Economic analysis of investments in range improvements / G.Cornelis van Kooten and Brad Stennes.
Material type: TextPublication details: Vancouver, BC : University of British Columbia, 1998.Description: (1) 54 p. : ill. ; 28 cmOnline resources: Abstract: Rangelands are lands suitable for grazing or browsing by herbivores.They include natural grasslands, savannas, shrublands, wet meadows,forestlands, and lands revegetated naturally or artificially to provide forage cover that is managed like native vegetation, if managed at all.Range resources refer to the vegetation including forage used by livestock and wildlife herbivores. Rangelands are an important natural resource in many areas of the work, including Canada and the United States, but they are sometimes neglected because of their low profile among the public. This is particularly true in British Columbia (BC)where issues related to timber harvest take centre stage.Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Electronic Report | Electronic Library | Non-fiction | VAN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 4829 | |
Book | Kamloops Office Stacks | Non-fiction | S 604.5 .R .950 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 9574 |
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S 604.5 .R .947 Managing Saskatchewan rangeland / | S 604.5 .R .948 Range management : handbook for British Columbia / | S 604.5 .R .949 Range program review : final report of the Review Task Force. | S 604.5 .R .950 Economic analysis of investments in range improvements / | S 604.5 .R .951 The rangelands of British Columbia / | S 604.5 .R .952 Specifications for structural range improvements / | S 604.5 .R .953 Agriculture sustainability in the Fraser River Basin : draft # 2 / |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 48-51).
Rangelands are lands suitable for grazing or browsing by herbivores.They include natural grasslands, savannas, shrublands, wet meadows,forestlands, and lands revegetated naturally or artificially to provide forage cover that is managed like native vegetation, if managed at all.Range resources refer to the vegetation including forage used by livestock and wildlife herbivores. Rangelands are an important natural resource in many areas of the work, including Canada and the United States, but they are sometimes neglected because of their low profile among the public. This is particularly true in British Columbia (BC)where issues related to timber harvest take centre stage.