Riparian Restoration ; Native Plants Are Being Revived in Places Invasive Species Were Thriving
13th Nov 2006, 22:53 GMT
By ERIC BILLINGSLEY Journal Staff Writer Native sunflowers, grasses and marsh reeds now thrive on a stretch of the Pecos River where invasive salt cedar and Russian olive used to prevail.
Riparian Restoration ; Native Plants Are Being Revived in Places Invasive Species Were Thriving related news:
- LA decides to replace dying palms with native species — SacBee -- AP State News
- EVALUATION OF THE EFFECTIVENESS OF RIPARIAN ZONE RESTORATION IN THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS BY ASSESSING SOIL MICROBIAL POPULATIONS — Recent EPA Catalog Records.
- More Species In The Tropics Because Species Have Been There Longer, Study Suggests — ScienceDaily Headlines
- Good News From Rita *** Storm "Cleaned" Marsh of Invasive Species — RedOrbit News - Science
- LA to replace dying its palms — Boston.com / News
- Plants halt shifting sands — PhysicsWeb News
- Why do insects like to eat some plants more than others? — EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health
- Climbing plants get wrapped up — PhysicsWeb News
- Trees for Travelers — Treehugger
- ORLive Presents: Minimally Invasive Aortic Valve Replacement Surgery -- Increasingly Popular Procedure to Correct Heart Function — ArriveNet : Health
Latest news from RedOrbit News - Science:
- Campuses Cash in on Students' Urge to Buy
- Texas Town Triggers Immigrant Fears
- Election Mocks Popular Myths
- Winter Perfect Time of the Year to Visit Death Valley
- Apartment Complex Fetches $30 Million
- Fire Chief Tackles Staff Concerns: Morale Low in Deerfield Department
- EDITORIAL: Slots Parlors: What The People Want To Know
- Tortoise Mystery Solved
- Shopping Centers Clean Up
- GREENGUARD Announces 2006 Winner of Memorial Fellowship