Leopold Live: Ashe Juniper Management

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 дек 2024
  • Leopold Live! is back with Chapter Two, Episode 17 - Ashe Juniper Management, and will stream on April 25th at 12:00pm CST. Leopold Live! began as a live-streaming seminar series conducted in partnership with the Selah, Bamberger Ranch Preserve (Bamberger) to demonstrate to natural resource students, landowners and wildlife enthusiasts the original 5 creative methods conceptualized by Aldo Leopold in the 1930s to effectively manage game and therefore conserve wildlife ecology. The series builds on “the central thesis of game management is this: game can be restored by the creative use of the same tools which have heretofore destroyed it-axe, plow, cow, fire, and gun.”
    Each month we are joined by Bamberger ranch staff and experts in the field to explore and demonstrate each of Leopold's five tools and to give viewers tangible practices that they can implement out in the field. This episode will be hosted by Bamberger ranch manager, Steven Fulton, and Daniel Oppenheimer from the Hill Country Alliance.
    Tune in here to ask questions, connect and learn about these essential tools for wildlife habitat management on your property.
    Resources:
    Hill Country Alliance: hillcountryall...
    Ashe juniper species profile: rangeplants.ta...
    Ashe juniper as a native species: • Hill Country's Juniper...
    Managing ashe juniper with fire: counties.agrili...
    Texas ecoregions: tpwd.texas.gov...
    Bison impacts on the landscape: tpwd.texas.gov...
    Ashe juniper and soil improvements: txmn.org/alamo...
    Bamberger Ranch Preserve workshops: www.bambergerr...
    Erosion control episode: • Leopold Live: Erosion ...
    Golden-cheekd warbler species profile: www.audubon.or...
    Golden-cheeked warbler nest: www.flickr.com...
    Mulching guidelines: counties.agrili...
    Wildlife brush piles: tpwd.texas.gov...
    1-d-1 wildlife tax valuation: rise.articulat...
    Texas snowbell species profile: tpwd.texas.gov...
    Texas snowbells and the Bamberger Ranch: passporttotexa...
    Creating plant corrals: brp-journal.bl...

Комментарии • 1

  • @Ashley-ti6mp
    @Ashley-ti6mp Год назад

    Do you aware there are many Bonsai club in each city in Texas, such as Dallas, Fort Worth, Sản Antonio, Houston, just to mention a few. Club would like to partner with land owner and TAMU to collect native trees such as Ash Juniper. It is one of club’s challenge to find private lands that would allow club to collect. Club would preserve the beauty of native trees into bonsai art. Hope someone would reach out to some clubs around Texas