Pre and post treatment (2016-2021) vegetation cover for three southwest Idaho sites treated with pre-emergent herbicides after fire

Selective herbicide application is a common restoration strategy to control exotic invaders that interfere with native plant recovery after wildfire. Whether spraying with preemergent or bioherbicides releases native plants from competition with exotics (“spray-and-release” strategy) and can make communities resistant to re-invasion by exotic annual grasses (e.g., cheatgrass, medusahead), without risks to non-target native plants or secondary invasion, is a major question for land managers of semiarid plant communities. We applied chemical herbicides (imazapic, rimsulfuron) and weed-suppressive bacteria (Pseudomonas fluorescens strains MB906 and D7) to three different SW Idaho sagebrush-steppe communities after fire. We measured plant cover prior to burning and for four years after treatments.

Data e Risorse

Campo Valore
accessLevel public
bureauCode {010:12}
catalog_@context https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.jsonld
catalog_conformsTo https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema
catalog_describedBy https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.json
identifier USGS:620adc28d34ec05caca60eb1
metadata_type geospatial
modified 20220224
old-spatial -117.0374, 42.2122, -114.9609, 44.1822
publisher U.S. Geological Survey
publisher_hierarchy Department of the Interior > U.S. Geological Survey
resource-type Dataset
source_datajson_identifier true
source_hash 3472857a75bce4dc8d031247bed617ae603215a5
source_schema_version 1.1
spatial {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[-117.0374, 42.2122], [-117.0374, 44.1822], [ -114.9609, 44.1822], [ -114.9609, 42.2122], [-117.0374, 42.2122]]]}
theme {geospatial}
Gruppi
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • National Provider
  • North America
Tag
  • amerigeo
  • amerigeoss
  • bioremediation
  • biota
  • cheatgrass
  • ckan
  • d7
  • ecosystem-resilience
  • environment
  • fires
  • geo
  • geoss
  • imazapic
  • invasive-species
  • mb906
  • national
  • native-species
  • natural-resource-management
  • north-america
  • pseudomonas-fluorescens
  • resistance-and-resilience
  • restoration
  • rimsulfuron
  • sagebrush-steppe
  • shrubland-ecosystems
  • united-states
  • usgs-620adc28d34ec05caca60eb1
  • vegetation
  • weed-suppressive-bacteria
isopen False
license_id notspecified
license_title License not specified
maintainer FRESC Science Data Coordinator
maintainer_email fresc_outreach@usgs.gov
metadata_created 2025-11-20T21:34:44.097026
metadata_modified 2025-11-20T21:34:44.097029
notes Selective herbicide application is a common restoration strategy to control exotic invaders that interfere with native plant recovery after wildfire. Whether spraying with preemergent or bioherbicides releases native plants from competition with exotics (“spray-and-release” strategy) and can make communities resistant to re-invasion by exotic annual grasses (e.g., cheatgrass, medusahead), without risks to non-target native plants or secondary invasion, is a major question for land managers of semiarid plant communities. We applied chemical herbicides (imazapic, rimsulfuron) and weed-suppressive bacteria (Pseudomonas fluorescens strains MB906 and D7) to three different SW Idaho sagebrush-steppe communities after fire. We measured plant cover prior to burning and for four years after treatments.
num_resources 2
num_tags 29
title Pre and post treatment (2016-2021) vegetation cover for three southwest Idaho sites treated with pre-emergent herbicides after fire