
Email: gewilson@fs.fed.us |
Genny
Wilson is a Forest Wildlife Biologist with the Humboldt-Toiyabe
National Forest. She got her B.S from Humboldt State University
in Wildlife Management and has been a Wildlife Biologist with the
USFS since 1987. She has worked throughout the Sierra Nevada Mountains,
the Nevada Portion of the Great Basin and Spring Mountains in the
Mojave Region outside Las Vegas, NV. She has 19 years of experience
working with grazing, timber harvest and recreation compatibility
and restoration of wildlife habitats. She has a particular interest
in northern goshawks and other landbird monitoring designs and applications,
as well as prescribed fire use and aspen restoration in the Great
Basin. For the last 6 years she has been the wildlife program manager
for the Humboldt-Toiyabe NF which manages the majority of National
Forest System lands in Nevada and portions of Eastern California.
|
| |
Abstract:
Nevada Aspen
Working Group: Focusing on aspen
Genny
Wilson, USFS: Humboldt-Toiyabe NF, Sparks, Nevada
Recognizing that knowledge
of aspen is limited in Nevada, the Nevada Aspen Working group was
formed in summer 2005. This small working group is comprised of
individuals from State and Federal agencies in addition to non-governmental
organizations with an interest in the restoration and persistence
of aspen across Nevada. The primary goals of the group are to determine
the overall distribution, condition, and stressors on aspen in Nevada.
Our mission is to provide land managers, private landowners and
others the tools to recognize declining aspen conditions, identify
issues related to aspen management and apply appropriate methods
to restore aspen. Over the past year, the group has focused on establishing
a common data depository; education; gaining a common understanding
of the issues affecting aspen in Nevada; and identifying additional
partners who have funding and the ability to do work on the ground.
The Nevada Aspen Working Group is assisting the Society of Range
Management in sponsoring a ½ day technical session in Reno-Sparks,
Nevada in February 2007.
|
|