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Rangelands comprise about 42 percent of the land area of the United States and provide vital land functions such as watershed, multiple-use, recreation, and other amenities. Currently, we do not know the status and trends of many of our nation's rangelands, and consistent protocols for describing rangeland system dynamics across land management agencies are lacking. Various Federal land management agencies have responsibility for rangeland inventory and assessments that characterize the health of the nation's rangelands. Many efforts have been initiated to standardize an approach to large-scale monitoring and assessment of rangelands, but none are universally accepted. This paper describes four rangeland health indicators and interpretation criteria that can be used to characterize rangeland health and functionality. The four indicators tested in this study-noxious weeds, ground cover, species composition, and shrub cover-proved to be viable indicators of rangeland health and functionality. The paper recommends that these indicators can be used at many scales, from the site level for local planning, to State and national levels for strategic planning.
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A series of ghastly murders are rocking the small resort town of Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. Detective James Wolfe struggles to stop a brutal killer while battling small-town prejudice and intolerance. The murder victims in each instance are attorneys and other members of local law enforcement. When Wolfe’s partner is violently killed, he gets teamed up with Detective Kelly Simpson, and the duo race from grisly murder scene to scene, desperate to uncover the identity of the killer or killers. Simultaneously, Wolfe does his best to balance his responsibilities as a divorced father of an impressionable twelve-year-old daughter with those of a homicide detective.