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Herbivory, Stand Condition, and Regeneration Rates of Aspen on Burned and Unburned Plots in the Little Mountain Ecosystem Area

Dates

Start Date
2009

Summary

Since 1990, more than 2 million dollars has been spent on habitat-restoration and enhancement projects in the Little Mountain Ecosystem. Many of these efforts have focused on restoring aspen communities to maintain or improve water quality and to enhance ungulate habitat. During 2009, biologists from the WGFD Green River Regional Office established long-term monitoring plots on Little Mountain to evaluate whether the increased number of ungulates using those stands is in balance with targets set for aspen regeneration. The WGFD is collecting data for developing an index of live to dead trees. The USGS is supporting this effort by measuring stand composition to study herbivory patterns at locations associated with historical burns (wildfires [...]

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habitat_treat_LittleMnt.jpg thumbnail 910.93 KB image/jpeg

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Communities

  • Wyoming Landscape Conservation Initiative

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Provenance

Derived from the WLCI Annual Reports.

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