This presentation at the Purgatoire Watershed Weed Management Collaborative workshop on July 19, 2016 was presented by Fred Raish. 

This presentation on plants poisonous to horses and ruminants in southern Colorado was prepared by Gene Niles DVM, DABVT, Director of the Rocky Ford Branch of the CSU Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory. Both native and non-native plants are discussed. 

This presentation on plants toxic to livestock was presented at the Purgatoire Watershed Weed Management Collaborative meeting on July 19, 2016. 

This document provides herbicide mixture rates for a variety of common herbicides used for spot spraying and backpack sprayers. 

The 2016 Compendium of Herbicide Adjuvants is the 13th edition of the biennial publication and contains 779 entries from 38 companies. While the Compendium of Herbicide Adjuvants is published every two years, the associated website is updated more frequently. This Compendium organizes adjuvant products by type (such as nonionic surfactants, crop oil concentrates, etc.). And each listing includes the product name, manufacturer/distributor, principal functioning agents, use rates, and comments. 

This brochure, developed by Fremont County Weed Management, for Fremont, Custer, and surrounding counties, provides mechanical, chemical, biological and cultural control information for a variety of common weed species. 

Free public access to digital collections of significant primary and secondary resources on water in the western United States.  

The Great Basin Native Plant Project has posted presentations from its diverse Webinar Series on its website; topics range from seed collection to pollinators to genetic diversity. 

The Native Plant YellowPages includes a list of vendors carrying ecotypic (i.e., locally adapted) native plants for flood-recovery, in the form of seed and container stock, as well as a comprehensive list of seed vendors and nurseries who sell native plants for Colorado.

This PowerPoint, prepared by Dr. Ken Lair, Chuck Bell, and Jackie Lindgren describes challenges related to tamarisk control and riparian restoration in the Mojave River Watershed.

This website provides a suite of resources produced by the Sonoran Institute, an Arizona based nonprofit focused on connecting people and communities with the natural resources that nourish and sustain them. 

The Roadmap for Considering Water for Arizona’s Natural Areas contains information on the current scientific understanding of water for natural areas and existing legal considerations for providing water to natural areas, examples of where natural areas are already included in water management decisions, and an overview of available paths forward for including natural areas alongside human uses.

This biodiversity scorecard provides a snapshot of the current conservation status of Colorado's rare and imperiled species, and its most widespread ecological systems. The Colorado Natural Heritage Program took a systematic and repeatable approach to these assessments, focusing on: quality, quantity, threats, and level of current protection. Resulting scores for these factors were then combined to produce an overall conservation status score.
This document presents a statewide assessment on the potential future influences of a changing climate on species and ecosystems of particular importance to the Bureau of Land Management within Colorado, with the goal of facilitating development of the best possible climate change adaptations to meet future conditions.    https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/5a0b0ccee4b09af898cb6e64

This site provides information on Colorado Breeding Bird Atlas history, methods, results, and the latest publication.

The Great Basin LCC annual webinar series provides an opportunity for land managers and scientists working in the Great Basin to discuss their latest research and how to incorporate the research into on-the-ground efforts. Each webinar includes a 30 minute overview of a project co-presented by a scientist and manager, followed by a discussion focused on how the work can be applied and possible collaborations.

This NRCS document  describes techniques related to the rehabilitation of a degraded wetland or the reestablishment of a wetland so that soils, hydrology, vegetative community, and habitat are a close approximation of the original natural condition that existed prior to modification to the extent practicable.

This NRCS document provides guidance on the augmentation of wetland functions beyond the original natural conditions on a former, degraded, or naturally functioning wetland site; sometimes at the expense of other functions.

This NRCS Conservation Practice Standard provides guidance on the creation of a wetland on a site location that was historically non-wetland.

This document describes NRCS standards for Wetland Wildlife Habitat Management.