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Browsing BLM Districts by Author "United States. Bureau of Land Management. Three Rivers Resource Area"
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Item Open Access Crow's Nest allotment management plan/agreement environmental assessment(2006-09-20) United States. Bureau of Land Management. Burns District; United States. Bureau of Land Management. Three Rivers Resource AreaProposes to extend the permitted season of grazing from April 1-October 15 to March 1-October 15, and to implement three resource objectives. Includes maintaining all seeded areas in stable to upward trend in condition over the next ten years to provide approximately 800 AUMs each year for livestock and wildlife, providing rearing and nesting opportunity for long-billed curlew in either of the pastures from May 1 through June 30 each year as well as breeding and foraging habitat for ferruginous hawk, and managing for stable to upward trend in condition in sagebrush/bottlebrush squirreltail range sites over the next ten years.Item Open Access Dry Lake allotment rangeland restoration project finding of no significant impact and decision record(2007-04-06) United States. Bureau of Land Management. Three Rivers Resource Area; United States. Bureau of Land Management. Burns DistrictAnnounces decision to implement proposal utilizing various methods of prescribed fire and mechanical treatments to control the spread of western juniper into four dominant vegetative community treatments: low/stiff sagebrush flats, mountain big sagebrush-bunchgrass communities, ponderosa pine-bunchgrass communities, and aspen stands.Item Open Access Five Creeks Rangeland restoration project finding of no significant impact(2006-10-16) United States. Bureau of Land Management. Three Rivers Resource Area; United States. Bureau of Land Management. Burns DistrictAnnounces decision to exclude EIS from project implementing an ecological restoration project to manage encroaching juniper on both public and private lands by utilizing prescribed fire and mechanical treatments. Includes reintroducing fire to restore and/or maintain natural fire regimes; reducing hazardous fuels, especially within previously treated juniper cuts; moving the species composition and structure of big sagebrush-bunchgrass, low sagebrush-bunchgrass, aspen and riparian communities toward pre-European immigration conditions; improving big game, sage-grouse, and other locally important species habitat; increasing wild horse and livestock forage; and improving watershed health.