Information About Saltcedar - Tamarix Ramosissima Exp. Station, NMSU coop. ext. service. Report 30. Volume 3 Saxifragaceae toEricaceae. University of washington Press, Seattle. Hoddenbach, G. 1987. http://www.nwcb.wa.gov/weed_info/saltcedar.html
Extractions: Written Findings of the State Noxious Weed Control Board - Class A Weed Saltcedar Tamarix ramosissima Ledeb.) Family : Tamaricaceae : Tamaricaceae WA Map Images Tamarix coalition newsletter Description and Variation : Salt cedar plants are spreading shrubs or small trees, 5-20 feet tall, with numerous slender branches and small, alternate, scale-like leaves. The pale pink to white flowers are small, perfect and regular, and arranged in spike-like racemes. The distinct petals and sepals occur in fours or fives. The fruit is a capsule (Hitchcock and Cronquist 1961). Salt cedar ( Tamarix ) taxonomy is currently in a state of confusion. The number of species in the genus has fluctuated widely because members of the genus have few constant differentiating features, and taxonomists have disagreed over which features are most important. Eight species have been listed as introduced into the United States and Canada. These species can be effectively divided into two groups. Tamarix aphylla , an evergreen tree, does not sexually reproduce in this climate, so it is not seriously invasive. Deciduous, shrubby species, including
Communicators Guide/chapter Seven Manager, Natural Resources Conservation service, US Department CO 805234050, douglass@coop.ext.colostate.edu N3308,200 Constitution Ave., washington, DC 20210 http://www.usda.gov/news/pubs/fcn/chapter7.htm
New Literature For New Crops California, coop. ext., Davis. SB306.U6K651989. United States. cooperative StateResearch service. Special Projects and Program Systems. washington, DC. http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/proceedings1996/v3-151.html
Extractions: Index Search Home Table of Contents Potter Gates, J. 1996. New literature for new crops. p. 151-154. In: J. Janick (ed.), Progress in new crops. ASHS Press, Alexandria, VA. LIBRARIES, CENTERS, AND SERVICES DATABASES AGRICOLA (AGRICultural OnLine Access) AGRIS International ... NEW CROP MONOGRAPHS 1980-1995 The United States government has long recognized the importance of agriculture in keeping people well-fed, well-clothed, and well-housed, as well as acknowledging the role of science in helping to achieve and sustain those conditions through exploration and research. In the pursuit of new crops, the importance of bibliographic information in the success of such exploration and research cannot be over-emphasized. Since 1862, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), through the National Agricultural Library (NAL), has collected, compiled, and disseminated information relevant to that mission. The National Agricultural Library (NAL), part of the USDA's Agricultural Research Service (ARS), is the largest agricultural library in the world. NAL has 10 subject specific information centers that provide customized services to the agricultural community and others. All of the Centers can be accessed electronically through the NAL gopher and the NAL homepage (see addresses below). The Centers include: Agricultural Trade and Marketing, Alternative Farming Systems, Animal Welfare, Aquaculture, Biotechnology, Food and Nutrition, Plant Genome Database. Rural Technology Transfer, and Water Quality.
Links And Resources Agric Exper Station and coop ext service http//www University of Nebraska cooperativeextension http//extension washington State University 2000 News Releases http://lowcostcowcalf.com/links.htm
USDA Forest Service Landowner Assistance Program Coordinators Website Address www.fs.fed.us/spf/coop/loa.htm. Dan Ernst Division of Forestry 402W. washington Street, Room Pittsfield, MA 01202 4134428928 ext 33 FAX 413 http://www.lta.org/publicpolicy/fl_contacts.htm
COMMUNICATIONS-L Archives -- June 2003, Week 1 (#10) 8%(Duty assigned by coop ext Director) Coordinates adkins@wsu.edu washington StateUniversity Immigration and Naturalization service.Reasonable accommodations http://hermes.case.org/cgi-bin/wa.exe?A2=ind0306a&L=communications-l&F=&S=&P=965
Life Skills Evaluation System by the washington State Strengthening grant, Partners in Promoting Strengths, a grantfrom the Cooperative State Research Education Extension service of the http://ext.wsu.edu/lifeskills/
Colorado State Cooperative Extension Template Phone 719689-2552/2112 Fax 719-689-9246 washington COUNTY 181 Birch, County CourthouseAnnex, Akron, CO 80720-1513 E-mail washingt@coop.ext.colostate.edu http://www.ext.colostate.edu/coop/ctylist.html
Extractions: You are here: Home Contact Us County Cooperative Extension Offices Your county Cooperative Extension office is your link to Colorado State University. They have a wealth of information available on Gardening, Consumer and family, agriculture, natural resources, 4-H and community development. Contact them!
Coop Ext Service Olympic Peninsula Master Gardeners. Home. Up. Demos Garden. Public Educ. MG Members. Plant Clinic. Cooperative Extension service benefited from the cooperative extension service. 59 agricultural http://clallam.wsu.edu/mg/coop_ext_service.htm
Extractions: Plant Clinic The First Morrill Act of 1862 granted land for agriculture and mechanical arts to be run by colleges and universities in all of the U.S. states. In 1890, the Second Morrill Act enhanced the first one with a partial endowment. In 1887, the Hatch Act established agriculture experiment stations at each of the land grant colleges and in the Bankhead-Jones Act of 1935, a more complete endowment was provided to the land grant colleges. Cooperative Extension offices have been helping the agricultural community since 1914. That was the year when the United States Congress passed the Smith-Lever Act, an agreement by which U.S. colleges and universities would receive funding and resources in exchange for creating programs for local state residents in horticulture, nutrition and natural and human resource development programs. Everyone has benefited from the cooperative extension service. 59 agricultural research stations across the nation have improved food-crop production and are among the leaders of Integrated Pest Management (IPM) which provides a common-sense approach to healthier crops and environment. In 1972, a busy cooperative extension agent in Washington came up with the idea of training volunteer Master Gardeners to provide expert assistance to home gardeners. Until that time, home gardeners were helped by agents as time permitted in their busy schedule of helping the commercial agricultural community. The idea soon spread nationwide and beyond and now there are about 60,000 Master Gardeners nationwide.
Washington State Department Of Ecology washington State cooperative extension washington State Military Department washingtonWetlands Network (WETNET) Foreword L. Katherine Baril (WSU coop. ext.). http://www.ecy.wa.gov/programs/sea/pubs/96-120/96120pre.html
Salt Cedar - A Noxious Weed In Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife is currently coordinating a saltcedar managementproject in eastern washington using Freshwater Exp. Station, NMSU coop. ext. http://www.ecy.wa.gov/programs/wq/plants/weeds/aqua013.html
Extractions: Washington State Department of Ecology Water Quality Home Technical Information About Tamarix (Salt Cedar) Description and Variation Saltcedar species are spreading shrubs or small trees, 5-20 feet tall, with numerous slender branches and small, alternate, scale-like leaves. The pale pink to white flowers are small, perfect and regular, arranged in spike-like racemes. The distinct petals and sepals occur in fours or fives. The fruit is a capsule (Hitchcock and Cronquist 1961). Tamarix taxonomy is currently in a state of confusion. The number of species in the genus has fluctuated widely because members of the genus have few constant differentiating features, and taxonomists have disagreed over which features are most important. Eight species have been listed as introduced into the U.S. and Canada. These species can be effectively divided into two groups. Tamarix aphylla , an evergreen tree, does not sexually reproduce in this climate, so it is not seriously invasive. Deciduous, shrubby species, including T. pentandra
Alternative Crops Alternative Crops Links. Click on a crop below to learn about its culture and marketing in the state shown. State cooperative extension agents compiled most of the information presented in these links. Mississippi State U. coop. ext. Agronomy Pubs Montana State University coop. ext. Pubs coop. ext. Ag. Resources. Idaho, Oregon, washington. Vegetable. Bean U. of Arkansas coop. ext http://plants.usda.gov/cgi_bin/alt_crop_rpt.cgi
Extractions: Alternative Crops Links Click on a crop below to learn about its culture and marketing in the state shown. State Cooperative Extension agents compiled most of the information presented in these links. Please note that PLANTS is not responsible for the content or availability of other websites. General Alternative Crops links Alternative crops for all states Crop Link State Crop Type Acerola (Barbados cherry): California Rare Fruit Growers Fruit Facts California Fruit Puerto Rico Fruit Alfalfa: Mississippi State U. Coop. Ext. Agronomy Pubs. Mississippi Forage Alfalfa: Montana State University Coop. Ext. Pubs. Montana Forage Alfalfa: Oklahoma State U. Plant and Soil Sciences Oklahoma Forage Alfalfa: Penn State U. Ag. Sciences Avail. Pubs. List Pennsylvania Forage Alfalfa: U. of Illinois Coop. Ext. Field Crops Illinois Forage Alfalfa: U. of Nebraska-Lincoln Field Crops Nebraska Forage Almond: U. of Georgia Coop. Ext. Pubs. Georgia Nut, Oil
Food Safety In Connecticut-Fact Sheets washington State University Cooperative ext. http//foodsafety.wsu.edu/. West VirginiaUniversity ext. service, www.wvu.edu/~exten/infores/pubs/nut_hlth.htm. http://www.canr.uconn.edu/ces/foodsafety/expert/hotlinkstab.html
Extractions: Food Safety Topics Foodborne Illness Safety At Home Meat Poultry Fish/Seafood Milk/Dairy Eggs Fruits/Vegetables Food Processing New Technologies Seasonal Issues For More Help Cooperative Ext. Foodsafety Resource Web Sites Alabama Cooperative Ext. System http://www.aces.edu/dept/extcomm/publications/he/hefn.html Alaska Cooperative Ext. www.uaf.edu/coop-ext/publications/fhepubs.html Clemson University Cooperative Ext. Service http://hgic.clemson.edu/ Colorado State University Cooperative Ext. www.colostate.edu/orgs/safefood Cornell Cooperative Ext. www.cce.cornell.edu/food/resources.html Delaware Cooperative Ext. http://bluehen.ags.udel.edu/deces/fnf/fs-list.htm Iowa State University Ext. www.extension.iastate.edu/Pages/families/fs/homepage.html Kansas State University Cooperative Ext. Service www.oznet.ksu.edu/foodsafety/ Maryland Cooperative Ext. www.agnr.umd.edu/ces/fcs/nutrition.html Michigan State University Ext. http://foodsafe.fshn.msu.edu/main.html Mississippi State University Ext. Service http://www.ext.msstate.edu/fce/foodsafety/fs.html Montana State University Ext. Service www.montana.edu./~wwwnutr/extension/index.html
Products And Services (Alternate Crops And Systems) CIRCULAR 788, FLA. coop. ext. SERF; INST. 8KAUGW KAUFMAN DD(1976) LITERATURE SURVEYOF BENCHMARK PESTICIDES. GEORGE washington UNIV. WASH., DC PP 252. http://www.arsusda.gov/acsl/services/ppdb/coden.html
Extractions: (lists all pesticides) BARC Weather Station Cotton Datasets Pesticide Properties Database CODEN REFERENCE 1800AJ V.H.FREED, "CHEMISTRY OF HERBICIDES & PESTICIDES AND THEIR EFFECTS ON SOIL & WATER", SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA. 5OLSEN OLSEN, L.D., ROMAN-MAS, A., WEISSKOPF, C.P., AND KLAINE, S.J. "TRANSPORT AND DEGRADATION OF ALDICARB IN THE SOIL PROFILE:-", PROC. 1994 AWRA NAT. SYMP. WATER QUALITY, 1994, CHICAGO, pp 31-42. 6ABERN ABERNATHY, J.R. "LINURON, CHLORBROMURON, NITROFEN & FLUBRODIFEN ADSORPTION AND MOVEMENT IN TWELVE SELECTED ILLINOIS SOILS," PH.D. THESIS. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS, URBANA-CHAMPAIGN, 1972. 6ACSAR AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, WASH., D.C., "ARSENICAL PESTICIDE". 6AGRON AGRONOMY JOURNAL 6AJSOR AUSTRALIAN J. SOIL RESEARCH
Other Plant Disease And Ag Related Sites of Calif., Davis); Plant Health Progress; MoreCrop Wheat Disease ManagementSystem for the PNW (by washington State Univ.); coop. ext. ext. http://www.uidaho.edu/ag/plantdisease/other.htm
Extractions: Plant Disease Information Biotechnology Information IPM Information Pesticide Information ... Other Information Plant Disease Information Pacific Northwest Plant Disease Control Handbook (by Oregon State Univ.) California Pest Management Guidelines (by Univ. of Calif., Davis) Plant Health Progress MoreCrop - Wheat Disease Management System for the PNW (by Washington State Univ.) Texas Plant Disease Handbook National Agricultural Pest Information (by USDA-APHIS, PPQ) Plant Disease Information Notes (by North Carolina State Univ.) Ohio Farm and Production Agriculture Information (by Ohio State Univ.) Plant Disease Articles (by Iowa State Univ. Coop. Ext. System) Plant Disease Informaton for Vegetables (by Colorado State Univ.) Pest Alert (by Colorado State Univ. Coop. Ext. System) Plant Disease Alerts (by Kansas State Univ. Coop. Ext. System) Montana Crop Health Report (by Montana State Univ. Ext. Service) Cereal Rust Bulletins (by the USDA ARS Cereal Rust Lab) Integrated Crop Management Newsletter (by Iowa State Univ. Coop. Ext. System)
Virginia-Wyoming And USDA State University Tree Fruit Research ext. Cooperative State Research, Educationand extension serviceUSDA. Waterfront Center Rm 3153 washington, DC 20250, http://www.apsnet.org/directories/extension/vawy.htm
Programs, Curriculum Guides & Activities San Luis Obispo, CA 93207 Phone (800) 2354146, washington State University coop.ext., King County Holly Kennell, extension Agent 700 Fifth Ave., Suite http://hort.ifas.ufl.edu/ggk/resprog.htm