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2010-11-12_PERMIT FILE - C1981010A (4)
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2010-11-12_PERMIT FILE - C1981010A (4)
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Entry Properties
Last modified
8/24/2016 4:26:47 PM
Creation date
11/26/2010 1:46:44 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
C1981010A
IBM Index Class Name
Permit File
Doc Date
11/12/2010
Doc Name
pages 2-58 to 2-169
Section_Exhibit Name
2.3 Vegetation & 2.4 Fish and Wildlife
Media Type
D
Archive
Yes
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Smooth brome grows best in regions of rather light rainfall and moderate summer <br />temperatures. IC is most popular in the Dakotas, Montana, and western Canada <br />where it grows luxuriantly and produces an abundance of palatable and nutritious <br />forage. This plant is one of [he most palatable of all grasses, being relished <br />by all classes of livestock especially during the spring and early summer. How- <br />ever, cattle and horses graze i[ more than sheep and goats. <br />This grass normally produces an abundance of viable seed except 'at [he higher <br />elevations where the seasons are too short for a seed crop. Good stands are usu- <br />ally secured and, if grazed lightly the first year, they increase rapidly and <br />form a complete sod the second or third year. Smooth brome is often one of the <br />major constituents of many pasture mixtures, and is highly recovanended for use in <br />western Canada and the northwestern United States. <br />Throughout its entire range, volunteer plants from the cultivated fields have <br />gained sparse and scattered footholds on many of the mountain ranges, particu- <br />• larly in [he semiarid regions of the West and Northwest. This species is fre- <br />quently found at all elevations up to 9,000 feet. It will grow as high as 10,500 <br />fee[ in central U[ah but does not reseed a[ [hat elevation. It often makes a <br />heavy growth of 2 fee[ or more on the deep, black clay loams of meadows and can- <br />yons but also thrives on [he dry loose soils of [he slopes and hills and succeeds <br />fairly well on sandy soils. <br />Smooth brome is one of the best cultivated species introduced into the western <br />mountains. I[ has been widely used by the Forest Serice in the artificial <br />reseeding of mountain ranges and has proved we 11 adapted for the rehabilitation <br />of overgrazed, eroded and burned over range lands. Good stands are usually <br />obtained in fairly moist rather deep soils, where [he species develops an exten- <br />sive root system which frequently penetrates [o depths of 5 feet or more, binds <br />Che soil firmly, and fortifies the plant to withstand grazing and unusual drought <br />conditions. <br />n <br />`J <br />2-76 <br />
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