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Dive into the research topics where Gary Wyatt is active.

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Featured researches published by Gary Wyatt.


Journal of Soil and Water Conservation | 2018

Comparison of woody species for use in living snow fences in the midwestern United States

Eric J. Ogdahl; Diomy Zamora; Gregg A. Johnson; Gary Wyatt

Living snow fences are windbreaks designed to prevent blowing snow on transportation routes in cold climate regions. Currently, there is a need to diversify plant species used in living snow fences due to landowner concerns about establishment and growth. Recent studies have suggested that fast-growing shrub willows (Salix spp.) can provide affordable and easily established living snow fences. We sought to compare the growth and establishment of four shrub willow cultivars and one native shrub willow species to two shrub species—gray dogwood (Cornus racemosa Lam.) and American cranberrybush (Viburnum opulus L. var. americanum Ait.)—traditionally used for living snow fences in Minnesota, as well as evaluate different coppice dates within willow species. After two years of growth, we found all species to have survival rates of >80% except for S. eriocephala × S. eriocephala ‘S25’ (77%). Additionally, postcoppice growth in 2014 for the willows significantly exceeded the growth of the traditional living snow fence species by up to 4.8-fold. Within willows, coppice date (fall of 2013 versus spring of 2014) had no effect on the survival and growth of plants except for S. purpurea ‘Fish Creek’ and S. eriocephala × S. eriocephala ‘S25’, which responded differently to coppice dates. Lastly, the native willow species S. petiolaris had comparable growth to the tallest and greatest stem-producing willow cultivars S. purpurea × S. miyabeana ‘Oneonta’ and S. purpurea ‘Fish Creek’. These results suggest that willows may establish faster than traditional living snow fence species; certain native shrub willow species may be as suitable as shrub willow cultivars for living snow fences, and the best coppice time for willow living snow fences may depend on species and objectives.


Biomass & Bioenergy | 2013

Biomass yield, energy values, and chemical composition of hybrid poplars in short rotation woody crop production and native perennial grasses in Minnesota, USA

Diomides S. Zamora; Gary Wyatt; Kent G. Apostol; Ulrike Tschirner


Agroforestry Systems | 2014

Biomass production and potential ethanol yields of shrub willow hybrids and native willow accessions after a single 3-year harvest cycle on marginal lands in central Minnesota, USA

Diomides S. Zamora; Kent G. Apostol; Gary Wyatt


Archive | 2012

Economic and Environmental Costs and Benefits of Living Snow Fences: Safety, Mobility, and Transportation Authority Benefits, Farmer Costs, and Carbon Impacts

Gary Wyatt; Diomy Zamora; David J. Smith; Sierra Schroeder; Dinesh Paudel; Joe Knight; Don Kilberg; Dean Current; Dan Gullickson; Steve Taff


Agroforestry Systems | 2017

Impact of managed woodland grazing on forage quantity, quality and livestock performance: the potential for silvopasture in Central Minnesota, USA

Madeline M. Ford; Diomy Zamora; Dean Current; Joe Magner; Gary Wyatt; William D. Walter; Sophia Vaughan


Agroforestry Systems | 2016

Establishment and potential snow storage capacity of willow (Salix spp.) living snow fences in south-central Minnesota, USA

Eric J. Ogdahl; Diomy Zamora; Gregg A. Johnson; Gary Wyatt; Dean Current; Dan Gullickson


Archive | 2015

Assessing the Use of Shrub-Willows for Living Snow Fences in Minnesota

Diomy Zamora; Eric J. Ogdahl; Gary Wyatt; David J. Smith; Gregg A. Johnson; Dean Current; Dan Gullickson


Archive | 2017

Expanding the Adoption on Private Lands: Blowing-and-Drifting Snow Control Treatments and the Cost Effectiveness of Permanent versus Non-Permanent Treatment Options

Dean Current; Gary Wyatt; Diomy Zamora; Karlyn Eckman; Megan Butler; Kate Carroll; Michelle Danielson; Dan Gullickson


Archive | 2016

Riparian Buffer Science: Status and Research Needs

Brad Gordon; Chris Lenhart; Ann Lewandowski; Gary Wyatt; Dean Current


The Journal of Extension | 2015

Teaching Farmers and Commercial Pesticide Applicators about Invasive Species in Pesticide Training Workshops.

Gary Wyatt; Dean Herzfeld; Tana Haugen-Brown

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Diomy Zamora

University of Minnesota

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Dean Current

University of Minnesota

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Dan Gullickson

Minnesota Department of Transportation

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Angela Gupta

University of Minnesota

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