Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Forest Sciences (4)
- Life Sciences (4)
- Forest Management (3)
- Physical Sciences and Mathematics (3)
- Environmental Sciences (2)
-
- Architecture (1)
- Biogeochemistry (1)
- Business (1)
- Business Administration, Management, and Operations (1)
- Chemistry (1)
- Earth Sciences (1)
- Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (1)
- Economics (1)
- Engineering (1)
- Entrepreneurial and Small Business Operations (1)
- Environmental Chemistry (1)
- Geography (1)
- Growth and Development (1)
- Horticulture (1)
- Industrial Technology (1)
- Natural Resources Management and Policy (1)
- Natural Resources and Conservation (1)
- Nature and Society Relations (1)
- Operations Research, Systems Engineering and Industrial Engineering (1)
- Other Architecture (1)
- Other Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (1)
- Other Environmental Sciences (1)
- Other Forestry and Forest Sciences (1)
- Other Operations Research, Systems Engineering and Industrial Engineering (1)
- Plant Sciences (1)
- Keyword
-
- Biochar (5)
- Charcoal (2)
- Pyrolysis (2)
- Activated carbon (1)
- Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi (1)
-
- Bacterial Community (1)
- Bio-oil (1)
- Biodegradable (1)
- Biomass (1)
- Biomass price (1)
- Biomass supply (1)
- Biomass utilization (1)
- Black Carbon (1)
- Business Emergy Analysis and Business Life Cycle Assessment (1)
- Canada (1)
- Clarkia (1)
- Crown of the Continent (1)
- Earthworms (1)
- Ecological Stoichiometry (1)
- Economic history; Montana -- Economic conditions – Periodicals; Business – Periodicals; Montana; Periodicals; Montana State University (Missoula (1)
- Elemental sulfur (1)
- Environmental conditions (1)
- Festuca (1)
- Financial performance (1)
- Forest attributes (1)
- Forest residues (1)
- Gasification (1)
- Grassland Degradation (1)
- Hyphal Abundace (1)
- Indonesia (1)
- Publication Year
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 17 of 17
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
Accumulation By Dispossession In Protected Areas, A Literatrue Review And Case Study To Create A More Unified Understanding, Leon Russell Miller
Accumulation By Dispossession In Protected Areas, A Literatrue Review And Case Study To Create A More Unified Understanding, Leon Russell Miller
Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers
No abstract provided.
Understanding The Utilization Of Woody Biomass Through The Perspectives Of Southwest United States Forest Service Land Managers: A Qualitative Study, Mary-Ellen Reyna
Understanding The Utilization Of Woody Biomass Through The Perspectives Of Southwest United States Forest Service Land Managers: A Qualitative Study, Mary-Ellen Reyna
Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers
Dry ponderosa pine/mixed conifer stands in the Southwestern United States create an overabundance of woody biomass during restoration and fuel treatments. It has been the job of land managers and resource specialists to develop management goals and practices to treat stands and lower the risk of catastrophic wildfires while managing for accumulations of woody biomass. Knowing the limitations, setbacks, and successes will help researchers, the United States Forest Service, and other land managers better improve woody biomass utilization. In conjunction with three previous ForBio Southwest studies, we present results from ten phone interviews from three Arizona and New Mexico ranger …
Invasive Earthworms In The Crown Of The Continent System And Implications For Land Management, Meghan Elizabeth Scott
Invasive Earthworms In The Crown Of The Continent System And Implications For Land Management, Meghan Elizabeth Scott
Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers
The United States contains invasive earthworms originating from Europe and Asia; the majority are European lumbricids. Direct introduction occurs primarily through human activity and, once established, earthworm populations are difficult to address. When exotic earthworms engage in bioturbation, they negatively alter subterranean food webs and nutrient cycling by disrupting soil layering systems. The most prominent form of physical alteration is the change and removal of the topmost organic layer. This disruption is associated with altered nitrogen and carbon cycling, as well as altered forest floor plant communities.
The Crown of the Continent ecosystem is located in southwestern Alberta, southeastern British …
Understanding And Measuring Net Positive Business Strategies, Luke Ruffner Robinson
Understanding And Measuring Net Positive Business Strategies, Luke Ruffner Robinson
Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers
Despite their attempts to mitigate ecological impacts through sustainability initiatives, businesses are a major cause of the world's ecological problems. Some progressive businesses are attempting to move beyond “net zero” in terms of achieving neutral environmental impacts and instead are now pursuing a goal of net positive. Net positive refers to the idea that business activities could contribute value-added benefits to earth’s ecological systems, for example, by using technologies that sequester and store carbon. However, except for a handful of high-profile corporate case studies, little is known about how companies are developing their strategies to become net positive and …
Influence Of Locally Produced Wood Biochar On Soil Nitrogen And Phosphorus Dynamics In The Northwestern Us, Si Gao
Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers
Wildfire cause a rapid and sometimes dramatic loss of carbon and nitrogen from forest ecosystems, but it also leaves behind ash and charcoal on the soil surface, both of which affect soil properties, processes, and function. Some of these effects may be induced by applying charcoal or biochar to surface soils. Biochar is the term given to the carbon rich product of thermochemical decomposition of organic material in an oxygen limited environment that is explicitly intended for soil application. Producing biochar from wood residues from timber harvest and applying it to nearby soils may represent a means of reducing carbon …
Ecological Stoichiometry In Watersheds: From Land To Water In The Qinghai Lake Basin, Ze Ren
Ecological Stoichiometry In Watersheds: From Land To Water In The Qinghai Lake Basin, Ze Ren
Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers
We examined the influences of grassland status (as indexed by normalized difference vegetation index, NDVI) on carbon (C), nitrogen (N), and phosphorus (P) concentrations and stoichiometry, nutrient limitation, as well as microbial community structure in soil, stream, and/or lake ecosystems in the Qinghai Lake watershed, where grassland is the dominant landcover and more than half of the grassland is degraded.
Chapter 2 showed that grassland degradation decreased C and N concentrations as well as C:N, C:P, and N:P ratios in soil. Moreover, grassland degradation decreased C, N, and P concentrations and influenced C:N and N:P ratios in soil microbial biomass. …
Ponderosa Pine Responses To Biochar, Fertilizer, Or Mastication On The Bitterroot National Forest, Usa, Haley C. Anderson
Ponderosa Pine Responses To Biochar, Fertilizer, Or Mastication On The Bitterroot National Forest, Usa, Haley C. Anderson
Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers
Management and restoration practices in even-age ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa Lawson & C. Lawson) stands in the Intermountain West can be improved by developing a more thorough understanding of the effects of soil amendment treatments on tree growth and soil properties. Biochar is a charcoal- soil amendment that is created by burning woody biomass in an environment with limited oxygen through a process known as pyrolysis. Biochar has been recommended as a soil amendment for a number of reasons; including increased water and nutrient retention, and building soil aggregates. However, the effects of biochar on temperate forest soils and …
An Assessment Of Biochar Amended Soilless Growing Media For The Nursery Propagation Of Rocky Mountain Native Plants, Clarice Matt
An Assessment Of Biochar Amended Soilless Growing Media For The Nursery Propagation Of Rocky Mountain Native Plants, Clarice Matt
UM Graduate Student Research Conference (GradCon)
Biochar is a co-product of the bioenergy pyrolysis process during which biomass is pyrolized in low-oxygen to zero-oxygen environments resulting in carbon-rich, recalcitrant charred organic matter. Many studies have shown biochar amendments to suboptimal field soils increase soil function by enhancing chemical and physical soil properties contributing to soil fertility. Our research aims to address a presently novel area of biochar research. The amount of current biochar knowledge that is applicable within the context of native plant container nursery seedling production is sparse. One material showing promise as a replacement for peat and perlite is biochar.
We conducted a greenhouse …
The Biogeochemistry Of Elemental Sulfur Contaminated Soils: Insights Into Effective Remediation, Michael Ryan Mctee
The Biogeochemistry Of Elemental Sulfur Contaminated Soils: Insights Into Effective Remediation, Michael Ryan Mctee
Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers
Soil contamination that results from elemental sulfur (S0) deposition is a new occurrence. Elemental sulfur is stockpiled as a byproduct from the oil and gas industry and is deposited by biodegradable trap and skeet targets at shooting ranges. Chemolithotrophs and mixotrophs can oxidize S0 to H2SO4. Consequently, in areas where excess S0 is deposited or stockpiled, soils can acidify to pH values observed with acid mine drainage.
I studied S0 contamination at a former sporting clay range. For seven years, the range used biodegradable trap and skeet targets that contained S …
An Assessment Of Biochar Amended Soilless Media For Nursery Propagation Of Northern Rocky Mountain Native Plants, Clarice P. Matt
An Assessment Of Biochar Amended Soilless Media For Nursery Propagation Of Northern Rocky Mountain Native Plants, Clarice P. Matt
Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers
A study was conducted to better inform nursery practitioners of the potential benefits of biochar application in common nursery media for native plant propagation. Biochar – a carbon-rich, recalcitrant charred organic co-product of the bioenergy pyrolysis process – has emerged as a promising potential replacement for various components of soilless media, namely peat, perlite, and vermiculite, in nursery seedling propagation. A strong conceptual basis exists for biochar as a nursery media amendment, but empirical data on biochar-based plant propagation is limited. This greenhouse study examined the effects of biochar displacement of standard soilless nursery media at rates of 0%, 15%, …
A Comparison Of Producer Gas, Biochar, And Activated Carbon From Two Distributed Scale Thermochemical Conversion Systems Used To Process Forest Biomass, Nathaniel Anderson, J. Greg Jones, Deborah Page-Dumroese, Daniel Mccollum, Stephen Baker, Daniel Loeffler, Woodam Chung
A Comparison Of Producer Gas, Biochar, And Activated Carbon From Two Distributed Scale Thermochemical Conversion Systems Used To Process Forest Biomass, Nathaniel Anderson, J. Greg Jones, Deborah Page-Dumroese, Daniel Mccollum, Stephen Baker, Daniel Loeffler, Woodam Chung
Forest Management Faculty Publications
Thermochemical biomass conversion systems have the potential to produce heat, power, fuels and other products from forest biomass at distributed scales that meet the needs of some forest industry facilities. However, many of these systems have not been deployed in this sector and the products they produce from forest biomass have not been adequately described or characterized with regards to chemical properties, possible uses, and markets. This paper characterizes the producer gas, biochar, and activated carbon of a 700 kg h−1 prototype gasification system and a 225 kg h−1 pyrolysis system used to process coniferous sawmill and forest …
Spatial Distribution And Quantification Of Forest Treatment Residues For Bioenergy Production, Lucas A. Wells
Spatial Distribution And Quantification Of Forest Treatment Residues For Bioenergy Production, Lucas A. Wells
Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers
The availability and spatial distribution of forest treatment residues are prerequisites to supply chain development for bioenergy production. To accurately estimate potential residue quantities, data must be provided to simulate stand-level silviculture across the landscape of interest. However, biomass utilization assessments often consider broad regions where adequate data are not supplied. At present, these measures are addressed using strategic level assessments and broad-based management that may not be applicable to all areas of the landscape. This thesis introduces a new methodology for spatially describing stand-level treatment residue quantities based on detailed silvicultural prescriptions and site specific management. Using National Agricultural …
Montana Business Quarterly, Winter 2011, University Of Montana--Missoula. Bureau Of Business And Economic Research
Montana Business Quarterly, Winter 2011, University Of Montana--Missoula. Bureau Of Business And Economic Research
Montana Business Quarterly, 1949-2021
This is an academic publication produced by the Bureau of Business and Economic Research (BBER) at the University of Montana’s College of Business. This is volume 49, number 4.
January 2011 News Releases, University Of Montana--Missoula. Office Of University Relations
January 2011 News Releases, University Of Montana--Missoula. Office Of University Relations
University of Montana News Releases, 1928, 1956-present
No abstract provided.
A Comparative Financial Analysis Of Fast Pyrolysis Plants In Southwest Oregon, Colin Brink Sorenson
A Comparative Financial Analysis Of Fast Pyrolysis Plants In Southwest Oregon, Colin Brink Sorenson
Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers
There are millions of acres of forestland in the Western United States that could benefit from fuel reduction treatments to improve forest health and reduce wildfire fuels. These treatments generate forest residues that are typically piled and burned. However, with increasing concerns about energy security, high oil prices, air quality from pile burning and climate change, there is great interest in examining ways to economically use these residues as a renewable energy source. Pyrolysis of forest biomass is one method that shows promise, though the financial feasibility of doing so has not been previously investigated. This study presents the expected …
Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Responses To Biochars In Soils - Potential Mechanisms Of Interaction And Observed Responses In Controlled Environments, Daniel Warnock
Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Responses To Biochars In Soils - Potential Mechanisms Of Interaction And Observed Responses In Controlled Environments, Daniel Warnock
Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers
The following thesis is a two-part study, investigating the influences of biochar (charcoal) on arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF). The first part of this study is a critical examination and conceptual overview of the literature regarding biochar and AMF available before July 2007. In the second part, I present three experiments all designed to evaluate the influences of biochar applications on AMF abundance in primarily temperate, neutral pH soils. This course of research was selected through an exstensive review of the literature suggesting that biochar presence can strongly affect both soil microbial populations, including mycorrhizal fungi, and biogeochemistry. As both biochar …
Assessment Of Whitebark Pine Seedling Survival For Rocky Mountain Plantings, Deborah Kay Izlar
Assessment Of Whitebark Pine Seedling Survival For Rocky Mountain Plantings, Deborah Kay Izlar
Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers
Whitebark pine (WBP) is a keystone species of Rocky Mountain alpine and subalpine areas. A pervasive non-native fungal disease (white pine blister rust), mountain pine beetle infestation, and successional replacement by shade-tolerant competitors following decades of fire exclusion have severely reduced whitebark pine and threaten these high-elevation ecosystems. Land managers are attempting to reverse whitebark pine’s decline by increasing regeneration of rust-resistant trees while restoring successional processes. Restoration efforts include the planting of whitebark pine seedlings and over 200,000 seedlings have been planted on National Forest, BLM and National Park service lands. In this Rocky Mountain (RM) study, select whitebark …