PNWFWC Members coop. ext. service Washington State University 169 Johnson Hall Pullman, WA991646420 nevada. Bob Wilson Whitepine coop. ext. PO Box 210 Ely, NV 89301 http://forages.oregonstate.edu/projects/pnwfw/Home/People/People.html
Defensible Space The resulting frustration of fire service agencies is captured in the following Under contract to nevada coop. ext.. Univ. of nevada, Reno. Unpublished. http://www.ci.sparks.nv.us/departments/fire/prevention/defensiblespaces.html
Journal Title Abbreviations nevada AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION SERIES B NEV AGR EXP STA SE B DAKOTA coopERATIVE extENSION service extENSION BULLETIN N DAK coop ext SE EX http://wos17.isiknowledge.com/help/N_abrvjt.html
Extractions: Select from the following list the abbreviated journal title of the cited work. It is advisable to truncate the abbreviated title even if you cut and paste from this list. Sometimes a journal title is abbreviated in different ways. This is a list of abbreviated journal titles only; if you want to look up references to books, enter the first significant word or words from the book title. To add an abbreviation (listed in bold text below) to the Cited Work field, select the abbreviation (by click-and-dragging your cursor over the text), and then use the copy and paste functions (CTRL-C and CTRL-V in Windows, Command-C and Command-V in Macintosh). For example of the Cited Work Lookup, click here Click on a letter to move through the journal list alphabetically. A B C D ... Z Journal List NA,K-ATPASE AND RELATED CATION PUMPS ANN NY ACAD SCI NA/K-ATPASE AND RELATED TRANSPORT ATPASES ANN NY ACAD SCI NACHRICHTEN AUS CHEMIE TECHNIK UND LABORATORIUM NACHR CHEM TECH LAB NACHRICHTEN AUS DER CHEMIE NACHR CHEM NACHRICHTEN FUR DOKUMENTATION NACHR DOK NACHRICHTENTECHNISCHE ZEITSCHRIFT NACHRICHTENTECH Z NAGOYA MATHEMATICAL JOURNAL NAGOYA MATH J NAHRUNG-FOOD NAHRUNG NANO LETTERS NANO LETT NANO LETTERS NANO LETTERS NANOBIOLOGY NANOBIOLOGY NANOPARTICLES AND THE ENVIRONMENT REV MINERAL GEOCHEM NANOPHASE MATERIALS MATER SCI FORUM NANOPOROUS MATERIALS III STUD SURF SCI CATAL NANOSTRUCTURED MATERIALS ACS SYM SER NANOSTRUCTURED MATERIALS NANOSTRUCT MATER NANOTECHNOLOGY ACS SYM SER NANOTECHNOLOGY NANOTECHNOLOGY
Interregional Research Project #4 Suite A coop ext service 624 W Foster Rd Santa Maria, CA, 93455-3623 cooperative extension Lassen County 707 nevada St. Susanville, CA, 96130 http://ir4.rutgers.edu/Cindex.cfm?nd=nd&letter=L
Information About Saltcedar - Tamarix Ramosissima Final report to the US Bureau of Reclamation, Boulder City, nevada. Improvement Task Force, NMSU Ag. Exp. Station, NMSU coop. ext. service. Report 30. http://www.nwcb.wa.gov/weed_info/Written_findings/Tamarix_ramosissima.html
Extractions: Written Findings of the State Noxious Weed Control Board - Class A Weed WA Map Images Tamarix coalition newsletter Saltcedar Tamarix ramosissima Ledeb.) Family : Tamaricaceae : Tamaricaceae 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
LVD State Contact List Southern Univ. coop. ext. Program PO Box 10010 Baton Rouge, LA 70813 Tel (504)7712242 University of nevada cooperative extension Mail Stop 404 http://web.aces.uiuc.edu/lvd/contacts.htm
NevadaNet Las Vegas coop ext Red Rock (Internal Use Only), P Sue Lewis, 702251-7531,702-251-7536 mcgee@wncc.nevada.edu. System Computing Services Technicians http://www.scs.nevada.edu/network_services/video/schedulers.html
USEPA - SEA - What's New University of nevada Cooperative extension //www.nce.unr.edu 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
Partners- Carson River service (NRCS), US Fish Wildlife service, nevada Cooperative extension, For more information, please contact Terri Pereira at (775) 4235124, ext. http://www.epa.gov/owow/showcase/carsonriver/partners.html
Extractions: Coordinated Resource Management Project As a result, Lahontan Conservation District took the lead and the project became the Lower Carson River Coordinated Resource Management Project (CRMP). The first step taken was to invite Frank Reckendorf, NRCS Sedimentation Geologist, to the area for an evaluation of the channel capacity of the lower Carson River. Frank made recommendations regarding which areas should be targeted first for debris and sediment removal. In January, 1995, the first sediment removal projects were begun. A thousand cubic yards of sediment were removed from each of three sites which were identified by the sedimentation geologist to be the most constrictive areas of the channel. The sediment was taken off-site due to the levels of mercury determined by previous tests. Debris removal has been accomplished on approximately 10 miles of riverbank. Prisoners from a minimum security prison used chainsaws to remove, cut, and stack wood above the high water line. At times, landowners had to use chains and a loader to pull large, water-logged trees from the channel. The debris removal is an ongoing project. Nine bank stabilization projects have been completed to date. A technique called willow matting has been used in the majority of the projects and has been successful. The projects all required bank reconstruction with a dozer prior to revegetation or placement of riprap. Engineering help has been provided by Natural Resources Conservation Service. For more information, please contact Terri Pereira at (775) 423-5124, ext. 101 or e-mail her at
CYFERnet Editorial Board Members Dan Weigel, Ph.D. University of nevada Reno. Dee Love, MA Purdue University Advisor, Solano Co. coop. ext. (reviewer only at present) http://www.cyfernet.org/about/editorialpub.html
Extractions: When we first started this project we identified 27 volunteer water quality monitoring programs sponsored or co-sponsored by Cooperative Extension in the United States and its territories. Now we are up to 38! We are always looking for programs we have missed and have had help from people across the country to find 'new' programs. Our latest change to this page was to identify which programs are sponsored or co-sponsored by Cooperative Extension and which are affiliated in other ways such as by providing technical assistance with trainings, educational materials, equipment, or meeting space for volunteer monitoring events. The map above shows where and to what extent Cooperative Extension is involved in volunteer water quality monitoring across the nation. Not shown is an Extension co-sponsored program in American Samoa. The first of these programs began in 1978, the most recent this year. In parentheses next to each program's name is the year that the program began. Program volunteers are monitoring a wide range of aquatic habitats including rivers, streams, lakes, ponds, wetlands, estuaries, and drinking water wells.
WSSA University, Government And Industry Website Links Page State Res., Ed., and ext. service Federal Interagency Committee for nevada,U. nevada, http//www.nce.unr.edu/extension/pub.html search for weeds http://www.wssa.net/directories/links.htm
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
Tourism: The Economic Impact Of Visitors To Your Community Issued in furtherance of Cooperative Extension work acts of May 8 and June 30, This material is based upon work supported by the Extension service, http://www.uaf.edu/coop-ext/publications/freepubs/WREP-144.html
Extractions: University of Wyoming Source: Adapted from California Economic Practices Manual (chapter 1). Impact studies that examine the economic effects within a community of development projects such as a new hotel are usually confined to a fiscal analysis of local government costs and revenues. But increasing emphasis on the total environment-social, biological, and business-calls for an appraisal of broader impacts within the community for a wholistic perspective. Economic impact studies need to provide information about the effects on jobs, income, or housing, as well as how a project will affect the community's overall environment. The effects a project has on various groups within a community (i.e. its distribution effects) are often more important than its economic efficiency. An economic impact assessment can become a useful tool for a community to use in working out what is most economically effective considering the goals for family income, distribution of benefits and costs, fiscal impacts, benefits over time, etc. The approach to setting up such a study will depend on the situation, the community, and the analyst's judgment. The study is not the final word on whether a particular choice should be made; it simply presents alternatives and their effects. The purpose of an economic study is to put some practical problems in proper perspective for a public decision-making process. Frequently, decisions must be made with less information than any community would desire.
Phil Mulder Las Vegas, nevada, 1995. 1996, Certificate of Excellence.1996. OSU OklahomaCooperative ext. service Current Report No. 6240. http://www.ento.okstate.edu/profiles/mulder.htm
Extractions: B.S., Ferris State College Science Education M.S., Iowa State University Entomology Ph.D., Iowa State University Entomology Department of Entomology, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, Oklahoma Area Extension Entomology Specialist-Cordell, OK Department of Entomology, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, Oklahoma Area Extension Entomology Specialist-Duncan, OK Oklahoma State University Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology, Stillwater, OK Assistant Professor, Extension Entomologist Oklahoma State University Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology, Stillwater, OK Associate Professor, Extension Entomologist 2004-present Oklahoma State University Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology, Stillwater, OK Professor, Extension Entomologist Current Assignment:
Natural Resources Extension Professionals Conference Chris Waddill, Dean and Director, Florida cooperative extension service, Universityof University of Arkansas coop. ext. service, Little Rock, AR http://conference.ifas.ufl.edu/nrep/
Extractions: The Cooperative Extension Service was established to provide a non-traditional approach of applying research knowledge to help resolve community issues. Extension has developed a strong tradition and an excellent reputation for serving the same clientele base extremely well. However, this tradition is now preventing Extension from effectively addressing many other issues that have emerged during the past century. The theme to be explored during this conference is whether another rapid (revolutionary) or a more gradual (evolutionary) rate of change should occur to make Extension more relevant in todays communities and the role of natural resource extension programming in this revision. Who Should Attend Natural resource extension professionals and those who work with or would like to partner with these educators in environmental education, fisheries, wildlife, range, forestry, forest products, toxicology, ecotourism, water conservation and quality, sea grant, public policy, nature interpretation, watershed planning, ecological economics, rural development and other related disciplines. The primary audience consists of three groups: 1) Extension personnel at state 1862, 1890 and 1994 Land Grant Institutions (county faculty, county directors, district directors, specialists, department chairs, state program leaders and state directors); 2) National program leaders, and other staff with the USDA Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service; 3) Natural resource educators from other governmental agencies and private not-for-profit organizations.
Florist Cleveland Ohio, Ohio Agric., coop. ext. Serv. S544.3.N3C66 ISSN 08951985 Reno, Nev. The College.Fact sheet - cooperative extension service, University of Maryland Fact sheet http://creekin.net/k22621-n240-florist-cleveland-ohio-ohio.html
Extractions: 98-R-125 Forest City Rental Prop. v. Cuyahoga County Board ofRevision, Cuyahoga County Auditor and Cleveland Board of Education. Real Property Tax. Stipulated. Board Members concur. ... 98-A-1143 Fairpark Co. v. Cuyahoga County Board of Revision, CuyahogaCounty Auditor and Cleveland Heights/University Heights Boardof Education. Real Property Tax. Dismissed. Board Members concur. ... 98-P-1211, 98-P-1212 Cleveland Board of Education v. Cuyahoga CountyBoard of Revision, the Cuyahoga County Auditor and John Gnandt. Real Property Tax. Denying Motion. ... [ Read More 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th 13th 14th 15th 16th 17th 18th 19th 20th 21st 22nd 23rd 24th 25th 26th 27th 28th 29th 30th 31st 32nd 33rd 34th 35th 36th 37th 38th 39th 40th 41st 42nd 43rd 44th 45th 46th 47th 48th 49th 50th 51st 52nd 53rd 54th 55th 56th 57th 58th 59th 60th 61st 62nd 63rd 64th 65th 66th 67th 68th 69th 70th 71st 72nd 73rd 74th 75th 76th 77th 78th 79th 80th 81st 82nd 83rd 84th 85th 86th 87th 88th 89th 90th 91st 92nd 93rd 94th 95th 96th 97th 98th 99th 100th 101st 102nd 103rd 104th 105th 106th 107th 108th 109th 110th 111th 112th 113th 114th 115th 116th 117th 118th 119th 121st 122nd 124th Abbott Abert Acacia Achilles Adams Adler Ahmedi Air Cargo Alabama Albany Albion Aldrich Alexander Allerton Allis Allyn Alma Alois Alquran Alvina Amy Anderson Andover Andrea Angela Ann Appleton Arch Archer Arctic Arden Argon ... [
Assets Across America State Asset Networks Univ. of Arkansas coop ext. service (CES) www.uaex.edu The University of Arkansascooperative extension service sponsors a Statewide Asset Building http://www.ctassets.org/aaa/statenetworks.cfm
Sources Extension Resource Materials cooperative extension service Auburn University Duncan Hall Auburn, AL 368495614 (205)844-4923 http//www.uafadm.alaska.edu/coop-ext/html/publist/ http://web1.msue.msu.edu/msue/imp/modtd/33629843.html
HTM_DATA\Attach2-A nevada, The nevada Commission on Tourism, Ken Evans, Public Information Officer Alaska, Anthony Nakazawa Cooperative ext. service University of Alaska http://www.montana.edu/wwwwrdc/attach2-a.html