Woody Plant Wetland Workshop
Saltcedar, Russian Olive

September 3 & 4, 1997
Holiday Inn, Grand Junction, Colorado

Colorado State University, U.S. Department of Interior - Bureau of Land Management, and the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service

Abstracts of Talks

Biological Control of Exotic Saltcedar in Western Riparian Areas
Dr. Jack DeLoach, USDA-ARS, Grasslands Research, 808 E. Blockland Rd., Temple, TX 76502

Saltcedar: Ecological Interactions and Potential Effects of Biological Control
Dr. Jack DeLoach, USDA-ARS, Grasslands Research, 808 E. Blockland Rd., Temple, TX 76502

Saltcedar (Tamarix spp.) Management
Keith W. Duncan, Brush and Weed Specialist, New Mexico State university, Artesia, NM 88210

The Ecological Role of Tamarisk and Russian Olive on Threatened and Endangered Species.
Terry Ireland, Fish and Wildlife Biologist, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 764 Horizon Drive, South Annex A, Grand Junction, CO 81506-3946

Science, Education, and Action (SEA): Sailing the political waters of weed management.
Eric Lane, State Weed Coordinator, Colorado Department of Agriculture

Natural History of Riparian Corridors - Richard Levad, Grand Valley Audubon Society, 2924 Ronda Lee, Grand Junction, CO 81503

Saltcedar invasion in desert wetlands of the southwestern United States: ecological and political implications Dr. Jeff Lovich, United States Geological Survey, Department of Biology, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521-0427, jeffrey_lovich@nbs.gov


Abstracts not available

Russian Olive: Biology, Introduction, Spread & Establishment - Gabrielle Katz, University of Colorado
The Native Riparian Community of Cottonwoods & Willows; Spread & Establishment - Dr. Robert Ohmart, Center for Environmental Studies
The Ecological Role of Tamarisk & Russian Olive : on birds and other animals - Dr. Robert Ohmart, Center for Envionmental Studies