Archive image from page 15 of The Dalles pocket gopher and. The Dalles pocket gopher and its influence on forage production of Oregon mountain meadows dallespocketgoph884moor Year: 1951 m Figure 8.—Meadow A after 9 years of gopher control: A, Ungrazed plot; B. grazed plot. A relatively dense stand of perennial forbs and grasses had become established. (Same quadrats shown in fig. 6.) Individual species differed somewhat in amount on the grazed and ungrazed plots. Kentucky bluegrass, common dandelion, and Columbia groundsel, species of high forage value as sheep forage on meadows, and litt


Archive image from page 15 of The Dalles pocket gopher and. The Dalles pocket gopher and its influence on forage production of Oregon mountain meadows dallespocketgoph884moor Year: 1951 m Figure 8.—Meadow A after 9 years of gopher control: A, Ungrazed plot; B. grazed plot. A relatively dense stand of perennial forbs and grasses had become established. (Same quadrats shown in fig. 6.) Individual species differed somewhat in amount on the grazed and ungrazed plots. Kentucky bluegrass, common dandelion, and Columbia groundsel, species of high forage value as sheep forage on meadows, and little oniongrass, fleabane, and Wyethia, species of low value as sheep forage, were more abundant on the grazed plot than on the ungrazed


Size: 1950px × 1026px
Photo credit: © Bookive / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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