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Fire Science Digest- Big Changes in the Great Basin

View the publication here!

JFSP-funded researchers are exploring the ecological functioning of sagebrush-steppe communities in the Great Basin and other places in the dry Intermountain West. Their work is helping managers effectively use tools such as tree mastication and prescribed fire to help these communities become more resilient in the face of invasive weeds. Other research is finding ways to reestablish native vegetation on sites where weedy invaders have pushed the community past the point where it can recover on its own.

Image Source: Joint Fire Science Program

Posted by:
Gloria Edwards
Published on:
June 6, 2017

Categories: Newsletter/DigestTags: arid shrublands, bromus tectorum, cheatgrass, ecosystem recovery, ecotype conversion, fire-adapted communities and fire response, grazing, grazing management, Great Basin, invasive species, JFSP, Joint Fire Science Program, landscape restoration and resilience, Mastication, noxious weeds, Prescribed Fire, ranch management, rangeland, sagebrush, sagebrush and fire, Sagebrush Ecology, wildfire

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This regional Fire Exchange is one of 15 regional fire science exchanges sponsored by the Joint Fire Science Program (JFSP).
View resources from multiple exchanges.