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Executive summary: Tamarisk control and removal has become a priority of riparian ecosystem management, due in part to its potential negative impacts on stream flow and groundwater recharge. Among the most controversial, and potentially most effective tamarisk control approaches is the introduction of the tamarisk leaf beetle, Diorhabda carinulata. The beetle has spread throughout virtually the entire upper Colorado River Basin, established major populations at Lake Mead in 2012, and is now poised to expand into the lower Colorado River Basin concordant with documented evolutionary change in beetle developmental response that may enable survival in southern regions. Superimposed on this direct plant/herbivore relationship...
Categories: Data,
Publication;
Types: Citation,
Map Service,
OGC WFS Layer,
OGC WMS Layer,
OGC WMS Service;
Tags: 2012,
AZ-01,
AZ-02,
AZ-03,
AZ-04, All tags...
AZ-05,
AZ-06,
AZ-07,
AZ-08,
AZ-09,
Arizona,
BIOSPHERE,
CA-08,
CA-36,
CA-51,
COMMUNITY DYNAMICS,
Conservation NGOs,
Conservation Planning,
Data.gov Desert LCC,
Datasets/Database,
EARTH SCIENCE,
ECOLOGICAL DYNAMICS,
Federal resource managers,
INVASIVE SPECIES,
LCC Network Science Catalog,
Lower Colorado River Basin,
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Methodology/Protocol,
Mojave Desert Pilot Area,
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NM-03,
NV-04,
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UT-02,
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Virgin River watershed,
Vulnerability Assessment,
biota,
climate change,
completed,
drought,
genetics,
invasive species,
phenology,
riparian,
stream flow,
tamarisk,
tamarisk leaf beetles,
water supply,
woody plants, Fewer tags
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