This document, updated in 2008, is a consolidated woody invasive species management plan for Colorado’s Colorado, Gunnison, Uncompahgre, Dolores, White, andYampa/Green Watersheds.

These worksheets were developed by The Foundation Center and provide helpful exercises for thinking through and developing the components of a Fundraising Plan. Attached is an example of a sample fundraising plan as well. 

The purpose of this Technical Note is to provide guidance for the design and implementation of conservation plantings to enhance habitat for pollinators and beneficial insects including: bees, wasps, butterflies, moths and hummingbirds. Plant species included in this document are adapted to the Colorado Plateau of eastern Utah and western Colorado to the Continental Divide

The MIGCLIM R dispersal model is calibrated and used to project the timing of arrival of subtropical tamarisk beetles into flycatcher habitats over the next 10 years, and to derive least dispersal time cost paths into these habitats.

This short handout summarizes key points from the 2010  Saltcedar (Tamarix spp.) and Russian Olive (Elaeagnus angustifolia) in the Western United States—A Report on the State of the Science.

The purpose of the Study, funded by the Bureau of Reclamation, was to define current and future imbalances in water supply and demand in the Basin and the adjacent areas of the Basin States that receive Colorado River water over the next 50 years (through 2060), and to develop and analyze adaptation and mitigation strategies to resolve those imbalances.

Producted by the Colorado Foundation for Water Education, this work draws together the expertise of six prominent historians and scholars from throughout Colorado and the West. The theme uniting their pieces is: Water & Community: how water shapes Colorado’s culture,history, and identity. 

Prepared by Colorado Foundation for Water Education, this Citizen's Guide is the first in a series of educational booklets designed to provide Colorado citizens with balanced and accurate information on a variety of subjects related to water resources. 

  Prepared by the RiversEdge West (formerly Tamarisk Coalition) in 2008, this document addresses options for the control, biomass reduction, and revegetation management components. All currently available technologies have been evaluated; however, not all are applicable for a given river location. Tamarisk is the focus of this document’s control component because it is the principle non-native phreatophyte in western watersheds.

This report describes the use of a skid-steer attachment called the Star Hill JAWZ for use in tamarisk extraction. 

This PowerPoint presentation from the Natural Resources Conservation Service was presented in Moab and Escalante, Utah in 2011. The presentation covers: what, when, and where to plant; effective planting methods; suggested planting equipment; survival results; and suggested publications. 

This is a PowerPoint presented during a Riparian Monitoring Well Workshop that was held in Palisade, Colorado on March 18, 2013. The class was taught by Bruce Smith from Western Water & Land, Inc. 

An Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service publication, this Extension Fact Sheet describes soil reclamation options.