Contents

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Contents

Welcoming and Opening Remarks

Jose Salinas and Chip Cartwright ..................................................................................... 1

Western Juniper Woodlands: 100 Years of Plant Succession

Rick Miller, Jeffrey Rose, Tony Svejcar, Jon Bates, and Kara Paintner ........................ 5

Soil Loss in Pinon-Juniper Ecosystems and Its Influence on Site Productivity and Desired Future Condition

Malchus B. Baker Jr., Leonard F. DeBano, and Peter F. Ffolliott .................................. 9

Plant Species Composition Patterns with Differences in Tree Dominance on a Southwestern Utah Pinon-Juniper Site

RobinJ. Tausch and Neil E. West ..................................................................................... 16

Acid and Alkaline Phosphatase Dynamics in Soils of a Pinon -Juniper

Woodland

Susanne Kramer .................................................................................................................. 24

Environmental Stress Influences Aboveground Pest Attack and Mycorrhizal

Mutualism in Pinon-Juniper Woodlands: Implications For Management in the Event of Global Warming

Catherine Gehring and Thomas Whitham ................................................................... 30

Stand Dynamics on Upper Elevation Pifton-Juniper Watersheds at Beaver

Creek, Arizona

Gerald J. Gottfried and Peter F. Ffolliott ......................................................................... 38

Preliminary Results of Decomposition and Cellulose Degradation Along an

Environmental Gradient in Northern Arizona

Carole Coe Klopatek, Kenneth L. Murphy, Julie Rosen, John R. Obst, and Jeffrey M. Klopatek ..................................................................................................... 46

Deer, Small Mammal, and Songbird Use of Thinned Pinon-Juniper Plots:

Preliminary Results

Steven K. Albert, Nelson Luna, and Albert L. Chopito ............................................... 54

Relationships Among Plant Species Composition and Mule Deer Winter

Range Use on Eastern Nevada Pinon-Juniper Chainings

Robin J Tausch and Paul T. Tueller ................................................................................... 65

Characteristics of Pifton-Juniper Habitats Selected for Feeding by Wintering

Merriam's Turkey

Brian F. Wakeling and Timothy D. Rogers ..................................................................... 74

Wildlife Associations in Rocky Mountain Juniper in the Northern Great

Plains, South Dakota

Mark A. Rumble and John E. Gobeille ............................................................................ 80

Effects of Fuelwood Harvesting on Small Mammal Populations in a

Pinon-Juniper Woodland

William H. Kruse ................................................................................................................. 91

Cone and Seed Insects Associated with Pinon Pine

Jose F. Negron ...................................................................................................................... 97

Insect and Disease Associates of the Pinon-Juniper Woodlands

Terrence J. Rogers .............................................................................................................. 107

Hydrology and Ecology of Pinon-Juniper Woodlands: Conceptual

Framework and Field Studies

Bradford P. Wilcox and David D. Breshears ................................................................ 109

Understory Production and Composition in Pinon-Juniper Woodlands in

New Mexico

Rex D. Pieper ...................................................................................................................... 120

A Checklist for Ecosystem Management in Southwestern Pinon-Juniper

Earl R Aldon, Reggie Fletcher, and Doug Shaw ......................................................... 125

Woodland Inventory Procedures and Analyses Conducted for Management

Planning Purposes on Indian Lands

John Waconda .................................................................................................................... 130

Watershed Restoration Through Integrated Resource Management on Public and Private Rangelands

,Sid Goodloe ........................................................................................................................ 136

"Can't We All Just Get Along"

Jon S. Bumstead ................................................................................................................. 141

Responding to Tribal Voices in Managing Woodland Resources

Ronald K. Miller ................................................................................................................ 146

The Capulin Pinon-Juniper Ecosystem Management Project The

Archaeological and Ecological Components

John C. Phillips and Martha D. Yates Ph.D ................................................................. 153

Community Based Pinon-Juniper Woodland Resource Management

Planning for the N ahat' a' Dziil Chapter

Usha Little and Denve!' Hospodarsky .......................................................................... 160

An Overview Of Woodland Projects Incorporated At Four Pueblos In New

Mexico

Buff Jebsen-Ross and Richard Schwab ......................................................................... 168

The Effects of Fire on Cultural Resources Mesa Verde National Park,

Colorado

Kathleen Fiero .................................................................................................................... 176

Western Juniper: An Evolving Case Study in Commercialization, Ecosystem

Management, and Community Development

Larry Swan ............................................................... , ......................................................... 179

Tres Piedras Pinon-Juniper Silviculture: A Partnership Project Between the

USDA Forest Service and New Mexico State University

John T. Harrington, Jim Fitch, and Patrick A. G1ass ................................................... 184

Pinon Pine Seed Production, Collection, and Storage

Richard M. Jeffers .............................................................................................................. 191

Carrizo Demonstration Area Restoration of a Southwest Forest Ecosystem

Richard S. Edwards ................................................................................................ '" ....... 198

Silvicultural Systems for Pinon-Juniper

James R. Ellenwood .......................................................................................................... 203

Trial Applications of Low-Impact Herbicides for Pinon-Juniper Control in the Southwest

Douglas Parker, Max Williamson, Richard Edwards, and Russell Ward ............... 209

Pinon-Juniper Fuelwood Markets in the Southwest

Lawrence A. SchnUdt ....................................................................................................... 214

Ecosystem Management Research in an "Old Growth" Pifton-Juniper

Woodland

William H. Kruse and Hazel M. Perry .......................................................................... 219

The Composition of Oils in Pinus edulis

Michael Blair, Telletha Valenski, Andrew Sykes, Russell Balda, and

Gerald ~aple ...................................................................................................................... 225

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