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Some grouse hunting tips as bird season approaches

It’s once again time for bird hunting season to commence. Monday, Aug. 30 is the opening day of Idaho’s forest grouse season, while Utahns have to wait until Sept. 1.

Cache-county , Utah , United-states , Bear-river-range , Idaho , Harvest-information-program , Forest-service , Bear-river , Forest-service-road , Grouse , Dusky-grouse

موقع خبرني : سد الشهية بطرق طبيعية

موقع خبرني - عاجل التفاصيل الكاملة حول: سد الشهية بطرق طبيعية، تابعوا اخر الاخبار المحلية العاجلة في الاردن على مدار الساعة يومياً.

Roads-dam , Green-leaved , Sagebrush , سد , الشهية , بطرق , طبيعية , خبرني , وكالة-خبرني , وكالة-اخبارية , وكالة-خبرني-الاخبارية

سد الشهية بطرق طبيعية

سد الشهية بطرق طبيعية
sarayanews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sarayanews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Roads-dam , Green-leaved , Sagebrush ,

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20210624:02:00:00

A big programming announcement. this coming wednesday, june the 30th, life, 9:00 p.m., we will be holding a hannity town hall at the u.s.-mexico border alongside president donald trump and the governor of the great state of texas, governor greg abbott, and we will be talking about the failed policies of biden and harris. let not your heart be troubled. at laura ingraham, hi, big show. you had a great show last night, good for you. laura: thank you. i have a question, is your town hall going to be like 800 miles away from her all the action is or is it going to be right on the border came up because we know kamala is going to a totally sean: i ve been down to the border 15 times in my career, all right? we re going to be right on the border. i m not exactly sure of the location. i m not the location manager for the channel. wherever they put me i will go. laura: you and trump together the crawling around in a sagebrush kind of looking for the migrants? will you both be in camo or what

Life , Town-hall , Programming-announcement , Hannity , Us-mexico-border , June , 9 , 30 , Wednesday-june-the-30th , 00 , Laura-ingraham , Joe-biden-speechwriter

Drill Seeding Sagebrush May Help Prevent Wildfires


Credit Bureau of Land Management Elko District Office
Last year was one of the worst wildfire seasons on record in the West. But certain seeding treatments may help prevent more fires in the future.
In a new study, University of Idaho researcher Chris Bowman-Prideaux explored how different types of seeding impact wildfire occurrence in sagebrush. Seeding is used to stabilize and improve sagebrush ecosystems across the West. Since 2000, much of that seeding has been with native grasses and big sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata).
Bowman-Prideaux compared drill seeding and aerial seeding. Drill seeding involves plowing land to bury seeds, which are then covered as a tractor runs back over the soil. In aerial seeding, helicopters or planes drop seeds from the air.

Chris-bowman-prideaux , University-of-idaho , Land-management-elko-district , Wildfire , Sagebrush , Eeding , Ire , Recipitation , Niversity-of-idaho , பல்கலைக்கழகம்-ஆஃப்-ஐடஹோ , காட்டுத்தீ

Eyes on Earth Episode 42 – Rangelands of the U.S.


Eyes on Earth is a podcast on remote sensing, Earth observation, land change and science, brought to you by the USGS Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center. In this episode, we hear how Landsat helps monitor vulnerable rangelands in the Western U.S.
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Matthew Rigge
Summary: The extensive rangelands across the Western United States are threatened by invasive grasses, climate change, and altered fire regimes that can disturb the landscape. The largely semi-arid lands are also important for the survival of species that need undisturbed sagebrush ecosystems to thrive. But most satellite-based land cover datasets don’t offer the kind of detail needed to track small but ecologically meaningful shifts in vegetation that can alter fire regimes and improve habitats. In this episode of Eyes on Earth, we hear about how new EROS data products help fill in that gap.

United-states , John-hult , Matt-rigge , Research-physical-scientist , Western-united-states , Land-cover , Land-change , Rangelands , Back-in-time , Sagebrush , Fire-danger , Nlcd

Other views: Letter critiques main points of BLM proposal


Recently, eight prominent scientists sent a letter to the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) declaring that the agency’s proposed Tri-State Fuel Break (TSFB) for Oregon, Nevada, and Idaho is flawed and will endanger sagebrush ecosystems.
To quote the scientists: “If implemented as proposed (and as already approved in the Idaho-side Record of Decision), the project will likely degrade the biological diversity and ecosystem services provided by these landscapes.”
The BLM’s proposes creating up to 1,539 miles of fuel breaks (enough to travel halfway across the United States). Fuel breaks by mowing, mowing and seeding, seeding within the fuel treatment zone, and blading, hand cutting, or herbicide application to remove vegetation within the existing roadbed. Besides, the BLM plans to use “targeted grazing” to reduce fuels further.

Nevada , United-states , Oregon , Idaho , Bureau-of-land-management , Land-management , Tri-state-fuel-break , Idaho-side-record , Southeast-oregon , Sagebrush , Ecosystem

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20181231:04:03:00

To start their search for a killer. when you see the satellite photos and the scarring on the desert floor, knowing what we know now, it s very obvious that those look like graves. this is what albuquerque police chief ray schultz says investigators saw when they looked at old pictures of the mesa. in this 2002 image of the area where the bones were discovered, there s nothing unusual. just desert and sagebrush with a dry stream bed running through it. but two years later in 2004, when most of the women on detective ida lopez s list were disappearing, the images show tire tracks leading from this road to a few bare spots in the vegetation, spots that weren t there before. this photo taken the following year shows even more bare spots, clustered within 20 yards of each other.

On-albuquerque , Killer , Search , Satellite-photos , Graves , Desert-floor , Scarring , Nothing , West-mesa , Area , Bones , Investigators

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20181226:02:03:00

Might have actually seen evidence of a murderer moonlighting as a grave digger. it turns out that even though that evidence was long gone by the time those bones were discovered in 2009 a bird s eye view was precisely the perspective investigators needed. to start their search for a killer. when you see those satellite photos and you see the scarring on the desert floor, knowing what we know now, it s very obvious that those look like graves. reporter: this is what albuquerque police chief ray schultz says investigators saw when they looked at old pictures of the mesa. in this 2002 image of the area where the bones were discovered there s nothing unusual. just desert and sagebrush with a dry stream bed running through it. but two years later, in 2004, when most of the women on detective ida lopez s list were disappearing, the images show

Bones , Evidence , Grave-digger , Murderer-moonlighting , Search , Killer , Satellite-photos , Perspective-investigators , Desert-floor , Scarring , Birds-eye-view , 2009