06626oam 2200829 450 991071163910332120220818113937.0(CKB)5470000002485672(OCoLC)1076962225(EXLCZ)99547000000248567220181203g20182020 ua 0engurcn||||a||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierRiparian research and management past, present, futureFort Collins, CO :United States Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station,2018-2020.1 online resource (2 volumes) illustrations (some color), maps (some color)General technical report RMRS ;GTR-377, GTR-411Technical editors of volume 1: R. Roy Johnson, Steven W. Carothers, Deborah M. Finch, Kenneth J. Kingsley, John T. Stanley.Technical editors of volume 2: Steven W. Carothers, R. Roy Johnson, Deborah M. Finch, Kenneth J. Kingsley, Robert H. Hamre."November 2018"--Volume 1."June 2020"--Volume 2.Includes bibliographical references.Volume 1: Development of the science of riparian ecology in the semi-arid western United States -- Development of riparian perspectives in the wet Pacific Northwest since the 1970s -- Impacts of interacting fire, climate, and hydrologic changes on riparian forest ecosystems in the Southwest -- Invasion and restoration of western rivers dominated by Tamarix spp. -- Unintended consequences: tamarisk control and increasing threats to the southwestern willow flycatcher -- Beavers, livestock, and riparian synergies: bringing small mammals into the picture -- Euro-American beaver trapping and its long-term impact on drainage network form and function, water abundance, delivery, and system stability -- Arizona as a watershed: then and now: case studies of changed management of rivers and habitat in the lower Colorado River system -- Evaluating riparian vegetation change in canyon-bound reaches of the Colorado River using spatially extensive matched photo sets -- Breeding waterbirds of the Mexican portion of the Colorado River delta -- Terrestrial vertebrates of mesquite bosques in southwestern North America -- Appendix A: Western pioneers of riparian study through the 1980s -- Appendix B: Conferences, symposia, and other gatherings pertaining to riparian ecosystems, riparian ecology, riparian habitat restoration, and riparian area conservation.Volume 2: Understanding gains and losses of riparian habitat: interpreting change, its causes and consequences -- A naturalized riparian ecosystem: consequences of tamarisk leaf beetle (Diorhabda spp.) biocontrol -- Vanishing riparian mesquite bosques: their uniqueness and recovery potential -- Using the Southwest Experimental Garden Array to enhance riparian restoration in response to global environmental change: identifying and deploying genotypes and populations for current and future environments -- The Watershed continuum: a conceptual model of fluvial-riparian ecosystems -- It's not all bad news : riparian areas in the Anthropocene -- The development of riparian ecosystem restoration in California -- Sacramento-San Joaquin System -- Recreation habitat versus ecological habitat in riparian areas: can we manage for both? -- Intended versus unintended effects during riparian restoration create high quality recreation habitat.In the past fifty years, riparian values have been recognized and documented, and the science of riparian ecology developed steadily. Volume 1 covers the more mesic northwestern United States to the arid Southwest and Mexico. The authors review the origins of riparian science in the western United States, document what is currently known about riparian ecosystems, and project future needs. Topics include: interactions with fire, climate change, and declining water; effects from exotic species; unintended consequences of biological control; the role of small mammals; watershed response to beavers; watershed and riparian changes; changes below large dams; water birds of the Colorado River Delta; and terrestrial vertebrates of mesquite bosques. Appendices and references chronicle the field's literature, authors, "riparian pioneers," and conferences.Volume 2 expands upon two important recent developments: global climate change and impacts of introduced tamarisk leaf beetles (Diorhabda spp.) in the American West. It also covers the losses of riparian habitat, including extirpation of a large number of mesquite bosques (woodlands) in the Southwest; the restoration of riparian ecosystems damaged by anthropogenic activities; the importance of a watershed; and the importance of riparian ecosystems to recreation. The combination of volumes 1 and 2 examines the evolving understanding of scientific implications and anthropogenic threats to those ecosystems since Caucasian settlement of the region to present.Riparian research and management Riparian areasUnited StatesManagementRiparian ecologyUnited StatesRiparian forestsUnited StatesRiparian animalsUnited StatesRiparian plantsUnited StatesWatershed managementUnited StatesRiparian animalsfastRiparian areasManagementfastRiparian ecologyfastRiparian forestsfastRiparian plantsfastWatershed managementfastUnited StatesfastTechnical reports.fastTechnical reports.lcgftRiparian areasManagement.Riparian ecologyRiparian forestsRiparian animalsRiparian plantsWatershed managementRiparian animals.Riparian areasManagement.Riparian ecology.Riparian forests.Riparian plants.Watershed management.Rocky Mountain Research Station (Fort Collins, Colo.),COPCOPOCLCOGPOMERUCOCLCFIADOCLCOUPMRLABOOK9910711639103321Riparian research and management3525873UNINA