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Combined shrub and herbaceous basal cover measured in the haul road study area was 16 <br />percent; basal cover on the reference area was estimated to be 14 percent (Tables 5-27 and <br />5-28). Low Sagebrush contributed the majority of the shrub basal cover (7 percent on the <br />reference area; 10 percent on the haul road corridor). <br />Average herbaceous cover was nearly equal (6 percent) on both the reference and haul road <br />corridor areas. Crass species showing highest cover and frequency on both the corridor <br />and reference areas were slender wheatgrass and juneg rass (Koeleria cristata ). The most <br />frequently encountered forbs on both areas were textile onion (Allium textile) and <br />mulesear. <br />Combined herbaceous and shrub production was estimated to be 41 g/mz (366 16/acre) on the <br />reference area (Table 5-30) and 34 g/mz (300 16/acre) on the haul road corridor (Table <br />5-29). Low Sagebrush contributed approximately half of all production on both areas. <br />Average herbaceous production was estimated to be 17 g/mz (152 ib/acre) on the reference <br />area and 15 g/mz (139 lb/acre) on the corridor area. Slender wheatgrass contributed the <br />highest yield among grasses; textile onion and mulesear the highest among forbs on both . <br />areas. <br />Estimated shrub density on the reference area was a very high 18.5 stems/4mz (18,731 <br />stems/acre); estimated density on the haul road corridor area was also high at 17.6 <br />stems/4mz (17,820 stems/acre) (Tables 5-31 and 5-32). Over 80 percent of the shrub <br />density was contributed by low sagebrush. <br />Meadow. The Meadow vegetation type occupies 14.1 acres (adjusted for permit area changes) <br />in the haul road corridor study area. The adjusted acreage resulted from a haul road <br />realignment in 1989 (see revised Exhibit 10-2 and Table 10-2 ). It occurs in narrow strips <br />along drainages and is dominated by grasses. Permanent water from hillside seeps exists <br />in a small area at the eastern end of the haul road study area. These seeps receive <br />additional ground water from summer fallowing of wheat ground above these areas. <br />This area was treated as an inclusion within the meadow study area and mapped as Meadow <br />because of its small size. This area is predominately bare ground. The dominant grass <br />growing on the reference area is Nuttall alkali grass (Puccinellia airoides) with meadow <br />barley (Hordeum brachyantherum) the dominant grass in Che study area. Dominant forbs . <br />included western ragweed (Ambrosia nsilnstachva) in the reference area and cluster tarweed <br />6 <br />