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Camas Monitoring at Nez Perce National Historical Park and Big Hole National Battlefield - 2008 Annual Status Report: Natural Resource Technical Report NPS/UCBN/NRTR?2008/133 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R305
Discovery Miles 3 050
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Camas Monitoring at Nez Perce National Historical Park and Big Hole National Battlefield - 2008 Annual Status Report: Natural Resource Technical Report NPS/UCBN/NRTR?2008/133 (Paperback)
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Loot Price R305
Discovery Miles 3 050
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The Upper Columbia Basin Network has identified 14 priority park
vital signs, indicators of ecosystem health, which represent a
broad suite of ecological phenomena operating across multiple
temporal and spatial scales. Our intent has been to monitor a
balanced and integrated "package" of vital signs that meets the
needs of current park management, but will also be able to
accommodate unanticipated environmental conditions in the future.
Camas is one particularly high priority vital sign for two UCBN
parks, Big Hole National Battlefield (BIHO) and Nez Perce National
Historical Park (NEPE). Camas is a unique resource for these parks
because it is both culturally and ecologically significant. Camas
was and remains one of the most widely utilized indigenous foods in
the Pacific Northwest and it is strongly associated with the wet
prairie ecosystems of the region that have been degraded or lost
due to historic land use practices. A long-term citizen
science-based monitoring program for detecting status and trends in
camas populations at BIHO and Weippe Prairie, a subunit of NEPE,
will serve as a central information source for park adaptive
management decision making and will provide essential feedback on
any eventual restoration efforts of park wet prairie habitats. The
involvement of student citizen scientists in this particular
program has been effective both in terms of leveraging resources as
well as in engaging communities in park stewardship and science
education. This annual report details the status and trend
estimates obtained from the first four years of monitoring,
2005-2008, at Weippe Prairie and BIHO.
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