Members Of WIN Wyoming Donna Birkholz, MA, FCS Educator, UW coop. ext. service, Sheridan County, Sheridan Julie Harker, RD, LD, idaho State Project Coordinator, WIN the Rockies, Univ. of idaho, Rexburg, http://www.uwyo.edu/winwyoming/members.html
OR Forage Extension Specialist Pacific Northwest Forage Workers Conference Yamhill County extension 2050 Lafayette Street McMinnville, OR 971289333 Okanogan County coop. Okanogan, WA 98840 Top Notch Nutri Ltd P.O. Box 1030 Abbotsford, BC V2S 4N3 Whitman County coop. Whitman County coop. ext. Public service Bldg. Colfax, WA 99111 Brad Brown. SW idaho Research extension. University of idaho http://www.forages.css.orst.edu/Oregon/People/OR_Forages_list.html
List Of Journals Indexed In AGRICOLA 1996 : I Univ. Ky. coop. ext. Serv. NAL call no. S544.3.K4K42 Lexington,Ky. The service. idaho economics Ida. economics NAL call no. http://www.nal.usda.gov/indexing/lji96/ljii.htm
Abbreviated Titles 1995 : B Maryland 275.29 M36B Bull Fla coop ext Serv Univ Fla* Bulletin Florida cooperativeextension service, University of Florida 275.29 F66 Bull idaho Agric Exp http://www.nal.usda.gov/indexing/lji95/abrtic.htm
CSREES - State Urban Programs Contacts Peggy Pletcher University of idaho Boise Center Distofc2 Doug Babkirk University ofMaine coop.ext. Dan Panshin Minnesota extension service dpanshin@mes.umn.edu. http://www.reeusda.gov/ecs/urbanlis.htm
Abbreviated Titles 1995 : C Abbreviated Titles C C Kans. State Univ. coop. Inf Ser coop ext Serv Univ idaho* Current information series - cooperative extension service, University of idaho 275.29 http://www.nal.usda.gov/indexing/lji95/abrtid.htm
Publications And Videos From Other States of the cooperative State Research, Education, and extension service. only, http//www.uaf.edu/coopext/publications/vid_toc idaho,Catalog, PDF, YES, See catalog. http://www.oznet.ksu.edu/library/other_st/other_st.htm
Extractions: Skip the navigation header body Thousands of Extension and Agricultural Experiment Station publications* and video tape presentations are available from other states. Also check out the directory of land-grant universities which are state partners of the Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service. STATE PUBLICATIONS VIDEOS Alabama HTML, PDF http://www.acesag.auburn.edu/department/extcomm/medialib/ Alaska Catalog only http://www.uaf.edu/coop-ext/publications/vid_toc.html Arizona HTML, PDF YES, listed with publications Arkansas HTML, PDF YES, limited number California Catalog, PDF Yes, listed with publications Colorado Catalog, PDF, HTML Connecticut No publications listed Delaware HTML Florida HTML Georgia HTML Hawaii HTML Illinois PDF, HTML YES Indiana HTML, PDF Idaho Catalog, PDF YES, See catalog Iowa PDF http://www.exnet.iastate.edu/Pages/video/publicvid.html Kansas PDF YES, same location Kentucky PDF, HTML Louisiana PDF Maine Catalog, HTML, PDF
USDA Forest Service, Cooperative Forestry R4 Intermountain Region (Southern idaho, Nevada, Utah, parts of Wyoming). Hilo, HI96720 Phone 808933-8121 ext. http//www.fs.fed.us/r6/coop/Programs/ucf/urban http://www.fs.fed.us/spf/coop/ucf_contact_fed.htm
Extractions: Federal Coordinators Forest Service Regional Coordinators provide program direction, technology transfer, and technical and financial assistance to states within their region. The national headquarters office provides national leadership and coordination among agencies and other national groups. The office establishes policies, strategies and direction, etc. in consultation with the National Urban Community Forestry Advisory Council, National Association of State Foresters, and other agencies and parters. In the map below, find your state and the administrative name of the region which coordinates programs in your state. Click on the name of the region below to find the name(s) of the federal coordinator(s) for your state. Region One Region Two Region Three Region Four ... National Headquarters R1 Northern Region (Northern Idaho, Montana, North Dakota) Glenn Roloff
4HMembers Colorado, 4H Volunteer Specialist, daleleid@coop.ext.colostate.edu Linda Webb lwebb@uidaho.eduJeff Goodwin, idaho, 4-H Contact the extension service Webmaster. http://extn.msu.montana.edu/4HDiscovery/4HMembers/4hmembers.html
Related Weed Science Websites (12/14/98) Winder. coop. State Res., Ed., and ext. service. Federal asp. idaho,U. idaho, http//info.ag.uidaho.edu/Catalog/catalog.htm. Indiana, http://www.wssa.net/registration/links/LINKS2.htm
WasteContacts.html of idaho Moscow, ID 838440904 PH 208-885-7626 FX 208-885-8923 EM rrynk@uidaho.eduILLINOIS Peter Bloome Asst Director coop ext service University of http://www.cfe.cornell.edu/wmi/GenInfo/WasteContacts.html
CompostContacts.html Ag Engineering Engineering/Physics Bldg University of idaho Moscow, ID MISSISSIPPIDr. Joseph Schmidt Comm Dev Specialist Mississippi coop ext service PO Box http://www.cfe.cornell.edu/wmi/Compost/CompostContacts.html
NAQ, No. 39: Cover Crops At A Glance Austrian Winter Peas a Green Manure Crop for idaho. U. idaho coop. ext. Ser. CurrentInfo Series No. US Dept. Agriculture, Soil Conservation service, 1975. http://www.fuzzylu.com/greencenter/q39/cover1.htm
Extractions: New Alchemy Quarterly, No. 39 Cover crops are grown not to produce food or fiber, but to conserve, maintain and enrich the soil, and to perform other functions in the agricultural ecosystem. Growing cover crops during seasons in which the land would otherwise be idle protects the soil from water and wind erosion, reduces the loss of nutrients through leaching and runoff, adds organic matter and suppresses weeds. Legumes such as clover support symbiotic bacteria on their roots which fix (convert) atmospheric nitrogen into a form that plants can use. Many cover crops can extract nutrients from insoluble minerals, making them available for plant growth. When cover crops are turned back into the soil (at which time they are often called "green manures"), their residues contribute to soil organic matter, and a substantial part of their nutrients become available to the next crop. Finally, some cover crops provide food (nectar) or habitat for beneficial insects. Because so many benefits can be derived from a relatively small input of materials (10 to 100 lb seeds per acre), cover crops have been called a cornerstone of many sustainable agricultural systems (Liebhardt et al. 1989) At the New Alchemy Institute, we have been studying cover crops for sustainable vegetable production for the past three years. The table on the following page is a synopsis of information on cover crops for temperate climates, derived from a review of literature and seed catalogues, a survey of farmers in the Northeast (Schonbeck 1988), and our own experience.
Perennial Ryegrass International Fact Sheet References EM 8585. Oregon State Univ. ext. service, Corvallis, OR. Heichel, GH, andKI Henjum. 1991. 2nd ed. Univ. of idaho coop. ext. System, Moscow, ID. http://www.forages.css.orst.edu/Topics/Species/Grasses/Perennial_ryegrass/Intern
Extractions: Authors Reviewers ... Entire Document Albrecht, K.A., and M.H. Hall. 1995. Hay and Silage Management. p. 155-162. In Robert F. Barnes, Darrell A. Miller, and C. J. Nelson. (eds.) Forages. Vol. 1. An Introduction to Grassland Agriculture. Iowa State Univ. Press. Ames, IA. Alderson, J., and W.C. Sharp. 1995. Grass Varieties in the United States . USDA/SCS. Ag. Handbook No. 170. USDA, Washington, DC. Association of Official Seed Certifying Agencies (AOSCA). 1995. Acres applied for certification on 1995 by seed certifying agencies. Production Publication No. 49. Balasko, J.A., G.W. Evers, and R.W. Duell. 1995. Bluegrasses, ryegrasses, and bentgrasses. p. 357-372. In R.F. Barnes, D.A. Miller, and C.J. Nelson. (eds.) Forages. Vol. 1. An Introduction to grassland Agriculture. 5th ed. Iowa State Univ. Press. Ames, IA. Ball, D.M, C.S. Hoveland, and G.D. Lacefield. 1991. Southern Forages. Potash and Phosphate Institute. Williams Print. Co., Atlanta, GA. Ball, P.R., and J.R. Crush. 1985. Prospects for increasing symbiotic nitrogen fixation in temperate grasslands. p. 56-62.
State Coordinators Joel Flagler, Ag./Resource Mgmt. Agent/CEDH Rutgers coop. ext., Bergen Cty. idaho.Dr.Wm. Of Vermont ext. service 157 Old Guildford Road, 4 Brattleboro, VT. http://hcs.osu.edu/mg/img/coordinators.html
1 1996. 65. Eberlein, CV, Boydston, R. and Thornton , M. Volunteer potato control.Univ. of idaho coop. ext. service Bulletin CIS 1048, 2 p. 1996. 66. http://www.usda.prosser.wsu.edu/Boydston_pub.htm
Extractions: PUBLICATIONS Boydston, R. A. and D. E. Koeppe Glyceollin: A site specific inhibitor of electron transport in isolated soybean mitochondria. Plant Physiol. 72:151-155. Boydston, R. A. and F. W. Slife. Field evaluation and mechanism of action of tridiphane on ( Zea mays L.) and giant foxtail ( Setaria faberi Herrm.). Proc. North Cent. Weed Control Conf. 38:52. Boydston, R. A. and F. W. Slife. Alteration of atrazine uptake and metabolism by tridiphane in giant foxtail ( Setaria faberi Herrm.) and corn ( Zea mays Ph.D. Thesis, Univ. of Illinois Urbana-Champaign IL Boydston, R. A. Bermudagrass. Proc. 36th Ann. Weed Conf. Wash. State Weed Assoc., pp. 29-30. Boydston, R. A. and F. W. Slife. Postemergence control of giant foxtail ( Setaria faberi ) in corn ( Zea mays ) with tridiphane and triazine combinations. Weed Sci. 35:103-108. 1986. Boydston, R. A. and F. W. Slife. Alteration of atrazine uptake and metabolism by tridiphane in giant foxtail ( Setaria faberi Herrm.) and corn ( Zea mays Weed Sci. 34:850-858. Parker, R. and R. A. Boydston. Weeds on the movepuncturevine.
2000 Society Level Award Nominations coop Fish Wdlf Res University of idaho Moscow, ID Chair Meritorious service AwardCommittee VT coop Fish Ln, Ste 110 Bethesda, MD 20814 (301) 8978616 ext. http://www.fisheries.org/Professional_Development/Awards/award_society_nominatio
Extractions: Given annually to an individual or organization, professional or nonprofessional, for outstanding contributions to the conservation of fishery resources. Accomplishments are not restricted and can include political, legal, educational, scientific, and managerial successes. Nomination deadline: 1 June Contact: Carl V. Burger , Chair
Potato Growers Researchers service 3328 Vandenberg Road Klamath Falls, OR, 97603 541 JONATHAN L. 3065 BackhandDrive idaho Falls, ID FAX 719754-2619 Email slvctr@coop.ext.colostate.edu. http://www.potatogrower.com/researchers.cfm