Historically, buffer zones or reserved areas have been used to restrict the array of management aclions within unique habitats or sensitive-species areas. This action, although necessary as an immediate protection measure, can create administrative fragmentation of the forest and associated problems over time. Rarely is the dynamic nature of the reserved or buffered area considered and the disturbance events that created and maintained these sites are not conserved.Sizes of buffer zones and reserved areas generally reflect concern for a single management action, such as local timber harvest activities, and do not reflect adequate concem for other disturbances such ----------Waworth cc-indexing enhy note]: "EmphaFis Areas as an Allrmativc to Buffer Zones wd Rcscrvcd Anas in Ulc Consavatim of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Recesses." Evurn, Richard L.. Paul F. Hessburg, and Trny R. Lillybridgc. Cbpublished simultaneously in thc J o u r~l of Sustmnnble Forestry (The Hawom Ress.
Lying on the ground with a prostrate base and erect tips. Opening at maturity to release the seeds. With spreading, pointed teeth. Having the male and female flowers on separate plants. A fruit where the hard covered seed lies within a fleshy outer layer (e.g. cherry; peach). Diminutive is drupelet. Leaves without marginal teeth or lobes. Foliage remains green throughout the year, not deciduous. Pertaining to a flower or flowers. A small flower, usually one of a large cluster such as in grasses. A single chambered fruit that splits along only one seam to release the seeds. An herb. Any herbaceous plant that is not grasslike. A ripened ovary with any other structures that ripen with and are joined to it. The usually compound leaf of a fern. A helmet-shaped part or upper lip of some flowers. A taxonomic class below a family and above a species (e.g. all pines are of one genus). Plural is genera.
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