Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Utilization Studies and Residual Measurement
Author
Coulloudon, Bill
Eshelman, Kris
Gianola, James
Habich, Ned
Hughes, Lee
Johnson, Curt
Pellant, Mike
Podborny, Paul
Rasmussen, Allen
Robles, Ben
Shaver, Pat
Spehar, John
Willoughby, John
Publisher
BLM - National Applied Resource Sciences Center
Body

The intent of this interagency monitoring guide is to provide the basis for consistent, uniform, and standard utilization studies and residual measurements that are economical, repeatable, statistically reliable, and technically adequate. While this guide is not all inclusive, it does include the primary study methods used across the West. An omission of a particular sampling method does not mean that the method is not valid in specific locations; it simply means that it is not widely used or recognized throughout the western states. (see Section V.E, Other Methods.) Proper use and management of our rangeland resources has created a demand for uniformity and consistency in rangeland health measurement methods. As a result of this interest, the USDI Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and USDA Forest Service met in late 1992 and agreed to establish an interagency technical team to jointly oversee the development and publishing of vegetation sampling field guides. The 13-member team currently includes representatives from the Forest Service, BLM, the Grazing Land Technology Institute of the Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS), and the Cooperative Extension Service. The interagency technical team first met in January 1994 to evaluate the existing rangeland monitoring techniques described in BLM's Utilization Studies, Technical Reference TR 4400-3. The team spent 2 years reviewing, modifying, adding to, and eliminating techniques for this interagency Utilization Studies and Residue Measurements technical reference. Feedback from numerous reviewers, including field personnel, resulted in further refinements.(source preface)

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Technical Report
Collection
  • Articles, citations, reports, websites, and multimedia resources focused on rangeland ecology, management, restoration, and other issues on American rangelands.