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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Arboles Trabajando En Beneficio De La Ganaderia Dec 2001

Arboles Trabajando En Beneficio De La Ganaderia

Working Trees (USDA-NAC)

Éstos son, árboles que se utilizan en conservación y sistemas de producción en fincas y ranchos. Estos árboles tienen un trabajo que realizar, sea aumentar los ingresos, proteger los recursos naturales o hacernos disfrutar un poco más de nuestras vidas. “Árboles trabajando” es un lema usado para promover la ciencia y práctica de la agroforestería. Agroforestería es un término que agricultores y dasónomos han definido para incluir la mayoría de las prácticas en las que se integran árboles y arbustos de forma intencional junto con un cultivo, forraje u operaciones de ganadería. Prácticas tales como rompevientos, bosques ribereños de amortiguamiento, …


Arboles Trabajando En Benficio De La Agricultura Nov 2001

Arboles Trabajando En Benficio De La Agricultura

Working Trees (USDA-NAC)

Imagine por un momento que en su finca usted cuenta con un producto capaz de controlar la erosión, aumentar el rendimiento de las cosechas y absorber los contaminantes en aguas de escorrentía. ¿Y que le parece si además pudiera proteger a los animales de fuertes vientos y temperaturas críticas, a la vez que éstos animales aumentan de peso y reducen los gastos de energía? Un producto que provea fuentes adicionales de ingreso y que provea diversidad al medioambiente, mantenga las aguas limpias y atraiga más vida silvestre. Seguramente la mayoría de nosostros correríamos a comprarlo.

Por supuesto un producto como …


Modeling Vegetative Buffer Performance Considering Topographic Data Accuracy, Jason M. Brothers, Dean E. Eisenhauer, Matthew J. Helmers, Mike Dosskey, Thomas G. Franti Jul 2001

Modeling Vegetative Buffer Performance Considering Topographic Data Accuracy, Jason M. Brothers, Dean E. Eisenhauer, Matthew J. Helmers, Mike Dosskey, Thomas G. Franti

USDA Forest Service / UNL Faculty Publications

Riparian buffers are a promising tool in efforts to reduce sediment contribution to streams. Models that predict the capacity of buffers to trap sediment have recently been developed. A number of parameters that are required to conduct such modeling efforts are derived from the topography of the site. In this study, three topographic data sources were used to generate the model input for an agricultural field with a riparian buffer. The runoff and sediment transport in the system was then simulated for three years. As a result, the area that contributed runoff and sediment to the buffer was substantially different …


Determining Differences In The Spatial Distribution Of Forest Structure On The Kaibab Plateau: Implications For Forest Management And The Northern Goshawk, Ryan S. Miller Apr 2001

Determining Differences In The Spatial Distribution Of Forest Structure On The Kaibab Plateau: Implications For Forest Management And The Northern Goshawk, Ryan S. Miller

Other Publications in Wildlife Management

The Kaibab Plateau, in North Central Arizona, has undergone extensive change in the last 100 years due to land management practices such as logging, road building, and fire suppression. The northern goshawk (Accipiter gentilis) has been a center of controversy, due to the potential effects of silvicultural practices on goshawk breeding habitat (Reynolds-1983, Bloom et al 1986, Kennedy 1989, Crocker-Bedford 1990). Current and past research efforts on the Kaibab Plateau have mapped Goshawk nesting territories and temporal change in nesting behavior and success. However, these research efforts have not determined how long-term spatial changes in land-use activities that have influenced …


"Vertebrate Pests Of Agriculture, Forestry And Public Lands" 2001 Annual Meeting Jan 2001

"Vertebrate Pests Of Agriculture, Forestry And Public Lands" 2001 Annual Meeting

Western Region Coordinating Committee for Vertebrate Pests of Agriculture, Forestry, and Public Lands (WCC-95)

Table of Contents

2001 Officers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

Minutes ................................................................ 2

Number and Title of the Regional Project ................................ 2

Location and Dates of the Meeting ................................... 2

Participants ................ , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . …


Both Lymantria Dispar Nucleopolyhedrovirus Enhancin Genes Contribute To Viral Potency, Holly J.R. Popham, David S. Bischoff, James M. Slavicek Jan 2001

Both Lymantria Dispar Nucleopolyhedrovirus Enhancin Genes Contribute To Viral Potency, Holly J.R. Popham, David S. Bischoff, James M. Slavicek

USDA Forest Service / UNL Faculty Publications

Enhancins are a group of proteins first identified in granuloviruses (GV) that have the ability to enhance nuclear polyhedrosis virus potency. We had previously identified an enhancin gene (E1) in the Lymantria dispar multinucleocapsid nucleopolyhedrovirus (LdMNPV) (D. S. Bischoff and J. M. Slavicek, J. Virol. 71:8133–8140, 1997). Inactivation of the E1 gene product within the viral genome lowered viral potency by an average of 2.9-fold. A second enhancin gene (E2) was identified when the entire genome of LdMNPV was sequenced (Kuzio et al., Virology 253:17–34, 1999). The E2 protein exhibits approximately 30% amino acid identity to the Ld …


Monitoring Large Areas For Forest Change Using Landsat: Generalization Across Space, Time And Landsat Sensors, Curtis E. Woodcock, Scott A. Macomber, Mary Pax-Lenney, Warren B. Cohen Jan 2001

Monitoring Large Areas For Forest Change Using Landsat: Generalization Across Space, Time And Landsat Sensors, Curtis E. Woodcock, Scott A. Macomber, Mary Pax-Lenney, Warren B. Cohen

USDA Forest Service / UNL Faculty Publications

Landsat 7 ETM+ provides an opportunity to extend the area and frequency with which we are able to monitor the Earth’s surface with fine spatial resolution data. To take advantage of this opportunity it is necessary to move beyond the traditional image-by-image approach to data analysis. A new approach to monitoring large areas is to extend the application of a trained image classifier to data beyond its original temporal, spatial, and sensor domains. A map of forest change in the Cascade Range of Oregon developed with methods based on such generalization shows accuracies comparable to a map produced with current …