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Investigations into the ecological relationships of ponderosa pine in southeast ArizonaDodge, Richard Archie, 1932- January 1963 (has links)
No description available.
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Changes in water infiltration capacities following the application of a wetting agent on a ponderosa pine forest floorKaplan, Marc Gabriel,1947- January 1973 (has links)
An infiltration-wetting agent study, using the wetting agent "WATER-IN", was conducted in the ponderosa pine forest type of east central Arizona, near McNary, Arizona. An application rate of 10 gallons of wetting agent per surface acre was used both on bare mineral soil and on ponderosa pine litter. The infiltration rate was measured by a modified North Fork infiltrometer. It was found that "WATER-IN" significantly increased water runoff, when applied to litter, but when applied to bare mineral soil, "WATER-IN" caused a significant increase in water infiltration. The wetting agent did not significantly affect antecedent moisture, soil particle distribution, litter water holding capacity, or litter bulk density. It is presently hypothesized that the increase in water infiltration on treated bare mineral soil is due to a decrease in the average bulk density of the surface inch of soil. The data strongly suggests this hypothesis to be correct. The increase in runoff when litter is treated is probably due to an interaction, either physical, chemical, or both, between the humus layer and "WATER-IN", creating a hydrophobic condition where one did not exist before.
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Multiple-resource modelling in the forest and woodland ecosystems of ArizonaBojórquez, Luis Antonio,1956- January 1987 (has links)
Management, under the concepts of multiple-use and adaptive management, requires the assessment of potentials and limitations of the natural ecosystems to provide satisfaction to human needs, to protect long term productivity, and preserve biological diversity. Overstory-understory relationships were developed for ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) ecosystems to help managers to evaluate herbage production potentials. Secondary data sources from the Beaver Creek and the Heber Watersheds were divided as follows: igneous soils, igneous clay loam, igneous loam-sandy loam, sedimentary soils, alluvium, and sandstone. Regression models were fitted to the raw data by the least squared method. The dependent variables were herbage production (lb/ac) by component; namely total, grass and grass like plants, forbs and half shrubs, and shrubs. The independent variables were total and ponderosa pine basal area (ft 2 /ac). Semilogarithmic models fitted the data from igneous soils, while logarithmic transformations of hyperbolic models fitted the data from sedimentary soils. For igneous soils, ponderosa pine basal area suffice for adequate predictions of herbage production. Significant differences were found between equations for alluvium and sandstone. The resulting equations for ponderosa pine integrate the core of the model UNDER. Mathematical functions developed elsewhere are included in UNDER to compute herbage production in pinyon-juniper and mixed conifer ecosystems. UNDER is linked to other simulators by MICROSIM. MICROSIM, a multiple-resource simulation model, is a tool to assist in the assessment of potentials of forest and woodlands of Arizona. MICROSIM is a menu driven program for IBM or compatibles it contains the module Flora, for estimating plant responses, and module Fauna, to evaluate impacts on animals. Further development of MICROSIM should include the linkage to more modules and models, and to Geographical Information Systems.
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DISTRIBUTION OF NITROGEN AND CARBON IN PONDEROSA PINE ECOSYSTEMS AS A FUNCTION OF PARENT MATERIALWelch, Tommy G. January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
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CHARACTERISTICS OF PONDEROSA PINE STANDS SELECTED BY THE ABERT'S SQUIRREL FOR COVERPatton, David R. January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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Effects of prescribed burning on breeding birds in a ponderosa pine forest, southeastern ArizonaHorton, Scott Patterson, 1951- January 1987 (has links)
A moderately intense, broadcast, understory, prescribed burn in 3 previously unburned ponderosa pine stands in southeastern Arizona felled or consumed 50% of all ponderosa pine snags ≥ 15 cm dbh. Large moderately decayed snags were most susceptible to burning. Large snags in the early stages of decay were preferred as nest sites by cavity-nesting birds. Numbers of live woody plants were reduced by 40%, mortality was greatest among shrubs and small trees. Canopy volume was reduced by 19%, the greatest impact was below 5 m. No species of cavity-nesting birds, or birds that associated with understory vegetation disappeared in the first season after burning, but 3 species decreased, and 1 species increased in abundance. The minor impacts of a single treatment with broadcast understory burning on bird populations will be ephemeral, but a repeated burns could have greater, and more lasting effects on the avian community.
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Impacts of ponderosa pine forest restoration treatments on the ectomycorrhizal fungal community and fine root biomass in the Blue Mountains of OregonSmith, Jane E. (Jane Elizabeth) 07 May 2004 (has links)
Before the arrival of Euro-Americans, the inland Pacific Northwest was settled by native
people whose frequent intentional burning of the landscape promoted open stands
dominated by large fire-resistant ponderosa pine. Fire suppression for nearly a century,
livestock grazing, and logging of the largest trees has resulted in forests characterized by
increased densities of small trees with closed canopies and unusually high fuel loads.
Such structural changes to the forest ecosystem are particularly evident in the Blue
Mountains of Oregon and Washington where forest managers are applying prescribed fire
and thinning to reduce the risk of stand-replacing wildfire and reestablish stand structure
characteristics seen prior to Euro-American settlement. Aboveground ecosystem
recovery after disturbance is directly linked to the survival of ectomycorrhizal fungi
(EMF) that form an obligate symbiosis with roots of tree species in the Pinaceae. EMF
are critical for the uptake of nutrients by the tree host. The research comprising this
dissertation explores the response of the EMF community structure and composition, live
fine root biomass, and duff (decaying material) levels to (i) seasonal burning (fall vs.
spring) and (ii) alternative fuel reducing restoration treatments (thinned only, prescribed
burned only, thinned and prescribed burned). In both studies, treatments significantly
reducing duff depth (e.g. fall burning and both restoration burning treatments) negatively
impacted EMF species richness and live fine root biomass. The EMF community is
characterized by a large number of species scattered at low frequencies across the sites.
The frequent occurrence of a few species (e.g. Rhizopogon salebrosus and Wilcoxina
rehmii), in both studies before and after treatment applications, demonstrates that some
EMF species survive or rapidly reestablish after disturbance. The initial reduction of
EMF species richness, fine root biomass, and duff levels after prescribed fire has
important implications for whether managers can achieve the desired future condition of
stands with large-tree retention and low fuel loads. The impacts of prescribed fire on the
soil microbial community, along with the recovery potential of a site and the impending
risk of stand-replacing wildfire in stands differing in structure from historic conditions,
bear consideration when developing restoration prescriptions. / Graduation date: 2005
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