Search
Skip to Search Results- 3Crude protein
- 1Alpine sweetvetch
- 1Bromus inermis
- 1Consumer-resource dynamics
- 1Forage production
- 1Functional response
-
2004
Irving, B. D., Asamoah, S. A., Hudson, R. J., Bork, E. W., Price, M. A.
We evaluated the temporal dynamics of herbage biomass and protein within riparian meadows and upland grasslands of native Aspen Parkland rangeland to understand the contribution of each to lives tock foraging. For the growing season monitored, meadows were greater in forage yield and crude...
-
Bromus-Poa response to defoliation intensity and frequency under three soil moisture levels
Download2002
Hudson, R. J., Donkor, N. T., Bork, E. W.
Smooth brome (Bromus inermis Leyss.) and Kentucky bluegrass (Poa pratensis L.) are important herbage for livestock and wildlife in Aspen-Boreal ecosystems in central Alberta, but there is paucity of information on the relationship between soil moisture and defoliation regimes on herbage...
-
Getting to the root of the matter: grizzly bears and alpine sweetvetch in west-central Alberta, Canada
DownloadSpring 2012
Wildlife habitat selection is influenced by gender, offspring-dependency, resource availability, and spatiotemporal variation in resource nutrition. In consideration of these factors, this thesis examines alpine sweetvetch (Hedysarum alpinum) root and its relationship to grizzly bears (Ursus...