Description

Book Synopsis
Cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum, downy brome) is an exotic species that appeared in North American in the late nineteenth century and has since become a dominant plant in the arid rangelands between the Sierra Nevada, Cascades, and Rocky Mountains. A shallow-rooted annual, it is the first grass to appear after the region's long, cold winters and has become an important forage plant for livestock and wildlife. It is also a major environmental hazard in the sagebrush plant communities where it has established itself, providing fuel for the ferocious wildfires that have ravaged so much of the Great Basin since the mid-twentieth century.

Cheatgrass is the first comprehensive study of this highly invasive plant that has changed the ecology of millions of acres of western rangeland. Authors James A. Young and Charlie D. Clements have researched the biology and impact of cheatgrass for four decades. Their work addresses the subject from several perspectives: the history of the invasion; the origins and biology of cheatgrass, including the traits that allow it to adapt so successfully to a wide range of soil and precipitation conditions; its genetic variations, breeding system, and patterns of distribution; its impact on grazing management; and the role it plays, both positive and negative, in the lives of high desert wildlife. The authors also describe efforts to control cheatgrass and offer some new approaches that have the potential to halt its further expansion.

Table of Contents
  • The Many Faces of Cheatgrass
  • Developing a Perspective of the Environment
  • Preadaptation of Cheatgrass for the Great Basin
  • Scientific Perceptions of Cheatgrass
  • Seral Continuum: The First Step
  • Seral Continuum: Intermediate Step
  • Seral Truncation
  • The Competitive Nature of Cheatgrass
  • Genetic Variation and Breeding System
  • Control of Cheatgrass and Seeding Prior to Herbicides
  • Control and Seeding with Herbicides
  • Revegetation Plant Material
  • Cheatgrass and Nitrogen
  • Grazing Management
  • Cheatgrass and Wildlife
  • Wildfire on the Range
  • Conclusions
  • Appendix: Common and Scientific Names of Plants Mentioned in the Text
  • Notes

Cheatgrass: Fire and Forage on the Range

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    £32.21

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    RRP £42.95 – you save £10.74 (25%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Mon 22 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by James Young, Charlie D. Clements

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      View other formats and editions of Cheatgrass: Fire and Forage on the Range by James Young

      Publisher: University of Nevada Press
      Publication Date: 25/10/2022
      ISBN13: 9781647790707, 978-1647790707
      ISBN10: 1647790700

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum, downy brome) is an exotic species that appeared in North American in the late nineteenth century and has since become a dominant plant in the arid rangelands between the Sierra Nevada, Cascades, and Rocky Mountains. A shallow-rooted annual, it is the first grass to appear after the region's long, cold winters and has become an important forage plant for livestock and wildlife. It is also a major environmental hazard in the sagebrush plant communities where it has established itself, providing fuel for the ferocious wildfires that have ravaged so much of the Great Basin since the mid-twentieth century.

      Cheatgrass is the first comprehensive study of this highly invasive plant that has changed the ecology of millions of acres of western rangeland. Authors James A. Young and Charlie D. Clements have researched the biology and impact of cheatgrass for four decades. Their work addresses the subject from several perspectives: the history of the invasion; the origins and biology of cheatgrass, including the traits that allow it to adapt so successfully to a wide range of soil and precipitation conditions; its genetic variations, breeding system, and patterns of distribution; its impact on grazing management; and the role it plays, both positive and negative, in the lives of high desert wildlife. The authors also describe efforts to control cheatgrass and offer some new approaches that have the potential to halt its further expansion.

      Table of Contents
      • The Many Faces of Cheatgrass
      • Developing a Perspective of the Environment
      • Preadaptation of Cheatgrass for the Great Basin
      • Scientific Perceptions of Cheatgrass
      • Seral Continuum: The First Step
      • Seral Continuum: Intermediate Step
      • Seral Truncation
      • The Competitive Nature of Cheatgrass
      • Genetic Variation and Breeding System
      • Control of Cheatgrass and Seeding Prior to Herbicides
      • Control and Seeding with Herbicides
      • Revegetation Plant Material
      • Cheatgrass and Nitrogen
      • Grazing Management
      • Cheatgrass and Wildlife
      • Wildfire on the Range
      • Conclusions
      • Appendix: Common and Scientific Names of Plants Mentioned in the Text
      • Notes

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