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8th California Oak Symposium: Page

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Background Total Suspended Solids and Turbidity Conditions in Oak Woodland Headwater Streams David J. Lewis, University of California Cooperative Extension Marin County Anna Dirkse, University of California Cooperative Extension Marin County, Anthony OGeen, University of California Davis, Kenneth W.
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8th California Oak Symposium: Page

Keynote Address

David Ackerly, Dean and Professor, College of Natural Resources, UC Berkeley Californias oaks range from the deserts edge to the wet forests of the northwest and the slopes of the high Sierra.
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8th California Oak Symposium: Page

The Past

David Stahle, Department of Geosciences, University of Arkansas In a state famous for exceptional trees, the blue oaks of California may be among the most remarkable. Old blue oak trees are still widespread across the foothills of the Coast Ranges, Cascades, and Sierra Nevada.
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8th California Oak Symposium: Page

The Present

Tedmund J. Swiecki and Elizabeth A. Bernhardt, Phytosphere Research The present condition and current prospects for Californias native oaks have been shaped by an accumulating and accelerating array of human-induced changes.
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8th California Oak Symposium: Page

The Future

Frank W. Davis, Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California, Santa Barbara California oak woodlands have long been impacted by biotic invasions, altered fire regimes, and changes in land use and land management.
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8th California Oak Symposium: Page

Fire and Oaks in CA

Jon E. Keeley, U.S. Geological Survey, Western Ecological Research Center, Sequoia-Kings Canyon Field Station Dawn M. Lawson, Biology Department, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA Quercus is an important component of fire-prone woodlands, savannas and shrublands.
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8th California Oak Symposium: Page

Climate Change and Management

Igor Lacan, Bay Area Environmental Horticulture and Urban Forestry Advisor, UC Cooperative Extension, San Mateo-San Francisco Counties Adapting urban tree populations to the changing climate has become a ubiquitous goal of urban tree managers.
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