POMF 2806 Page GOV PAYROLL OFFICE NUMBER 12050301 USDA coop ext. service ALABAMA C/O THOMAS montana MARY FRAN SANSOUCIE USDA PO BOX 172230 BOZEMAN MT 597172230 http://webwtc.opm.gov/raft/html/pomf2806.shtml
Extractions: New User About the Agency What's New Quick Index ... Career Opportunities Payroll Office Contacts for Retirement Inquiries To locate a specific item, select EDIT from the menu bar, then select FIND (on this page). In the prompt box, type the agency name, payroll office number, or other item. Each time you click "Find Next," you will get the next word on the page that matches your FIND entry. Return to Government Payroll Contacts NAVAL AIR STATION LEMOORE, CA 93246-0000 TELEPHONE (559) 998-3331
POMF Summary Page EDU PAYROLL OFFICE NUMBER 12050325 USDA coop ext service MISSOURI ATTN TAMMY montana MARY FRAN SANSOUCIE USDA PO BOX 172230 BOZEMAN MT 597172230 http://webwtc.opm.gov/raft/html/pomf2811.shtml
Extractions: New User About the Agency What's New Quick Index ... Career Opportunities Payroll Office Contacts for Insurance Inquiries To locate a specific item, select EDIT from the menu bar, then select FIND (on this page). In the prompt box, type the agency name, payroll office number, or other item. Each time you click "Find Next," you will get the next word on the page that matches your FIND entry. Return to Governme nt Payroll Contacts Return to Government Payroll Contac ts Page updated: Office of Personnel Management Site Index A-Z A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z TTY (202) 606-2532
California Section Of The Society For Range Management Tom D. Whitson, coop. ext. service, Dept. of Plant Sciences, Tony J. Svejcar,USDAARS, Burns OR; and Roger Sheley, montana State Univ., Bozeman. http://www.casrm.org/Hawaii02.shtml
Extractions: Aston Keauhou Beach -Kahaluu II Utilizing the World Wide Web to Inform, Educate, and Market In the 21st Century Organized by Mitch Flanagan, for the SRM Information and Education Committee, and the Technology Transfer Committee (6 CEUs available for the workshop) Range Management and the Web: Partners in the 21st Century . Mike Haddock, Hale Library, Kansas State Univ., Manhattan, KS 66506-1200. Brief history of the Web; anatomy of URLs; best Web search engines; tips on searching; and evaluation of sites. So You Want to Build a Web Page?
National Park Service - Nature & Science: Biologic Resources No. w465., 14 Agr 12 coop. ext. Serv., Univ. N. Dakota, Fargo, ND The statusof biological control of leafy spurge in montana. pp. 12-13. http://www.nature.nps.gov/biology/ipm/manual/spurge.htm
Extractions: NPS Home Biologic Resources NPS Biology Leafy Spurge This module is intended to serve as a source of basic information needed to implement an integrated pest management program for leafy spurge. Any pest management plan or activity must be formulated within the framework of the management zones where it will be implemented. Full consideration must be given to threatened and endangered species, natural and cultural resources, human health and safety, and the legal mandates of the individual parks. Recommendations in this module must be evaluated and applied in relation to these broader considerations. Indirect impacts of leafy spurge infestations include the loss of food sources for grazing animals caused by competition with native plants in pastures and on rangeland. Leafy spurge infestations may cut pasture production by 50%-75%. Since wildlife and cattle generally avoid grazing in infested areas, carrying capacity may be reduced by up to 75% (Lacey et al. 1984). Leafy spurge is toxic to most grazing mammals, and the milky latex contains substances that act as irritants, emetics, and purgatives for many animals when eaten.
Interregional Research Project #4 cooperative extension service Soldotna, AK, 99669 Phone 907262-5824 Fax907-262-3939 montana State Univ. coop. ext. Serv. Pest Education Serv. http://ir4.rutgers.edu/Cindex.cfm?nd=nd&letter=J
Interregional Research Project #4 Suite A coop ext service 624 W Foster Rd Santa Maria, CA, 93455-3623 Phone805-934-6240 montana State Univ Plant Sciences Plant Pathology Dept http://ir4.rutgers.edu/Cindex.cfm?nd=nd&letter=L
Noxious Weed IVM Guide- Leafy Spurge North Dakota coop. ext. service, pp. 5369. Bandsund, DA and FL Leistritz. 1991 . coop. ext. Serv., montana State Univ., Bozeman, MT. 245 pp. http://www.efn.org/~ipmpa/Noxlspur.html
Extractions: Leafy spurge is a deep-rooted perennial weed of the family Euphorbiaceae. Because certain structural characters of the weed are very variable, there has been some confusion about how to classify it taxonomically. In North America it is commonly referred to as Euphorbia esula (Watson 1985). Leafy spurge grows as clusters of upright stems one to three feet tall. The stems are erect, tough and woody, and frequently have many non-flowering branches. The plant emerges in early spring, producing bright yellow bracts which appear from early to late May, with the true flower emerging in mid-June. The bracts surround a cluster of 11-20 small, stalked yellow-green flowers. Leaves are dark blue-green, hairless, narrow, and alternate on the stem. Maturing stems change color from pale green in early summer to yellow or red in the fall. Leafy spurge can be distinguished from other plants by the white sap that will ooze from all parts of the plant when cut or broken open (Lajeunesse et al. 1995; Lym 1991). Damage Leafy spurge is an aggressive weed that tends to displace all other vegetation in pastures and rangelands. The latex in leafy spurge is a skin irritant that can cause severe dermatitis in humans and grazing animals, and is unpalatable and toxic to cattle and horses. Cattle and horses generally avoid leafy spurge, but if ingested it causes scours and weakness that may result in the death of the animals. Sheep and goats are not affected by the toxin and can eat young leafy spurge plants (Muller et al. 1990).
Speakers Directory Idaho, montana and Kansas; American Chamber of Commerce of Hong Kong; TOPIC (S) coop. ext. serviceWho we are and services we offer. ELDERLY http://www.hpcnet.org/cgi-bin/global/a_bus_card.cgi?SiteID=191421
Nitrate Toxicity Of Montana Forages Wisconsin coop. ext. http//www.uwex.edu/ces/forage/pubs/nitrate.htm Vice Provost and Director, extension service, montana State University, Bozeman, http://www.animalrangeextension.montana.edu/articles/Forage/General/Nitrate-tox.
Extractions: Forage crops can accumulate toxic amounts of nitrate (NO ). High nitrate has been reported in cereal grains (oats, rye, wheat, barley, triticale, etc.),bromegrass, orchardgrass, fescue, sorghum, sudangrass, millet, corn, sweetclover and alfalfa. Several weeds, such as kochia, lambs-quarter, pigweed, quackgrass and Russian thistle, can also have high nitrate levels, especially when growing under adverse conditions. Nitrate poisoning of livestock was reported as early as 1895. Livestock losses occurred for many years before elevated nitrate levels in forage were determined to be the cause of death. The term "oat hay poisoning" was the common explanation for livestock losses in the 1930s, because large acreages of oats were harvested for forage during drought years. Nitrate itself is not toxic to animals, but at elevated levels, it can cause a noninfectious disease called
Euphorbia Esula Species Management Summary (ESA) The cooperative extension service at NDSU publishes a leafy spurge newsletter45 times a year. Contact montana State U. coop. ext. Serv. Circ. 309. http://tncweeds.ucdavis.edu/esadocs/documnts/euphesu.html
Extractions: ELEMENT STEWARDSHIP ABSTRACT for Euphorbia esula Leafy Spurge To the User: Element Stewardship Abstracts (ESAs) are prepared to provide The Nature Conservancy's Stewardship staff and other land managers with current management-related information on those species and communities that are most important to protect, or most important to control. The abstracts organize and summarize data from numerous sources including literature and researchers and managers actively working with the species or community. We hope, by providing this abstract free of charge, to encourage users to contribute their information to the abstract. This sharing of information will benefit all land managers by ensuring the availability of an abstract that contains up-to-date information on management techniques and knowledgeable contacts. Contributors of information will be acknowledged within the abstract and receive updated editions. To contribute information, contact the editor whose address is listed at the end of the document. For ease of update and retrievability, the abstracts are stored on computer at the national office of The Nature Conservancy. This abstract is a compilation of available information and is not an endorsement of particular practices or products.
Agronomy Journal -- Sign In Page Funding support for this study came from montana Fertilizer Tax. Rep. MF1018.coop. ext. service, Kansas State Univ., Manhattan, KS. Francis, CA (ed.). http://agron.scijournals.org/cgi/content/full/96/6/1730
Extractions: This Article Abstract Figures Only Full Text (PDF) ... Alert me if a correction is posted Services Similar articles in this journal Similar articles in ISI Web of Science Alert me to new issues of the journal Download to citation manager PubMed Articles by Chen, C. Articles by Knox, M. Agricola Articles by Chen, C. Articles by Knox, M. Related Collections Forage Management
My Master Gardener Page Los Angeles Master Gardeners , Univ. of Calif. coop. ext. montana. montana StateUniversity extension service Master Gardener Program http://www.hal-pc.org/~trobb/mastgar.html
Extractions: You are visitor A separate and distinct area of gardening is that of the Master Gardener - the voluntary arm of the Agricultural Extension Services. As a Past President and member of the Harris County Master Gardener Association (Houston, Texas), I am more familiar with the Texas Master Gardener program but Master Gardening is nationwide in scope and on this page I will be attempting to put it all together. I am often asked the question, "Who and what are 'Master Gardeners'"? The following comments, questions and answers are geared primarily to the Texas Master Gardener Program. However, with slight differences, they also apply to all 50 states since all now have "Master Gardener Programs". They also generally apply in the four Canadian provinces with the program except for the sponsorship of Cooperative Extension agencies. Master Gardeners are members of the local community who take an active interest in their lawns, trees, shrubs, flowers and gardens. They are enthusiastic, willing to learn and to help others, and able to communicate with diverse groups of people. What really sets Master Gardeners apart from other home gardeners is their special training in horticulture. In exchange for their training, persons who become Master Gardeners contribute time as volunteers, working through their cooperative Extension office to provide horticulture-related information to their communities.
Miles City, Montana Research montana Beef Prod. School, montana coop. ext. service, montana State Univ., Bozeman.Short, RE, Peters, JB, First, NL, and Casida, LE 1968. http://www.ars.usda.gov/Research/docs.htm?docid=5812
Food Safety In Connecticut-Fact Sheets montana State University ext. service, www.montana.edu./~wwwnutr/extension/index.html South Dakota State University Cooperative ext. service 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
HIA Contacts montana State University extension service Housing Program Univ. of ArkansasCooperative ext. service 2301 S. University Ave. PO Box 391 http://www.montana.edu/wwwcxair/contacts.htm
Quick Facts, 2004-05 Each year the Career services Office at montana State UniversityBozeman conductsa survey to Ag Exp Station/ext service, 113, 99, 14, 106.56, 64, 49 http://www.montana.edu/opa/facts/quick.html
Extractions: Bozeman Quick Facts provides an overview of MSU's enrollment, employment, and programs for the current year. Quick Facts for , and are also available. Historical figures for many topics are available through the Office of Planning and Analysis , and MSU posts the Common Data Set online. If you have questions or suggestions for facts you would like to see included, please send e-mail to facts@montana.edu. Please visit Admissions and New Student Service's Quick Facts , a site containing much of the information here. Affiliated Campuses On July 1, 1994, the Montana Board of Regents of Higher Education restructured the state's colleges and universities into two umbrella universities, Montana State University and the University of Montana. MSU is the home campus for Montana State University, with the following affiliates:
State Coordinators Univ. of Nevada, Reno coop. ext. 2345 Red Rock Street, Suite 100 Of Vermontext. service 157 Old Guildford Road, 4 Brattleboro, VT. 05301 http://mastergardener.osu.edu/img/coordinators.html
USEPA - SEA - What's New montana State University Cooperative extension service WEB SITE PUBLICATIONS Virginia Cooperative extension service www.ext.vt.edu http://www.epa.gov/seahome/farmasyst/states.htm
Extractions: Software for Environmental Awareness Serving Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin and 35 Tribes Contact Us Print Version Search: EPA Home SEAHOME Titles Topics ... Links All the links on this page are to sites outside the EPA. "Links to Web sites outside the U.S. EPA Web site are for the convenience of the user. The Standards of Ethical Conduct do not permit the U.S. EPA to endorse any private sector Web site, product, or service. The U.S. EPA does not exercise any editorial control over the information you may find at this location. This link is being provided consistent with the intended purpose of the EPA Web site." AL AK AS AZ ... WY www.uwex.edu/farmasyst
Extractions: The Society You will leave the WSSA web site when you click on any of the below listed sites Agriculture, Food, and Rural Development of Alberta, Canada Animal and Plant Control Commission - South Australia R. Carter (Weed Science advisor) Agricultural Research Service USDA Animal and Plant Control Commission - South Australia R. Carter (Weed Science advisor) Aphis noxious weed programs USDA ARS North Central Soil Conservation Research Laboratory - Morris, MN F. Forcella California Dept. of Pesticide Regulation Canadian Forest Service - Biocontrol Method for Reedgrass (English and French available) R. Winder Coop. State Res., Ed., and Ext. Service Federal Interagency Committee for the Management of Noxious and Exotic Weeds (FICMNEW) - USDA D. Miller of University of Wisconsin - Madison IR-4 Program National Ag. Statistics Ser. National Wildlife Refuge Environmental Contaminant Page Weed Science Group, Agriculture Western Australia National Ag Library National Ag. Statistics Ser. National Plants Database Project ... Weeds, Noxious and Exotic and Invasive Plants Ag Chem Database Ag in the Classroom "Kid Video" and study guides Ag-Consultant Online AgriSurf! Searchable Ag index
Weed-ID-Links montana category 1 Category 1 noxious weeds are weeds that are currently http//www.arapcsuext.org/agri/fbindwd.htm CO. St. Univ. coop. ext. http://mtwow.org/Weed-ID-Links.htm
Extractions: category 1: Category 1 noxious weeds are weeds that are currently established and generally widespread in many counties of the state. Management criteria includes awareness and education, containment and suppression of existing infestations and prevention of new infestations. These weeds are capable of rapid spread and render land unfit or greatly limit beneficial uses.