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Rocky Mountain Research Station


Forest Service Research Reduces Fire Danger in Chernobyl Contaminated Zone

May 28, 2020 Diane Banegas, USDA Forest Service Office of Communications

In April 1986, the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Ukraine exploded and heavily contaminated nearly 40,000 square miles with radioisotopes. The contaminated area became known as the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone in Ukraine and the Polesie Radioecological Reserve in Belarus. Today, the site remains...

Forestry

New Tool Tests Management Strategies for Ecosystem Resilience

February 19, 2020 Diane Banegas, Research and Development, Forest Service

The USDA Forest Service has developed a new risk-assessment tool that helps scientists and decision makers manage natural resources and develop strategies that strengthen ecosystems.

Forestry

Multiagency Effort Goes Deep Inside a Fire

July 29, 2019 Gail Keirn, Rocky Mountain Research Station-Fort Collins, CO; Matt Burks, Pacific Northwest Research Station-Corvallis, OR and John Zapell, Fishlake National Forest-Richfield, UT

Forest fires often reach or exceed temperatures of 2,000° Fahrenheit—that’s equivalent to one-fifth the temperature of the surface of the sun. What is the impact of such high temperatures on the soil and plants of our forests? And how do the intensity and heat of a wildfire impact its behavior...

Forestry

New Research Confirms that Today’s Wildfires Moderate Future Fires

June 13, 2019 Diane Banegas, Research and Development, USDA Forest Service

The Forest Service manages landscapes, so they are resilient and resistant to threats of all kinds—from fires, to drought, to pest infestations. Forest Service researchers recently confirmed that naturally occurring wildland fire helps create fire-resilient landscapes that limit the start and spread...

Forestry

New Science Framework Provides Basis for Conservation and Restoration of Sagebrush

April 16, 2019 Jessica Brewen and Jennifer Hayes, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Forest Service

“Resilience” is the ability to recover from change, or when you think about landscapes, the ability to recover from disturbances like wildfires. A new model takes the idea of resilience and applies it to the natural environment, specifically, to sagebrush. This resilience model is one of the core...

Conservation Forestry

Tree Rings Tell the History of Fire and Forest Health

April 12, 2019 Diane Banegas, Research and Development, USDA Forest Service

Why are Rocky Mountain Research Station scientists sampling tree rings in the Pinaleño Mountains of southeast Arizona? Because tree ring samples reveal the history of fire. When fire scorches a tree, the tree floods its wound with sap, which protects the wound from wood rot decay for hundreds of...

Forestry

Scientists Bring Back the Good Earth

November 08, 2018 Diane Banegas, Research and Development, Forest Service

“You can’t have a forest without a foundation of quality soil,” said Debbie Page-Dumroese, a soil scientist for the U.S. Forest Service’s Rocky Mountain Research Station in Moscow, Idaho. That’s the lesson learned when hundreds of ponderosa pines were planted on rocky streambanks in national forests...

Forestry

The Benefits of Helping Great Plains Trees - One Diagnosis at a Time

March 09, 2017 Jennifer Hayes, U.S. Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station

It began as a causal conversation in a hotel lobby in Kansas. After a day of discussions during the annual meeting of the Great Plains Tree Pest Council, the after-hours talk turned to the idea of updating the 1986 Diseases of Trees in the Great Plains manual.

Forestry

Keeping Animals Connected All Over the World

October 03, 2016 Cody Sullivan, U.S. Forest Service Research and Development Program

The landscape modeling expertise Samuel Cushman provides as a research ecologist at the U.S. Forest Service’s Rocky Mountain Research Station is in demand worldwide as human-caused disturbances impact animal distribution, connectivity and survival. Whether it’s clouded leopards in Borneo, lions in...

Conservation Forestry

New Research Provides Insights into Sage Grouse DNA

September 27, 2016 Jennifer Hayes, U.S. Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station, and Brianna Randall, Natural Resources Conservation Service Sage Grouse Initiative

The greater sage grouse is an iconic bird that lives in the American West's sagebrush landscape. It’s also a species at the center of a nationwide debate focused on how best to manage its habitat to balance multiple uses and ensure the bird’s long-term survival. And the dialogue has just been...

Conservation Forestry
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