Displaying 1 to 11 of 11

  • Areawide Pest Management

    https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/5cabc9203b4443e9bf2a1778bf486bc6

    USDA. Agricultural Research Service.

    Areawide Pest Management (AWPM) is the systematic reduction of a target pest(s) to predetermined levels using uniformly applied pest mitigation measures over geographical areas clearly defined by biologically-based criteria (e.g., pest colonization, dispersal potential). This storymap provides the following: Background, Current Projects, Success Stories, and Data Exploration. The program has six active projects on crops, insects, invasive plants, and agronomic weeds spread across the US. These updates provide a brief summary, current status and projections along with photos and graphs.
    Note: Success Stories include The Ecological Areawide Management (TEAM) of Leafy Spurge, Invasive Annual Grasses (cheatgrass medusahead),  Fruit Flies (Mediterranean fruit fly, melon fly, Oriental fruit fly, and Malaysian fruit fly).

  • Cheatgrass and Medusahead

    https://www.usgs.gov/centers/forest-and-rangeland-ecosystem-science-center/scie…

    DOI. USGS. Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center.

  • Cheating Cheatgrass

    Oct 7, 2019
    https://tellus.ars.usda.gov/stories/articles/cheating-cheatgrass

    USDA. ARS. Tellus.

    ARS scientists in Nevada, studied ways to control cheatgrass and restore rangelands to a healthy mix of plants, which in turn reduces wildfire threats, supports wildlife, and increases sustainable grazing resources.

  • Downy Brome Control

    2008
    https://extensionpubs.unl.edu/publication/9000016361204/downy-brome-control

    University of Nebraska - Lincoln. Cooperative Extension.

  • Firefighting Cattle: Targeted Grazing Makes Firebreaks in Cheatgrass

    Oct 1, 2020
    https://www.usda.gov/media/blog/2020/10/01/firefighting-cattle-targeted-grazing…

    United States Department of Agriculture.

    Cattle grazing on a nearly half mile wide targeted strip of cheatgrass near Beowawe, Nevada, created a firebreak that helped limit a rangeland fire to just 54 acres this past August compared to rangeland fires that more commonly race across thousands of acres of the Great Basin. This "targeted grazing" firebreak and eight others are part of an evaluation project being managed by the Agricultural Research Service (ARS), partnering with other federal, state and local agencies and local cattle ranchers in Idaho, Nevada and Oregon. These demonstration sites are being studied so the concept's efficacy and environmental impacts can be uniformly evaluated and compared.

    Cheatgrass, also known as downy brome, is an invasive annual that dominates more than 100 million acres of the Great Basin in the western U.S. Germinating each winter, cheatgrass grows furiously in spring and dies in early summer, leaving the range carpeted in golden dry tinder. The Great Basin now has the nation's highest wildfire risk, and rangeland fires are outpacing forest fires when it comes to acreage destroyed.

  • The Greening of the Great Basin

    Dec 28, 2022
    https://daily.jstor.org/the-greening-of-the-great-basin/

    JSTOR Daily.

    The arid and semiarid Great Basin of the western United States comprises parts of California, Nevada, Utah, Idaho, and Oregon and can variously be described by its hydrology, topography, or biology. Biologically, the area has been defined historically by the native sagebrush and shrubs that thrive in the dry valleys of the Sierra Nevada and Cascade Mountains. But, as a recent study undertaken by researchers at the University of Montana and the Department of Agriculture notes, these native plant communities are rapidly being colonized by nonnative annual grasses like cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum), red brome (B. rubens), and medusahead (Taeniatherum caput-medusae) to the detriment of wildlife and humans.