Archive Nut, Prune and Olive Programs

UC Oaks: Article

Tax Incentives Encourage Open Space Conservation

September 8, 2025
By Michael Jones
by Richard StandifordQuercus – Volume 2, Issue 1 – March, 1995This information may be out of date.Residential and commercial development is the leading cause of conversion of oak woodlands over a relatively large area of the state. Oak woodlands have the highest biological diversity of any major habitat type…
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UC Oaks: Article

A Potential New Profit From Oak Woodlands

September 8, 2025
By Michael Jones
by Mo-Mei ChenOaks ’n Folks – Volume 8, Issue 2 – November 1993IntroductionIn California, a variety of mushrooms have become increasingly popular. Because mushrooms grow well in oak woodland habitat, commercial mushroom production offers a profit potential for oak woodland owners. Woodland owners can also…
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UC Oaks: Article

A Dynamic Ranch Model of Hardwood Rangeland

September 8, 2025
By Michael Jones
by Richard Howitt and Richard StandifordA study was started in 1987 to develop a dynamic model of hardwood rangeland management activities using the best available biological and economic data. Firewood production, livestock production, and commercial hunting were incorporated into a multi-product objective…
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UC Oaks: Article

Blue Oaks: Forage Production and Quality

September 8, 2025
By Michael Jones
by Neil K. McDougald and William FrostOaks ’n Folks – Volume 6, Issue 1 – April 1991What is the value of blue oaks in terms of forage production?The value of blue oaks in terms of forage production has long been debated. In northern California blue oaks have been shown to decrease total forage production as…
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Nutrition Policy Institute News: Article

Benefits of School Meals for All policies highlighted in California School Boards Association’s California Schools magazine

September 8, 2025
By Danielle Lee, Wendi Gosliner
Nutrition Policy Institute School Meals for All research was featured in a guest article in the summer issue of the California School Boards Association’s quarterly magazine, California Schools. The article highlights California’s School Meals for All policy, also known as universal school meals,…
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Primary Image
Tapinoma sessile, also known as the odorous house ant. It is a very common species, but tends to be pushed aside by the introduced Argentine ant, according to UC Davis ant specialist Phil Ward

Got an Ant Question?

September 8, 2025
By Kathy Keatley Garvey
 Got an ant question?Professor Phil Ward, a myrmecologist or ant scientist with the UC Davis Department of Entomology and Nematology, will be featured at the Davis Science Café on Wednesday, Sept. 10. Billed as "A Conversation with Professor Phil Ward," the event begins at 5:30 p.m. in the G Street…
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UC Oaks: Article

The Role of Fire in California’s Oak Woodlands

September 8, 2025
By Michael Jones
by Richard StandifordOaks ’n Folks – Volume 9, Issue 2 – September 1994IntroductionFire is a natural part of California’s oak woodland ecosystem. It has also served as an important management tool since Native Americans first inhabited these areas. Fire plays a role in the development of oak woodland stand…
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UC Oaks: Article

Protecting Homes from Wildfire in Oak Woodlands

September 8, 2025
By Michael Jones
by Richard StandifordOaks ’n Folks – Volume 7, Issue 2 – September 1992IntroductionUrbanization in California’s oak woodlands is taking place at unprecedented rates. Areas that were previously extensively managed for livestock production, with only a few homes spread out over thousands of acres, now contain…
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UC Oaks: Article

Assessing Fire Damaged Coast Live Oaks

September 8, 2025
By Michael Jones
by Richard StandifordOaks ’n Folks – Volume 6, Issue 3 – December 1991The recent fires in the Oakland and Berkeley hills that claimed several thousand homes and caused several billion dollars in property damage, occurred partly in oak woodlands dominated by the coast live oak (Quercus agrifolia). As…
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