Skip to content.
|
Skip to navigation
Visit Our Companion Sites:
All About Watershed
After Wildfire Guide
NMFWRI
Search Site
Search
only in current section
Advanced Search…
Navigation
Home
About
News & Events
Announcements
Library
Groups
AAW Partners
Help
Personal tools
Register
Log in
You are here:
Home
Info
Search results
12
items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Sort by
relevance
·
date (newest first)
·
alphabetically
At the Nexus of Fire, Water and Society
Opinion piece. May 23, 2016. Philosophical Transactions Royal Society of London B 371: 20150172. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2015.0172
Located in
Library
/
Inbox
Effects of Fire Severity on Herbaceous Vegetation Recovery, Following a Southwest Ponderosa Pine Wildfire
This poster presents research on the effectiveness of aerial seeding conducted on private lands by the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) following the Trigo Wildfire of April 2008, which burned 13,709 acres of ponderosa pine and mixed conifer in the Manzano Mountains of central New Mexico. The general objectives of this research were to: - determine the effects of fire severity on the recovery of forest understory vegetative communities and determine how different plant species respond to fire severity; - determine the response of intentionally seeded grass species used in restoration efforts by the NRCS (annual rye grass, Lolium multiflorum, and tall wheat grass, Thinopyrum ponticum) to high and low fire severity; and - evaluate the relative recovery responses of native and exotic plant species to fire severity.
Located in
Groups
/
…
/
Monitoring
/
Monitoring Papers, Presentations, and Posters
Evaluation of the Greater Santa Fe Fireshed Coalition Public Meeting of May 12, 2016
Report on the May 12, 2016 "Fire Fair" by the GSFFC Communication Team
Located in
Groups
/
Greater Santa Fe Fireshed Coalition
/
Communication Team
Finding Solutions Through Collaboration: New Mexico's All About Watersheds Portal (for Download)
The second of four (4) recorded PowerPoint presentations given during the "Preparing For Large Wildfires in New Mexico" workshop series, April 2018.
Located in
Groups
/
Wildfire Mitigation and Planning Project Workgroup
/
Public Collaborative Group Folder
Finding Solutions Through Collaboration: New Mexico's All About Watersheds Portal (Video)
The second of four (4) recorded PowerPoint presentations given during the "Preparing For Large Wildfires in New Mexico" workshop series, April 2018.
Located in
Groups
/
Wildfire Mitigation and Planning Project Workgroup
/
Public Collaborative Group Folder
Living With Fire: How social scientists are helping wildland-urban communities reduce wildfire risk
Science You Can Use Bulletin, Issue 19. Fort Collins, CO: Rocky Mountain Research Station. Published May 2016
Located in
Library
/
Inbox
Restoring the West Conference: Climate, Disturbance and Restoration in the Intermountain West
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
Review of economic benefits from fuel reduction treatments in the fire prone forests of the Southwestern United States
Bagdon, B. and Huang, C.H., 2016. Southwest Fire Science Consortium Working Paper
Located in
Library
/
Inbox
TVWC Landscape Restoration Strategy
This Landscape Restoration Strategy (LRS) was developed over seven months during 2014-2015 by the Taos Valley Watershed Coalition (TVWC). Coalition members manage or provide land use consultation on all of the adjoining jurisdictions within our focus area, which extends from the Rio Grande del Rancho on the south to the San Cristobal drainage on the north and also includes the Rio Fernando, Rio Pueblo, Rio Lucero, Rio Arroyo Seco, and Rio Hondo stream systems. Coalition members agree to focus on the goals of protecting, improving, and restoring the water quality, quantity, and ecological function of the forests and streams in the Rio Grande watershed within Taos County, to the benefit of both local and downstream water users. This LRS was developed by our membership to document our shared understanding of scientific data and community values, and to guide coordinated actions within our local watersheds.
Located in
Library
/
Inbox
Understanding Large Fire Management in New Mexico (for Download)
The third of four (4) recorded PowerPoint presentations given during the "Preparing For Large Wildfires in New Mexico" workshop series, April 2018. Downloadable file.
Located in
Groups
/
Wildfire Mitigation and Planning Project Workgroup
/
Public Collaborative Group Folder
Next 2 items »
[
1
]
2
Site Map
Accessibility
Contact