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File Pinon-Juniper Restoration Protocols: Presentation to WHO CG42 January 2019
Presentation made by Ken Reid to the NM Forest and Watershed Management Coordinating Group on 01/11/19
Located in Groups / Forest and Watershed Health Coordinating Group / Public Collaborative Group Folder
File PJ Restoration Protocols - NMFWRI
Handout distributed at the January 11, 2019 NM Forest and Watershed Management Coordinating Group meeting
Located in Groups / Forest and Watershed Health Coordinating Group / Public Collaborative Group Folder
File PS document Pueblo of Tesuque RTRL project maps
Handouts from 09/26/16 Greater Santa Fe Fireshed Coalition meeting showing proposed and future projects
Located in Groups / NMSF Workspace / Public Collaborative Group Folder
File Regional Collaborative Groups, Partners and Projects (Rev. 10/20/16)
Spreadsheet listing collaborative groups working on forest and watershed restoration in and adjacent to New Mexico. Updated 10/20/16. List includes some partners and collaborative projects. Distributed at the Fall 2016 Coordinating Group meeting.
Located in Groups / Forest and Watershed Health Coordinating Group / Public Collaborative Group Folder
File image/x-icon Resources for Private Forest Landowners in New Mexico
Are you a private forestland owner in New Mexico? You may be interested in learning more about your forest, improving the health of your land, creating better wildlife habitat, addressing wildfire hazard or improving the health of your riparian forest (or bosque), or learning more about forest industry. If so, you may be unsure of where to begin. The following pages contain resources for technical and financial assistance for forest landowners, including resources for forest health, forest thinning and more.
Located in Library / Inbox
This guidebook contains science-based principles, processes, and tools necessary to assist with developing adaptation options for national forest lands.
Located in Library
RMRS-GTR-310. USFS Rocky Mountain Research Station. Abstract: Ponderosa pine and dry mixed-conifer forests in the Southwest United States are experiencing, or have become increasingly susceptible to, large-scale severe wildfire, insect, and disease episodes resulting in altered plant and animal demographics, reduced productivity and biodiversity, and impaired ecosystem processes and functions. We present a management framework based on a synthesis of science on forest ecology and management, reference conditions, and lessons learned during implementations of our restoration framework. Our framework focuses on the restoration of key elements similar to the historical composition and structure of vegetation in these forests: (1) species composition; (2) groups of trees; (3) scattered individual trees; (4) grass-forb-shrub interspaces; (5) snags, logs, and woody debris; and (6) variation in the arrangements of these elements in space and time. Our framework informs management strategies that can improve the resiliency of frequent-fire forests and facilitate the resumption of characteristic ecosystem processes and functions by restoring the composition, structure, and spatial patterns of vegetation. We believe restoration of key compositional and structural elements on a per-site basis will restore resiliency of frequent-fire forests in the Southwest, and thereby position them to better resist, and adapt to, future disturbances and climates.
Located in Groups / Forest and Watershed Health Coordinating Group / Public Collaborative Group Folder
File Restoring composition and structure in Southwestern frequent-fire forests: A science-based framework for improving ecosystem resiliency
Ponderosa pine and dry mixed-conifer forests in the Southwest United States are experiencing, or have become increasingly susceptible to, large-scale severe wildfire, insect, and disease episodes resulting in altered plant and animal demographics, reduced productivity and biodiversity, and impaired ecosystem processes and functions. We present a management framework based on a synthesis of science on forest ecology and management, reference conditions, and lessons learned during implementations of our restoration framework. Our framework informs management strategies that can improve the resiliency of frequent-fire forests and facilitate the resumption of characteristic ecosystem processes and functions by restoring the composition, structure, and spatial patterns of vegetation. We believe restoration of key compositional and structural elements on a per-site basis will restore resiliency of frequent-fire forests in the Southwest, and thereby position them to better resist, and adapt to, future disturbances and climates.
Located in Library
Video presentations from the conference held October 18-19, 2016 at Utah State University. As climate changes, forests are being impacted by severe drought, longer fire seasons, and impressive insect epidemics. New approaches to landscape restoration are needed to cope with these disturbances. The 2016 Restoring the West Conference offered presentations by experts in climate science, landscape restoration, and forest ecology on techniques for this uncertain future, and gave examples where these techniques are working.
Located in Library / Inbox
Bagdon, B. and Huang, C.H., 2016. Southwest Fire Science Consortium Working Paper
Located in Library / Inbox