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coarse woody debris host:home.ccil.org

Listing 1 - 10 from 19 for coarse woody debris

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... do more damage in many cases. The roots of grass grow deeper than many non-woody roots of trees. We suggest mowing the grass as low as possible and placing the ... .E.; Hua, C Coarse Woody Debris Dynamics in Two Old-Growth Ecosystems USDA Research Paper INT-RP-477, Sept 1994 13 pages Graham; Harvey; Jurgensen; Jain; Tonn; Page-Dumroese Managing Coarse Woody Debris in Forest of ...
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... Coarse Woody Debris – Animals / Endangered Species 8. Coarse Woody Debris – Temperature 9. Coarse Woody Debris - Other Habitat and Potential Niches 10. Coarse Woody Debris – Insects and Other Bonogens / Endangered Species 11. Coarse Woody Debris – Humic Acids, Horizons, Buffers and pH 12. Coarse Woody Debris ...
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... budgets and erosion potential (Page-Dumroese, Harvey, Jurgensen and Graham, 1991). 45. Logging is removing woody material that has been identified as playing several important roles in the functioning of ... too often goes unobserved, such as the case in this Painter Run Windthrow Salvage Project? Coarse woody debris / ecoart nurse logs play a key role in providing the requirements of water/moisture ...
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... , Tarrant, Trappe and Franklin, 1988). 117. Logging removes deeper, multi layered canopies, larger accumulations, of coarse woody debris (any symplastless standing or fallen tree stem at least 4 inches in diameter at breast ...
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... habitat for fungi and arthropods. We know, During decomposition, logs and other forms of coarse woody debris (CWD) reduce erosion, affect soil development, store essential elements and water, are a ... if not eliminates multi-layered canopies, removes and stops accumulation of larger accumulations of coarse woody debris (any symplastless standing or fallen tree stem at least 4 inches in diameter ...
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... for fungi and arthropods. We know, During decomposition, logs and other forms of coarse woody debris (CWD) reduce erosion, affect soil development, store nutrients and water, are a ... fungi immobilize nitrogen, but in coarse woody debris they actively transfer it to the soil. 2. Another important consideration in understanding nutrient release from coarse woody debris is that tree boles are ...
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... the system ranging from soil protection to wildlife and microbial habitat. The management of coarse woody debris is critical for maintaining functioning ecosystems (Graham, Harvey, Jurgensen, Jain, Tonn and Page-Dumroese, ... which vertebrates such as salamanders, shrews, shrew moles, and voles, would have found under debris of sloughed bark and so called rotten wood alongside the class IV tree; they ...
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... as the associated other living organisms (Page-Dumroese, Harvey, Jurgensen and Graham, 1991). [See: 4. Coarse woody debris – Nutrients and Essential Elements] 331. Logging is removing present and future higher plants ... such as salamanders, shrews, shrew moles, and voles, which would have found cover under debris of sloughed bark and so called rotten wood alongside the class IV tree; they ...
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... and decomposition as well as organic nitrogen compounds mineralized within the wood chemical matrix. Non-woody roots and mycorrhizae of plant species that colonize decaying wood use its available nitrogen ( ... is removing future needed active parts of the soil system as soil wood. In fact: Coarse woody debris can be incorporated into the surface soil horizon as freezing and thawing cycles move CWD ...
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... forests will contain much less coarse woody debris (CWD), and that debris will be smaller and of different quality than that seen today. We have the technology to remove most coarse woody debris from the forest; in ...
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