. 58Cooper, D.J. 59Cooper, S.M. 47, 48, 72Copeland, H. 62Coppock, D.Layne 37Coughenour, M. 37Cox, S.E. 75, 79Cox, S.H. 58Cram, D.S. 26Crane, K. 78Crane, K.K. 78Creamer, R. 44Creech, E. 38Cribley, B. 38Crigler, W. 56Crimmins, M. 59Crozier, H. 65Cusack, C.J. 27, 60

DD’Antonio, C.M. 48Dalgleish, H.J. 67Damdinsuren, B. 75Darr, R.L. 78Davenport, B.W. 43Davies, K.W. 28, 48, 53

85

Davies, S. 63Davis, B. 54Davis, D.Bracken 60, 61Davis, J. 65Davis, R. 36Davis, T.Zane 44Davison, J. 40Dawdy, L. 57Dawson, J.O. 32Deal, P.B. 57DeBerry, D. 69Deboodt, T.L. 56, 59, 62DeBuys, W. 25DeKeyser, E.S. 27, 74DelCurto, T. 47Delgado, J.Mora 58DeMaere, C. 58Demint, A. 64Denogean-Ballesteros, F.G. 37, 55Derner, J.D. 41, 51, 52, 53, 57, 68Devoe, N. 38, 40Dewey, S. 43DeWitt, P. 48DeYoung, C.A. 72, 78Di’Tomaso, J. 53Diamond, J.M. 40Dick, B.L. 47, 57Dillard, C. 49Diller, K. 64Do-Nascimento, A.Edna 58Dobrowolski, J.P. 45, 77Dodd, J.L. 59Don-Carlos, A.W. 59Doran, M. 37Dormody, T. 55Douglas, J. 37Draeger, D.A. 78Dragt, B. 74Drawe, D.Lynn 69Dreesen, D.R. 27Dressler, D. 56Duncan, C. 71Duncan, C.M. 28, 60Duniway, M.C. 46, 75Dunn, B. 51Dunn, G.H. 28, 60, 68

EEager, T. 35Eastburn, D.J. 28, 35Edminster, C. 26Eisner, J.M. 78Ell, M.J. 27, 74Elliot, W.J. 45Ellis, C.R. 63Ellsworth, D. 64, 81Elmore, R.D. 56Emmerich, W. 67

Encinias, E.Manuel 45Engle, D.M. 50, 53, 74, 76Enloe, S.F. 52Ersch, E.A. 28Esgate, T. 63Espeland, E.K. 42Esquivel, R. 37Esser, S.M. 39Everly, C.A. 31Ezzell, R. 36

FFalk, A.D. 39Fassnacht, S.R. 34, 59Fehmi, J.S. 34Fenchel, G.A. 27Fernald, A. 27, 59, 60, 75Fernandez, M.R. 35Fernandez-Gimenez, M.E. 34, 55,56, 69Fick, W.H. 51Fimbres, J.J. 55Finch, M. 51Fish, D. 63Fisher, M.P. 59, 62Fleming, J. 33Ford, P.L. 39Forero, L.C. 73Foroughi, M. 66Fox, W.E. 73Fraker-Marble, M. 29Frakes, N. 61France, K.A. 39Franscisco, F. 80Fraser, L.H. 34, 60, 68Fredrickson, E.L. 48, 56, 58Freese, M.T. 72Friedman, C.Ross 60Friel, G. 63Frost, R.A. 42, 67Frost, W.E. 73Fuhlendorf, S.D. 50, 53, 54, 76Fulbright, T.E. 39, 40, 53, 72, 78

GGadzia, K. 80Gage, R.T. 78Gaiser, D. 51Galt, D. 36Ganskopp, D.C. 47, 48, 57Garcia, H.B. 34, 81Garcia, L. 68Gardner, D.R. 44Gardner, K.T. 45Gates, R.N. 40, 50, 63, 65Gearhart, A.L. 63, 75Geaumont, B.A. 72, 73Gehring, C. 38

86

George, C. 63George, C.H. 67George, H.A. 27, 61George, M.R. 37, 53, 55, 74Gibbons, B.Landgraf 75Gilbert, P. 32Gilgert, W. 35Gillaspy, R.L. 61Gillen, R. 51Gipson, P.S. 31, 50Godfrey, E.Bruce 73Goebel, J.Jeff 46Goehring, B.J. 67Gokbulak, F. 75Gokhale, B.S. 80Gomez-Martinez, S. 36Gonzales, P. 69Gonzalez-Dominguez, J.R. 36Goodloe, S. 54Goodloe, S.A. 80Goodrich, D.C. 45Goodwin, M. 55Goolsby, D.P. 50, 76Gosnell, H. 60Graham, J.David 44, 45Grahmann, E.D. 78Grant, W.E. 55Graves, I.E. 55Green, B.T. 44Green, D.M. 59Green, S.A. 65Greenall, A.L. 60, 68Greenhalgh, L.K. 43Gregg, M. 56Griggs, T. 40Groves, J. 27Guertin, D.P. 45Guinn, K. 52Guldan, S. 27, 60

HHabibi, V. 50Hagen, F.L. 32Haile, K.F. 39Hale, M.B. 62Hall, L.M. 38, 71Halstead, L.E. 52Halstvedt, M. 71Hamilton, B. 50Han, G. 75Hardegree, S.P. 53Hardesty, L.H. 28, 74Hargiss, C.L. 27, 74Harmon, D.N. 36, 39Harmoney, K.R. 51Harper, J.M. 37, 55, 73Harris, N.R. 29Haug, A. 56

Havstad, K.M. 70, 76Heilmann, P. 81Helfert, S. 31Hellier, B. 50Hendrickson, J.R. 37, 51Hernandez, M. 46Hernández-Peralta, F. 38Hernández-Quiroz, N. 38, 61Herrick, J.E. 46, 62, 70, 75Herrin, J. 65Hewitt, D.G. 72, 78Hickman, K.R. 38, 71Hidinger, L. 70Hild, A.L. 33, 42, 71, 74Hoar, B.R. 27Hobbs, M. 54Holder, J. 56Holochek, J. 36Holter, P. 80Hooper, L.K. 40Hopkins, B.G. 26Howery, L.D. 30, 52Huang, Y. 76Hubert, M. 63Hughes, A.L. 81Hughes, L.E. 63, 66Hulet, A. 51, 81Humes, J.D 66Hunt, R.E. 79Huntsinger, L. 56, 69, 73Hurley, M. 46Hutchinson, B. 29Hutmacher-Glancy, A. 59Huxman, T.E. 75

IIbarra, F.A. 37, 55Ingram, R. 37, 55Iwaasa, A.D. 68

JJackson, E.C. 60Jackson, K.T. 44Jackson, R. 53Jaeger, J.R. 52Jafari, M. 50James, D. 67James, J.J. 28, 49James, K.M. 72Jamison, B. 27Jenkins, Wilma 56Jensen, K.B. 31, 32Jessop, B. 51, 81Jiménez-González, G. 40, 41Johanson, J.K. 65Johnson, D.A. 34, 66, 67Johnson, D.D. 48

87

Johnson, D.E. 30, 42, 46, 47,57, 60

Johnson, J. 64Johnson, K. 37Johnson, M.D. 30, 47Johnson, M.V. 61, 62Johnson, P.S. 35, 40, 50, 58,

63, 65Johnson, R. 64Johnson, R.C. 28, 50Jolley, L.W. 46, 53, 54Jones, B.E. 58Jones, P.O. 48Jones, T.A. 53Jurado-Guerra, P. 36, 39, 40,

62, 81

KKaboli, M. 66Kachergis, E.J. 34Kaminski, T.J. 43Karami, M. 66Karl, J.W. 60, 79Karl, M.”Sherm” 36Kaufmann, J. 43, 58Kava, J.A. 52, 57, 58, 61Kebede, A. 37Keller, W. 74Kelsey, K. 59Khatib, A. 62Kiesecker, J. 62Kilian, R.W. 37Kim, M. 34King, J.R. 38,71King, P. 27King, R.J. 57King, Y. 63Kiniry, J.R. 61, 62Kirby, D.R. 27, 28, 74Klement, K.D. 57Kluever, B.M. 30Klypina, N. 37Knabem, R. 74Knapp, C. 34Knox, S. 64Koger, J.B. 40Koper, N. 78Kormos, P. 39Kostrubala, T. 64Krausman, P.R. 53Kreuter, U.P. 55, 69, 73Kulla, A. 71Kuvlesky, W.P. 72

LLaca, E.A. 37, 49, 72Lacey, R.M. 32LaFantasie, J.J. 52

Laituri, M. 34Lancaster, D.L. 59Lantz, T. 63LaPlante, V.K. 61Larsen, K. 34Larson, L.L. 30, 47Larson-Praplan, S. 37, 49, 55Lauenroth, W.K. 57Lauhban, R. 74Launchbaugh, K.L. 29, 40, 67Lee, C.D. 35Lee, S.T. 44Leger, E.A. 49Leis, S.A. 72Leland, R.F. 51Lemke, R.L. 68Leon, F.L. 55Light, S. 24Lile, D.F. 27, 58, 59Limb, R.F. 28, 50, 53Lindon, H.L. 32Liu, J. 37Lloyd-Reilley, J. 81Lodge-Ivey, S.L. 57Lohse, N. 69Louhaichi, M. 47, 62Lowe, C.Caselton 50Loya, F. 45Luna-Luna, M. 26, 66Lyman, T.D. 52

MMack, R.N. 48Madrid-Pérez, L. 39Madril, R.D. 40Madsen, M.D. 26, 61Maestas, J. 35Major, D.J. 62Malechek, J.C. 52Mamedov, E. 43Mamo, C. 43Mangold, J.M. 28, 36Mann, R.S. 81Manzano, M.G. 42Margo, M.R. 61Marks, B. 56Marks, D. 76Martin, B. 78Martin, D.W. 34, 37Martin, J. 59Martin, J.A. 44Martin, M.H. 37, 55Martinez, M. 40, 62Martinez-Nevarez, J. 68Martinez-Reyna, J.M. 36Martinez-Rios, J.J. 41Masters, R.A. 49, 51, 71Mata-Gonzalez, R. 37, 58

88

Matchett, J.R. 61Maugans, J. 39Maurer, B.A. 79Maxwell, C.J. 61Maywald, P.D. 39, 41, 81McAdoo, J.Kent 27, 74, 78McCaig, T.N. 35McCollum, D.W. 73McCoy, N. 40McCuin, G.L. 74McCullough, S.A. 35McDaniel, K. 45, 53McDougald, N. 55McGrew, B. 37McKinley, R.A. 61McLendon, T. 34, 37McLeod, E.M. 38, 71McMahon, T. 37Mealor, B.A. 42, 62, 71Meiman, P.J. 55, 59Melgoza-Castillo, A. 36, 38, 39,

40, 62, 81Menchaca, M.W. 67Merrill, E. 48Merrill-Davies, M. 59Messmer, T.A. 35Meyer, S.E. 66Michels, G.J. 32Milby, J.L. 65Milchunas, D.G. 41, 53, 68Miller, C. 70Miller, J. 28, 74Miller, M.E. 75, 77Miller, R.F. 28, 53, 56, 72Miller, S.N. 45Miller, W.H. 78Miranda-Baeza, R. 38Mirik, M. 50Misar, C.G. 50Mitchell, J.E. 73Moffet, C.A. 45, 46, 53, 57Molinar, F. 36Mollnau, C. 59Monaco, T.A. 27, 49, 53, 71, 72Moore, S.M. 51Morales-Nieto, C.R. 36, 39, 40Moreno, C.Y. 55Moreno, S. 37, 55Morgan, C.V. 30Morgan, J.A. 67Mori, N. 50Morris, C. 71Morris, L.R. 27, 28Morton, L.Wright 74Moseley, K. 77Moseley, M.E. 55Moseley, W.A. 72Mosley, J.C. 42, 67, 78

Moulton, A.R. 43Mousel, E.M. 51, 65Mukimov, T. 42Mulliniks, J.Travis 58Munis, M.D. 37Munoz, A. 67Murdock, C. 45Murphy, B. 64Muscha, J.M. 41, 68Mutz, J. 41

NNaeth, M.Anne 68Narem, D.M. 65Nascimento, A. 80Natoli, N.S. 31Naugle, D. 53Navarro, J. 36Nayak, A. 76Neal, S.M. 38Nearing, M.A. 45Neff, M. 70Negrete, L.F. 26Nejati, M. 65Nelson, M. 60Nelson, R. 37Nevárez-Moorillón, G. 39Newman, R.F. 42Newton, M. 59Nichols, M.H. 46Nicholson, R.A. 35, 55Nielsen, C. 63Nieto, C.R. 39Norlland, Jack E. 28Norman, A. 37, 60Norton, B.E. 76Nosal, D. 64Novak, P. 77Nykaza, E.T. 32Nyren, A. 28, 43, 57Nyren, P. 43, 57

OO’Geen, A.T. 28, 35, 36O’Sullivan, M.Tess 79Ochoa, C.G. 27Ocumpaugh, W.R. 41Odden, M. 63Ogden, A. 54Olson, K.C. 43, 58, 63Orr, B. 29Ortega-Ochoa, C. 36, 38, 59,

68, 81Ortega-Santos, J.Alfonso 39, 40, 72Osmer, E. 34Oviedo, J.Luis 73Owens, C.J. 67, 71Owens, J.M. 52

89

Owens, M.Keith 47

PPablo, J. 64, 74, 80Paige, G.B. 42, 45, 46, 74Palazzo, A.J. 31, 32Palmer, M.W. 50Panter, K.E. 44Park, S. 34Parsad, R. 62Patton, B. 28Patz, M. 64Pauley, G. 46Peacock, G. 37Pearce, R.A. 27, 37Peinetti, R.H 58Peitz, D.G. 72Pellant, M. 24, 38, 40, 75Pendleton, R.L. 41Pereyra-Alférez, B. 39Perez-Amaro, J.Alberto 58Perez-Cantu, J.Manuel 81Perotto-Baldivieso, H.L. 47, 48Perryman, B.L. 67, 74Petersen, E.A. 58Petersen, M.K. 48, 52, 57, 58Petersen, S.L. 26, 56, 60, 61, 72Peterson, E.M. 78Peterson, J.M. 63Peterson, K. 75, 79Peterson, V. 51Peykanpour, P. 65, 66Pfander, J. 29Pfister, J.A. 44Phillips, J.R. 31Phillips, R. 67Picinich, C. 32Pierson, F.B. 30, 39, 45, 46Pilkington, L. 39Pinedo-Alvarez, C. 36, 38, 59, 61Piper, C. 60Piper, K.L. 67Pitts, D. 32Pocewicz, A. 62Pollak, E.R. 58Polley, H.Wayne 67Poole, G. 63Poscher, E. 35Poulsen, C.L. 36Pregitzer, K. 38Prentice, K. 61Prestwich, C. 65Price, K.P. 79Prileson, V.J. 58Prince, S.D. 52, 57Printz, J. 28, 60Provenza, F.D. 52, 66, 69Puckett, K.L 65

Puckett, W. 76Pyke, D.A. 28, 70, 75

QQualls, C.P. 31Quiñones-Vera, Jose 81Quiñones-Vera, J.J. 40, 41Quintana-Martinez, R. 38, 61Quistberg, S.E. 77

RRadnezhad, H. 65, 66Ralphs, M.H. 44, 45, 67Ramirez, H. 59, 75Ramsey, R.Douglas 79Rango, A. 61Rascón-Cruz, Q. 39Rasmussen, A. 25Rasmussen, G.Allen 40, 72Ratchford, J.S. 28Ravi, S. 75Redente, E.F. 53Redfearn, D. 71Regen, E. 74Reid, I. 61Reid, R.S. 34Repp, J. 77Rew, L. 33Reyes-Fox, M. 68Reyes-Gomez, V. 59Rhodes, E.C. 61Richter, H.A. 58Rickard, J.W. 56Rico-Diaz, A. 38Riddle, R.R. 72Rideout-Hanzak, S. 26Riegel, G.M. 35Riera-Lizarazu, O. 58Rigby, C.W. 71Rimbey, N.R. 73Rinella, M.J. 28, 49, 53, 81Ritchie, J.C. 61Rivero-Hernandez, O. 38, 40Rizzoli, A. 74Roath, R. 37Robb, J. 62Robichaud, P.R. 45, 46Robinson, T.F. 79Rocca, M. 34Roche, L.M. 28, 35Rodriguez, L. 61Roeder, B.L. 42, 67Rogers, A.S. 70Rogers, S. 31Rogers, W.E. 65, 69Rollins, K. 61Rolong, N.A. 61Romanek, A. 73

90

Romero, J. 54Romero, M. 44Romo, J.T. 50Roof, C. 57Ros, J.Da 80Ross, T.J. 42Roster, N. 62Roundy, B.A. 26, 39, 49, 51,

53, 81Rowland, M.M. 47Royo, M.H. 36, 39, 62, 81Rubio, C.M. 48, 58Rubio-Arias, H. 40Rudeen, A.K. 55Runyon, T. 31Rus, D. 57Ruyle, G. 29, 45, 52, 56Ryel, R.J. 28

SSalley, S.W. 60Salomon, M. 55Sanchez, H. 77Sanchez, O. 41Sánchez-Muñoz, A. 59, 61, 71Sandoval-Reyes, R. 38Santana, L. 35Sarewitz, D. 70Saucedo-Teran, R. 39, 40Sayre, N.F. 68Schacht, W.H. 51, 65Schafer, D.W. 52Schauer, C.S. 63, 72, 73, 75Schell, K. 56Schellenberg, M.P. 35Schmelzer, L.E. 67Schmidt, K.N. 61Schmitt, A. 64Schmitt, A.Luiz 74, 80Schmugge, T.J. 61Schneberger, L. 30Schreder, P. 48Schriefer, C. 49Schultz, B.W. 27, 38, 67, 74, 78Schupp, E. 72Schwinning, S. 76Scott, C.B. 67, 71Sears, C. 39Sedivec, K.K. 43, 51, 57, 60,

72, 73, 75Selensky, C.M. 42Seyfried, M.S. 76Shahriary, E. 50Shaver, Pat 75Shaw, N.L. 53Shaw, W. 61Sheehy, C.M. 55, 74Sheley, R.L. 49, 53

Shelton, J.Maurice 58Shewmaker, G.E. 40Sidwell, M. 63Sidwell, T. 63Sieg, C.Hull 38, 70Sieg, R.T. 70Sierra, J.S. 62Simmons, C.K. 40Sinsabaugh, R.L. 41Skaggs, R.K. 73Skelton, P. 55Skilnick, J. 58Skinner, Q.D. 59Slaughter, A.L. 61Sleugh, B.B. 51Smallidge, Sam 30Smart, A.J. 35, 51, 56, 59, 60Smeenk, J. 63Smith, B.S. 49Smith, F.S. 39, 41, 81Smith, M.A. 59Smith, M.L. 62Smith, T. 30, 31, 32, 33, 71Snyder, K.A. 67, 75Sorensen, G.E. 26Spaeth, K. 37Spaeth, K.E. 45, 46Spencer, D.F. 46Springer, L. 39Sprinkle, J. 58Sprock, H. 64Staats, J.W. 77Stage, R. 62Staggs, T.J. 48Stanford, R. 50Staples, M.L. 35Stapp, P. 57Stebleton, A.A. 26Steele, C.M. 61Steffler, A. 78Stegelmeier, B.L. 44Stephenson, M.B. 65Sterling, T.M. 37Stevens, J. 33Stevenson, M. 63Stewart, T. 66Stoltenberg, M.B. 27Stone, J.J. 45, 46, 81Strand, E.K. 79Strankman, P. 63Stringham, T.K. 28, 59, 63, 77Stucker, S. 25Stursova, M. 41Sulak, A. 56Sullivan, J.C. 49Svejcar, T.J. 28, 35, 39, 49, 67Swanson, J. 59, 62Swanson, L.E. 73

91

Swanson, S.R. 27, 38, 67, 74, 78Swartz, H. 60Symstad, A.J. 42

TTacha, D.H. 35Tackman, C.D. 62Talbot, C. 36Tanaka, J.A. 29, 38, 54, 77Tannas, S.C. 71Tartowski, S. 67Tastad, A. 62Tate, K.W. 27, 28, 35, 53,

58, 59, 61, 68Taylor, A.G. 26Taylor, C. 65, 69Taylor, J. 80Teague, W.Richard 69Tedesche, M.E. 59Terry, R. 51Thiel, C.A. 58Thomas, G. 25Thomas, M. 36Thompson, D.C. 45Thompson, D.W. 70, 76Thompson, J. 34, 55Thorne, M.S. 29, 59, 63Thurow, T.L. 45, 74Tidwell, V. 27Toledo, D. 55Tolleson, D.R. 52, 57, 58, 61Tongway, D. 50Torell, L.Allen 54Torell, R. 67Torgerson, R. 73Torres, L. 25Townsend, L. 36Treviño, R. 81Trickey, M. 56Trlica, J. 34Trlica, M.J. 37Troelstrup, N.H. 40Trujillo, V. 54Tshireletso, K. 52Tugel, A.J. 62, 75Tuggle, B.N. 30Tunberg, J.E. 55Turkington, R. 60Turney, C.J. 65Turnipseed, B.E. 40Twidwell, D. 55, 65Twombly, E. 61Tyler, C.M. 48

UUdall, S. 56Underwood, M.L. 27

VValencia, I.Dario 62Valencia-Castro, C.M. 40, 41VanLeeuwen, D. 75VanZee, J. 46Varela-Guadarrama, E. 38Vasquez, E.A. 35, 49Vavra, M. 47, 57Vazquez, A. 36Veblen, K.E. 78Vermeire, L.T. 39, 41, 68Villalba, J.J. 52Villalobos, C. 26, 43, 66, 68Villalobos-Carrera, M. 38Villanueva, J.Francisco 26, 66Viramontes-Olivas, O. 38, 59, 61Volesky, J.D. 51, 65Volk, J.M. 28

WWagner, J.A. 40Walburger, K.J. 47, 50Waldron, B.L. 31, 43Walker, R. 56Wallace, M.C. 53Wang, G. 43, 57Ward, J.C. 32Warren, S.D. 32Watkins, A. 35Weber, K.T. 80Wei, H. 45Weidmeir, R.D. 52Weigelt, M.L. 40Weir, J.R. 56Welch, K.D. 44Weltz, M.A. 36, 38, 45, 46, 61, 62Wesley, R.L. 44, 48, 58West, N.E. 28Wester, D.B. 26Wheatley, L. 39White, C. 73, 80White, C.G. 46White, C.S. 41White, J.J. 57Whiting, J.C. 79Whiting, M.L. 35Whitlaw, H. 26Whitley, R. 24Whitaker, J.M. 79Whittaker, A. 49Whitted, D. 60Wiedmeier, R.W. 52Wiegand, B.R. 56Wiemers, D.W. 72Wiens, D. 65Wilcox, B.P. 53, 76Wiles, J.Lori 28, 60

92

Wilkinson, M.G. 47, 57Will, R.E. 76Williams, B.N. 62Williams, C.Jason 39, 45Williams, D.G. 76Williams, E. 81Williams, K.K. 52Williams, Mimi 62Williams, M.I. 42, 74Williams, S.K. 80Williamson, M.M. 38Willms, W.D. 38, 71Willoughby, M.G. 35Wills, S.A. 62, 75Wilson, G. 38Wilson, K.D. 30, 47Wilson, S.M. 69Wimsatt, J. 31Wisdom, M.J. 47Withers, J. 80Witmore, B.K. 52Woerz, A.L. 47, 60Wolfe, A. 80Woodside, G.J. 47, 57Woolstenhulme, L. 56, 65

Wright, C. 58Wu, B.X. 48, 54Wuliji, T. 67Wyman, S.K. 77, 78

XXu, L. 35, 40, 50, 65

YYost, A.C. 56, 72Young, D.G. 68Young, J.A. 36, 39Young, K. 51Ypsilantis, W.G. 36Yusupov, S. 42

ZZagar, P. 46Zaimes, G. 59Zhang, J. 49Ziehr, R. 37ZoBell, D.R. 43Zou, C. 76Zvirzdin, D.L. 61


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