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Brad W. Schultz

Researcher at University of Nevada Cooperative Extension

Publications -  24
Citations -  180

Brad W. Schultz is an academic researcher from University of Nevada Cooperative Extension. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bromus tectorum & Grazing. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 20 publications receiving 123 citations. Previous affiliations of Brad W. Schultz include Desert Research Institute.

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CASE STUDY: Reducing cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum L.) fuel loads using fall cattle grazing

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of pasture-scale fall grazing of cheatgrass by cattle on standing crop (fuel reduction), the perennial vegetation community, and cattle performance were examined. But, the authors did not consider the effect of fall grazing on cattle performance.
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Aboriginal Precedent for Active Management of Sagebrush-Perennial Grass Communities in the Great Basin

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that Indians practiced regular use of fire for many purposes, including increasing the availability of desired plants, maintaining habitats for animals used as food, and driving game during hunts.
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Fall-Grazing and Grazing-Exclusion Effects on Cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum) Seed Bank Assays in Nevada, United States

TL;DR: Combined plotted data from this and the previous study indicated that after several years of fall-grazing treatments, removal of fall cattle grazing for only 1 yr can result in significant increases in cheatgrass seed bank size.
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Viewpoint: An Alternative Management Paradigm for Plant Communities Affected by Invasive Annual Grass in the Intermountain West

TL;DR: In the Intermountain West, the most significant landscape-level management approach toward invasive annual grasses has been to complain this paper, and we now know how to begin the process of taking the intermountain west back from the domination of invasive annual weeds: through the management of standing dead litter.
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Plant Community Factors Correlated with Wyoming Big Sagebrush Site Responses to Fire

TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantified soil surface and foliar cover in 12 cover groups and found that cheatgrass cover before a fire played a strong role in determining postfire plant communities; this suggests management should focus on prefire and postfire management of cheatgrass and litter.