| Evaluation of a proposed dwarf mistletoe project, Stevensville Ranger District, Bitterroot National Forest, Montana | |
Abstract/OtherAbstract
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Residual Douglas-fir and lodgepole pine are dwarf mistletoe-infested and pose a threat to existing regeneration. Felling or girdling these residuals, along with sanitation/thinning of dense patches of regeneration, will reduce dwarf mistletoe intensity and increase future volume yields. Present net worth of the project is $0.50/acre. Benefit/cost ratio is 1.01/1. Use of pest management funds is recommended., Scanned at 600 DPI using a Cannon DR-9080C in TIF format. PDF generated through Capture Perfect using OmniPage Professional 15 for textual OCR. |
Authors
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Dooling, Oscar J., Wiegand, Robert, United States. Forest Service. Northern Region. Cooperative Forestry & Pest Management |
Contributors
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Publication Detail
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Publisher : Missoula, Mont. : USDA Forest Service, Northern Region, Cooperative Forestry & Pest Management Type : Technical Report Format : 519569 bytes, application/pdf |
Date Detail
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2006-12-05, 2006-12-05, 1983 |
Subject
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Dwarf mistletoes -- Control -- Bitterroot National Forest (Idaho and Mont.), Douglas fir -- Diseases and pests -- Control -- Bitterroot National Forest (Idaho and Mont.), Lodgepole pine -- Diseases and pests -- Control -- Bitterroot National Forest (Idaho and Mont.) |
Coverage
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Relation
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Report (United States. Forest Service. Northern Region), no. 83-9, Cooperative forestry and pest management |
Source
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Copyright Information
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Other Details
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Languages : en_US |
Export Citation
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