Distribution of Organic Matter Reserve in a Desert Shrub Community


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In a community of widely spaced perennials, mostly shrubs, in the cold desert of western Utah, total accumulated organic mass (excluding the small amount of humus) is about 1,770g./m.2. Of this total, 240 g. are above the ground and 1,530 g. below. Of the latter, 295 g. is underground litter. About half of the 1,235 g. of roots are in the surface 30 cm. of the soil, about 0.3 of them in the second 30 cm., 0.15 in the third, 0.03 in the fourth, and 0.01 of them occur below 120 cm. to about 135 cm. Coarce roots (> 2 mm. in diameter) are found only in the immediate vicinity of plants and are unimportant below the 15-cm. depth. Fine (




USDA Forest Service Research Note RM.


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Aerial Field Tests of Five Insecticides on Western Spruce Budworm in Idaho and Montana, 1978-1980


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Each of five insecticides was applied at two or three application rates by helicopter to 20-ha plots. Effectiveness of each application rate against western spruce budworm (Choristoneura occidentalis Freeman) was judged by cornparing larval population reduction at I5 or 20 days after treatment against populations in untreated check plots. Performance of each insecticide was then compared with the levels of control normally obtained with two registered insecticides. carbaryl and acephate (90 + pct) usually used for western spruce budworrn control. Maximum population reduction from sulprofos (58 pct), phosmet (59 pet). and from the growth regulator BAY SIR- 8514 (58 pet), at all application rates tested was below the acceptable minimum of 90 + percent population reduction. Methomyl reduced populations 92.3 percent at 0.28 kg a.i./ha and 94.0 percent at 0.56 ke a.i./ha. Permethrin at 0.11 kg a.i.iha reduced the population by 93.9 percent. Methonyl and permethrin at these application rates appeared to be as effective as the registered insecticides acephate and carbaryl.