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May 2025Archived

 

Field picture submitted by Elizabeth Fichtner

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Publications

8th California Oak Symposium: Page

41

Determining the Long-Term Effects of Wildfire on Goldspotted Oak Borer in Southern California Kim Corella, Forest Pest Specialist, California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection Cheyenne Borello, Forester I, California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection David Haas, Forester I, Califor...
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8th California Oak Symposium: Page

17

Ranchers and Land Managers Responses to an Oak Survey Devii R. Rao, University of California Cooperative Extension, 3228 Southside Road, Hollister, CA 95023; 831-637-5346; drorao@ucanr.
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8th California Oak Symposium: Page

61

Coordinated Squirrels: Harvesting Acorns for Reforestation Using Community Volunteers, Smartphones, and Persistent Chat Applications Zarah Wyly, Sacramento Tree Foundation The Sacramento Tree Foundation operates an annual acorn harvesting program that gathers seven to fifteen-thousand acorns to supp...
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8th California Oak Symposium: Page

62

Context-dependent Effects of Cattle and Wildlife on Floral Resources at Tejon Ranch in Southcentral California Devyn A.
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8th California Oak Symposium: Page

51

Can Grazing Reduce Wildfire Risk? Katherine Siegel, Theresa Becchetti, Stephanie Larson, Matthew Shapero, Fadzayi Mashiri, Lulu Waks, Luke Macauley, Van Butsic Livestock grazing has been removed from many rangelands due to concerns grazing negatively impacts ecosystems.
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8th California Oak Symposium: Page

57

Examining abiotic and biotic factors influencing specimen black oaks (Quercus kellogii) in northern California to reimplement traditional ecological knowledge and promote ecosystem resilience post-wildfire Cory J. OGorman, Department of Biology, Sonoma State University Dr.
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8th California Oak Symposium: Page

52

Bark Properties and Expected Conferred Resistance to Fire-induced Mortality in Three California Oak Species Kaili Brande, Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California, Santa Barbara Frank W.
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8th California Oak Symposium: Page

40*

Identifying second order effects of fire on California oaks Shane Dewees, Leander Anderegg, Max Moritz, Nicole Molinari Fire can cause tree mortality both immediately, through large-scale tissue necrosis, and post-fire, through second order effects on the phloem and xylem.
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8th California Oak Symposium: Page

9

Conifer Encroachment and Removal in a Northern California Oak Woodland: Influences on Ecosystem Physiology and Biodiversity Gabriel Goff, Dept. of Forestry, Cal Poly Humboldt, Arcata *Lucy Kerhoulas, Dept. of Forestry, Cal Poly Humboldt, Arcata Nicholas Kerhoulas, Dept. of Forestry and Dept.
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8th California Oak Symposium: Page

48

North Coast Oak Woodland Restoration: Assessment of Post-treatment Understory Conditions Jeffery Stackhouse, University of California Cooperative Extension Yana Valachovic, Lenya Quinn-Davidson, Brendan Twieg, University of California Cooperative Extension, and Chris Lee, CAL Fire The loss of decidu...
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