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American Museum of Natural History (AMNH)
SOUTHWESTERN RESEARCH STATION

Mail address PO Box G. Portal, AZ 85632
Telephone + 1 (602) 558-2396 Fax + 1 (602) 558-2396

Nature Private sector
Mission Research
Financial support Private
Working languages English (Spanish also spoken)
Scope of interest Biology, ecology, zoology, behavior, evolutionary biology, taxonomy, ornithology, mammalogy, botany, herpetology, geology, entomology

Research program
Locations On-site and on surrounding public and private lands
Subjects Research projects are those of visiting scientists, covering Subjects of interest to biologists doing field-oriented research
Findings Published in scientific periodicals

Internal Organization
Chief official Wade C. Sherbrooke, Director
Professional staff 1
Total staff 5

Facilities
Office Animal behavior observatory and darkroom, large laboratory area with equipment to accommodate researchers
Library Small specialized Library on flora, fauna. physical features of area; almost complete collections of flora and fauna, including 13,000 insects
Exchange Facilities Accommodations include main lodge with dining room, plus 14 cottages each for 2 to 6 people, and recreation Facilities

Publications
Serials Annual newsletter sent to scientists and naturalists who have visited the Station
Publications list Bibliography of scientific Publications originating from work at the Station is available

History
Established in 1955

 

THE ARIZONA-SONORA DESERT MUSEUM

Mail address 2021 N. Kinney Road, Tucson, AZ 85743
Telephone + 1 (602) 883-1380 (business office) Fax + 1 (602) 883-2500

Nature Private, non-profit
Mission Interpretation of Sonoran Desert flora, fauna, minerals, and geological and climatic forces that created the area; soil and water conservation; regional biota research; historical ecology
Financial support Admissions, contributions, memberships, concessions
Working languages English, sometimes also Spanish
Scope of interest Ecology and conservation biology of reptiles, amphibians, and Other wildlife; Paleoecology: packrat middens, paleoclimatology; Biogeography: flora of Sonoran Desert and adjacent tropical thornscrub and deciduous forests; ecology, distribution, ethnobotany, diet and nutrition, evolution, conservation

Research program
Locations Sonoran Desert in Arizona, and in Sonora, Mexico; tropical areas in southern Sonora, Mexico; San Pedro River Valley, Tucson Mountains, and Waterman Mountains, Arizona
Subjects Evolution of Sonoran Desert; History of Sonoran Desert vegetation, arthropods. small vertebrates, climates; interactions of bruchid beetles and legumes; diet and nutrition of desert tortoise in Northeastern Sonoran Desert; diet and nutrition of San Esteban Island Chuckwalla; ecology and distribution of Abutilon parishil; floras of the Tucson Mountains, Arizona, and the Rio Cuchujaqui, Rio Mayo, and Sierra de Alamos, Mexico; Late Holocene vegetation and ethnobotany of Mayo Indians; rare Sonoran plants
Status Some completed, some published, some ongoing
Findings History of vegetation, fauna, and climate in Sonoran Desert; many new records of rare Sonoran Desert plants; discovery of new species of plants; nutritional contents of Sonoran Desert plants; nutritional needs of desert tortoise; relationship of bruchid beetles and legumes

Internal Organization
Chief official David Hancocks, Executive Director
Divisions (1) Botany, (2) Geology, (3) Herpetology and Ichthyology, (4) Mammalogy and Ornithology, (5) Business and Finance, (6) Design and Planning, (7) Development and Community Relations, (8) Education and Programs, (<)) Facilities, (10) Guest Services, (11) Publications, (12) Administration
Division heads (1) Mark Dimmitt, Curator; (2) David Thayer, Curator; (3) Howard Lawler, Curator; (4) Peter Siminski, Curator; (5) Mary M. Huerstel, Manager; (6) Ken Stockton, Curator; (7) Susan Sirkus, Director; (8) Carol Cochran, Director; (9) Bruce Thurston, Manager; (10) Heather Andreaccio, Manager; ( I I ) Steven Phillips, Curator; ( 12) No name given
Professional staff 14
Total staff 111

Facilities
Library General, desert-oriented, natural History Library for in-house use, with 6,000 volumes, 100 +periodicals
Local databases Research databases on plant collections in Arizona and in Sonora, Mexico
Exchange Facilities Research Associate program - honorary affiliation; living quarters for visiting scientists

Publications
Serials sonorensis (membership magazine, issued twice yearly)
Other Publications program just beginning (July 1994); book chapters, journal articles, proceedings papers

History
Established in 1952

 

Arizona State University
CENTER FOR ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES

Mail address PO Box 873211, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 84287-3211
Telephone +1 (602)965-2975 Fax +1 (602)965-8087
E-mail [email protected] (Duncan T. Patten, Director)

Nature Academic
Mission Research
Financial support State government, outside grants and contracts
Working languages English, limited Spanish
Scope of interest Riparian, aquatic and wildlife ecology, arid ecosystem processes, environmental planning and policy, recycling

Research program
Locations Arizona/Sonora border; Arizona; Sierra Nevada Mountains, California
Subjects Riparian ecosystem response to water management, land use effects on aquatic and riparian quality, endangered fish recovery, siting of waste Sites
Status
Ongoing
Findings Importance of balance between human needs and natural ecosystem functions anti services

Internal Organization
Chief official Duncan T. Patten, Director
Professional staff 7
Total staff 17

Facilities
Office 11 offices, 1 laboratory
Library In-house ecological journals; otherwise, use Arizona State University library

Publications
Serials Recycling newsletter (subscribe through Center)

History
Established in 1974

 

Arizona State University
OFFICE OF CLIMATOLOGY

Mail address PO Box 871508, Tempe, AZ 85287- 1508
Telephone +1(602) 965-6265 Fax +1(602) 965-1473

Nature Academic
Mission Research, instruction
Financial support State-appropriated funds, research grants
Working languages English
Scope of interest Climatology, greenhouse effects, desertification

Internal Organization
Chief official Dr. Robert C. Balling, Jr., Director
Professional staff 4
Total staff 7

Facilities
Office Office and research offices located at Community Services Center
Library National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) climatic data and documents

Publications
Serials Arizona Climate Summary

History
Established in 1974 as Laboratory of Climatology

 

BOYCE THOMPSON SOUTHWESTERN ABORETUM

Mail address 37615 E. Highway 60, Superior, AZ 85273-5100
Telephone +1 (602)689-2723 Fax +1(602)689-5858

Sponsoring agency Boyce Thompson Southwestern Arboretum Inc. (non-profit foundation), University of Arizona, Arizona State Parks Board
Nature Cooperatively managed by two state agencies and a private, non-profit corporation
Mission Education, recreation, research associated with arid land plants, animals and habitats
Financial support Locally generated income from gate receipts and store sales, income from non-profit endowment, state support, grants, memberships, donations
Working languages English
Scope of interest Low water use plants for urban landscapes, arid-adapted legumes, maintenance irrigation requirements of arid-adapted groundcovers, arid and semiarid economic botany, propagation and production of cacti and succulents, ex situ conservation of endangered species, desert biology and ecology oriented to local flora and fauna, vegetative propagation of woody desert legumes, public education and interpretation of the above

Research program
Locations Most research conducted on arboretum grounds, or on adjacent lands of the Tonto National Forest
Subjects Groundcover evaluation, maintenance irrigation requirements, and introduction; Penstemon taxonomy, phenotypic plasticity, horticultural evaluation; Leguminosae introduction, horticultural and economic evaluation; vegetative propagation of woody desert legumes; studies on various aspects of cactus and succulent plant biology; longterm baseline ornithological studies
Status Studies on the use of acrylic polymer in nursery production of Trichocereus, completed; studies on the effects of 9 herbicides on survival and growth of 6 endangered species surrogate cacti species, completed; studies on water requirements of arid-adapted groundcovers and on vegetative propagation of woody desert legumes, ongoing
Findings Determined irrigation needs of 8 groundcover species used in central Arizona; determined response of 9 herbicides for surrogates of 6 endangered cacti species; impressive collection of Leguminosae from arid and semiarid regions assembled in new Desert Legume Garden

Internal Organization
Chief official Dr. William R. Feldman, Director
Divisions (1) Education, (2) Collections, (3) Research, (4) Botany, (5) Facilities, (6) Development
Division heads (1) Dr. Carol D. Crosswhite, (2, 3) Dr. William R. Feldman, (4) Dr. Frank S. Crosswhite, (5) Raymond J. Dion, (6) Kim M. Sweetman
Professional staff 8
Total staff 23

Facilities
Office The Visitor Center includes 700 ft² Of administrative Office space; the Smith Building houses the Library (460 ft²), the laboratory (640 ft²), cactus and succulent conservatories (2,500 ft²), darkroom (65 ft²), and Office space (660 ft²)
Library Library of cat 3,000 items specializing in worldwide arid and semiarid botany, horticulture, natural sciences, History, and anthropology of the American Southwest
Local databases Collections records are computerized with BG-BASE, a botanical gardens database management system, and are computer mapped using BGMAP, an autocadbased mapping application which interfaces with BG-BASE
Exchange Facilities One small apartment and dormitory accommodations available for individuals or groups up to 30 people; visitors ordinarily responsible for own transportation (call for arrangements)

Publications
Serials Desert Plants (semiannual, covering ecology, taxonomy, growth, culture and use of arid and semiarid plants; direct inquiries to Editor, 2120 E. Allen Road, Tucson, AZ 85719)

History
Established in 1927, and referred to as the "Desert Biology Station" in University of Arizona Publications dating from the 1960s

 

CENTER FOR HOLISTIC RESOURCE MANAGEMENT

Mail address 1007 Luna Circle, NW, Albuquerque, NM 87102
Telephone + 1 (505) 842-5252 Fax + 1 (505) 843-7900

Nature Non-profit international corporation
Mission To train people in the practice of holistic resource management
Financial support Grants, training and membership fees, management of absentee-owned farms and ranches
Working languages English, French, Spanish, Shona
Scope of interest desertification, agronomy, energy, forestry studies, horticulture, remote sensing, wildlife management, livestock management, renewable natural resources, holistic management, economic influence, social conditions

Research program
Locations Victoria Falls area of Zimbabwe; southern New Mexico; mid-eastern Colorado
Subjects Restoring and maintaining seasonal rainfall grasslands through use of grazing animals alone, as means of combating desertification and global warming
Status Ongoing
Findings Techniques for holistic management; role of large herbivores in seasonal rainfall environments as year-round carbon recyclers

Internal Organization
Chief official Mrs. Shannon A. Horst, Executive Director
Professional staff 6
Total staff 6

Facilities
Office 1,500 ft² Office in Albuquerque, no laboratory space; research Sites on farms and ranches in US, Mexico, Canada, southern Africa
Library Small collection
Formal networks Plan to affiliate with EcoNet
Subcenters African Center for Holistic Resource Management, Canadian Center for Holistic Resource Management, Mexican Center for Holistic Resource Management
Local networks Yes, in general
Exchange Facilities Not at main office, but can visit farms and ranches under management

Publications
Serials Holistic Resource Management Quarterly
Other Holistic Resource Management (1988), Holistic Resource Management Workbook
Publications list Available

History
Established in 1984

 

CENTER FOR PVO/UNIVERSITY COLLABORATION IN DEVELOPMENT (PVO/UNIVERSITY CENTER)

Mail address Bird Building, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC 28723
Telephone +1 (704) 227-7492 Fax +1 (704) 227-7422
E-mail [email protected]

Sponsoring agency Western Carolina University's Center for Improving Mountain Living is the host organization for the PVO/University Center
Nature Nonprofit consortium of private voluntary organizations (PVOs) and universities
Mission To promote collaboration between PVOs and universities to carry out applied research, technical and development assistance, and training
Financial support USAID grants and contracts, foundations and Other donors, membership dues, membership contributions in cash, kind, and services
Working languages English
Scope of interest Desertification (soil erosion and fertility loss, vegetation loss and deforestation), land restoration (soil conservation, soil moisture retention, etc ), afforestation, agroforestry, intercropping, arid adaptable crops, integration of crops and livestock, pasture improvement, and systems/process approaches to sustainable agriculture and natural resource management; also, a major focus on landscape/lifescape ecology-interactions and linkages among ecosystems/agroecosystetus and the role of humans in ecosystem processes

 

Research program
Locations Current arid lands research Locations include: (1) Burkina Faso, (2) Senegal, (3) the Gambia, (4) Uganda, (5) Mali
Subjects (1) Village-level agriculture and natural resources management, watershed-level sustainable agriculture, resource management; (2-4) on-farm production of improved seeds, soil restoration through legume management, agroforestry, anti biological nitrogen fixation (BNF); (5) animal productivity, natural resources management, export markets for livestock and livestock products
Status (1) Village project completed, watershed project ongoing; (2-5) ongoing
Findings (1) The Sustainable Agriculture Natural Resources Management Collaborative Research Support Program (SANREM CRSP) is developing and applying a new paradigm for agricultural and natural resources management research (landscape/lifescape ecology approach to ecosystems/agroecosystems, focusing on biophysical and socieconomic/cultural interactions and linkages) and user/farmer participation as central in defining and addressing research problems; planning is completed for Burkina Faso; (2-4) the On-Farm Productivity Enhancement Project (OFPEP), which links farmers' traditional knowledge and practice with external technical assistance and participatory training, has resulted in expanded on-farm production of grain and forage seed stock, increased yields, and improved techniques of seed selection, storage and distribution; (5) The Mali Animal Productivity and Export Project (APEX) strengthens market-driven production systems by increasing participation by all stakeholders in the animal production and processing sector, including small holders, processors anti marketers of animal products, input providers (feeds, animal health, transporters), public sector livestock organizations, state-owned enterprises being' privatized, producer cooperatives, trade and professional associations, banking institutions, and local, regional and central government agencies

Internal Organization
Chief official Dr. Robert Gurevich, Executive Secretary
Divisions The Center for Improving Mountain Living's International Unit serves as the administrative home and secretariat for the PVO/University Center
Division heads Mr. Ralph B. Montee, Program Director; Ms. Mary Lou Surgi, Program Coordinator; Mr. William Collins, Information Specialist
Professional staff 5
Total staff 5 (The Center draws project staff from the thousands of technical and professional personnel of its member organizations)

Facilities
Office Center Facilities consist of offices and a reference/resource library; all university members have laboratory Facilities
Library Small collection consisting of: (1) resource materials on member institutions; (2) books, monographs, periodicals, technical papers, and case studies of village and local development; natural resources management in a variety of environments, including arid and semiarid lands; sustainable agriculture; water harvesting/aquaculture; integrated agriculture
Formal networks Internet
Exchange Facilities Through Center's secretariat, training and orientation programs available for visiting scientists and officials from developing countries; members' technical assistance network also provides training and Exchange opportunities for scientists and officials

 

Publications
Serials Of Soils and Seeds (semiannual OFPEP newsletter, in English and French), SANREM Ecolinks (semiannual SANREM CRSP newsletter, English and French, Spanish version forthcoming), Synergy (the PVO/University Center's newsletter, occasional basis, in English; contact Information Specialist at address above)
Other PVO/University Collaboration in Action, final report and final evaluation report of the Water Harvesting/Aquaculture Project (WHAP); Water Harvesting and Aquaculture (WHAP training manuals, revised 1993, available from Auburn University); Rainwater Runoff Management and Other Technologies for Improving the Use of Arid and Marginal Lands in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan (originally issued by CAREJordan, 1981; reprinted by PVO/UC in 1993); An Initial Study of PVO/University Collaboration (1985)
Publications list In process

History
Founded in 1979 as the Joint PVO/University Rural Development Center; renamed in 1985

 

CHIHUAHAN DESERT RESEARCH INSTITUTE

Mail address PO Box 1334, Alpine, TX 79831
Telephone + I (915) 837-8370

Nature Private nonprofit
Mission Scientific, educational
Scope of interest Natural sciences, renewable natural resources

Research program
Locations Big Bend National Park, Texas, and areas throughout Chihuahuan Desert
Subjects Revegetation, ecological investigations, wildlife inventories
Status Ongoing

Internal Organization
Chief official Executive Director, President
Divisions Research, Education, Visitor Center Management
Professional staff 4
Total staff 8

Facilities
Office Office space on campus of Sul Ross State University, 200-ha Visitor Center, Library Library W. Frank Blair Memorial
Library contains natural sciences collection of 3,000 volumes, 35 journals, 15,000 reprints, and special Chihuahuan Desert collection
Subcenters Visitor Center, Nature trails, Chihuahuan Desert Arboretum and Botanical Gardens, outdoor classroom facility, greenhouses, field research plots

Publications
Serials The Chihuahuan Desert Discovery (semiannual, free to members); Newsbriefs (semiannual newsletter, free to mailing list recipients),
Other Invited Papers from the Second Symposium on the Resources of the Chihuahuan Desert--U.S. and Mexico; films, videotapes
Publications list Available

History
Incorporated in 1973, housed in Centennial School until 1983, now at Sul Ross State University

 

Colorado State University
DEPARTMENT OF SOIL AND CROP SCIENCES

Fort Collins, CO 80523
Telephone +1 (303) 491-6501 Fax +1 (303) 491-0564
E-mail [email protected] (Dr. Lee Sommers, Head)

Nature Academic
Mission Research, teaching, extension, service
Financial support State of Colorado, US Department of Agriculture, Other federal and private grants
Working languages English
Scope of interest Dryland ecosystems, crop sequence, soil type, water use efficiency, erosion control

Research program
Locations Sterling, Burlington and Walsh, Colorado (on eastern slope of Rocky Mountains); Cortez, Colorado (on western slope of Rocky Mountains)
Subjects Dryland ecosystems, soil fertility and nutrient cycling
Status Ongoing
Findings Conventional wheat-fallow, one crop in two years, can be eliminated and 2 crops in three years and/or 3 crops in four years can increase grain production by >75% on an annual basis including the fallow year; soil organic matter can be increased with no-till practices

Internal Organization
Chief official Dr. Lee Sommers, Head
Professional staff 30, with 3 devoted to dryland systems
Total staff 100

Facilities
Office Department has access to university-wide Office and laboratory Facilities
Library University Library (Morgan)
Computer catalog Yes
Remote access Available
Subcenters 9 Subcenters in Colorado, located in Center, Rocky Ford, Walsh, Gunnison, Yellow Jacket, Fruita, Orchard Mesa, Rogers Mesa, and Akron
Local networks Some, not all
Exchange Facilities The University has extensive experience in providing short- and longterm training; housing is available if plans are made in advance

Publications
Serials Technical Bulletins published by the Agricultural Experiment Station (contact Agronomy Department)

History
University established in 1879 as Colorado A&M

 

THE DESERT BOTANICAL GARDEN, INC.

Mail address 1201 North Galvin Parkway, Phoenix, AZ 85008
Telephone +1 (602) 941-1225 Fax +1 (602) 481-8124

Nature Private sector
Mission Research, instruction, conservation
Financial support AdMission fees, grants, donations, endowment
Working languages English, Spanish
Scope of interest Horticulture, conservation of wildlife and native plants, ethnobotany, cultivar development, ecology, cactus taxonomy, agave research, water use of native Sonoran Desert plants

Research program
Locations Sonoran Desert in United States and Mexico for wild plants and conservation field studies, especially agave habitat; on-site for landscape plant, water use, ethnobotany and propagation activities and research
Subjects Conservation, ecology, propagation
Status Ongoing
Findings Saguaro research, water use of plants in deserts, soils, pollination of agaves, grassland erosion, companion plants. wildflowers

Internal Organization
Chief official Robert (i. Breunig, Executive Director
Divisions (1) Research: Living Collection, Herbarium, Library; (2) Education: Exhibits, Programs, Volunteers; (3) Horticulture: Demonstration Gardens, Propagation
Division heads (1) Joseph McAulitfe, Research Director; (2) Kathleen Socolocsky, Education Director; (3) Mary Irish, Public Horticulture Director; Cesar Mazier, Horticulture
Professional staff 10
Total staff 55

Facilities
Office Seed storage and propagation areas, herbarium, library, auditorium, 60 ha fenced living plant grounds
Library Library containing botanical information, desert ecological studies, support material; herbarium
Local databases Plant records
Formal networks Through Arizona State University, connected with CARL network anti Internet
Exchange Facilities Available

Publications
Serials Sonoran Quarterly (formerly Saguaroland Bulletin, 4 times yearly), Agave (irregular since 1990)
Other Guidebooks to plant collection, Index Seminum issued to Other research institutions
Publications list Available

History
Established in 1937 by Arizona Cactus and Native Flora Society, on federal land, which now belongs to City of Phoenix as part of Papago Park

 

THE DESERT LABORATORY

Mail address Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721
Telephone +1 (602) 629-9455, 670-6821 Fax +1 (602)629-9455, 670-6806

Sponsoring agency University of Arizona, United States Geological Survey
Nature Academic, national government
Mission Research, instruction
Working languages English
Scope of interest Desert plant demography and physiology, paleoecology, geobotany

Research program
Locations Tumamoc Hill in the Sonoran Desert
Subjects Computer mapping of desert woody plants, repeat photography, permanent plots, C14 dating of fossil middens
Status Ongoing
Findings Dynamic and continuing natural change in desert woody plants; major ice age displacement of biota with very recent development of modern flora; catastrophic extinction of megafauna 11,000 years ago with no significant loss to plants; value of rich, semitropical desert scrub for longitudinal studies; minimal long-term human disturbance to environment

Internal Organization
Chief official Julio Betancourt, Physical Scientist, USGS; Jay Quade, Professor, Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona; Robert Webb, Hydrologist, USGS
Professional staff 9
Total staff 13

Facilities
Office At Tumamoc Hill, on grounds and in buildings of original Carnegie Desert Laboratory
Library Small book and reprint collection in reading room of Desert Laboratory; University of Arizona main and science libraries nearby
Exchange Facilities Desk space and nondestructive field Sites for visitors; International Biological Program site in Tucson Mountains, 24 km away

Publications
The Changing Mile, Discovering the Desert, Bibliography of Repeat Photography for Evaluating Landscape Change, Sonoran Desert Plants: An Ecological Atlas, A Sense of Place: The Life and Work of Forrest Shreve
Publications list Available

History
Established in 1903 as Carnegie Desert Botanical Laboratory; became part of The University of Arizona in 1955 as the Geochronology Laboratory; renamed Paleoenvironmental Laboratory in 1969 and obtained present name in 1986

 

East-West Center (EWC)
PROGRAM ON ENVIRONMENT

Mail address 1777 East-West Road, Honolulu, HI 96848
Telephone +1(808)944-7266 Fax +1(808)944-7298 Telex 989171
Cable EASWESCEN E-mail [email protected]

Nature Public, nonprofit institution with international board of governors
Mission Cooperative study, training, research, with principal focus on United States, Asia, Pacific
Financial support Principal funding comes from U.S. government, with additional support provided by private agencies, individuals, and corporations and more than 20 Asian and Pacific governments
Working languages English, multicultural languages
Scope of interest Desertification, agronomy, energy, forestry, horticulture, livestock, remote sensing, renewable natural resources, wildlife

Research program
Locations Asia-Pacific region
Subjects See Scope of interest
Status
Many projects completed, many ongoing

Internal Organization
Chief official Dr. A. Terry Rambo (E-mail: [email protected])
Divisions Within East-West Center, in addition to Program on Enviromnent: Cultural Studies, Communications and Journalism, Pacific Islands and Development, Population, Resources: Energy and Minerals, International Economics and Politics, Education and Training
Professional staff 20 in Program on Environment
Total staff 40 in Program on Environment

Facilities
Office Offices in East-West Center's 300-room building adjacent to University of Hawaii campus
Library Specialized, with access to University Facilities
Exchange Facilities Center supports approximately 2,000 research fellows, graduate students, and professionals each year; Facilities include 3 residential halls housing up to 600 participants

Publications
Serials East-West Center Views (6 times/year, free)
Other Books, book chapters, journal articles, occasional papers, working papers
Publications list Available

History
The East-West Center was established in 1960 by the U.S. Congress; the Program on Environment was established in 1977, and was formerly named the Environment and Policy Institute

 

INSTITUTE FOR DEVELOPMENT ANTHROPOLOGY (IDA)

Mail address 99 Collier Street, PO Box 2207, Binghampton, NY 13902-2207
Telephone + 1 (607) 772-6244 Fax + 1 (607) 773-8993
E-mail [email protected] (Professor Michael M. Horwitz, Executive Director)

Nature Nonprofit
Mission Research, training, project design and evaluation
Financial support Grants, contracts, publication sales, contributions
Working languages English
Scope of interest Socioeconomic analysis, natural resources management, drylands, river basin development, pastoralism, food production systems, environmental analysis, social and community forestry

Research program
Locations Senegal, Mali, Niger, Sudan, Somalia, Mauritania, Tunisia, Morocco, Israel, Jordan, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, India, Bolivia, Burkina Faso, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Kenya, Botswana, Lesotho
Subjects See Scope of interest
Status
Senegal River Basin Monitoring Activity, completed December 1993; Tunisia Potable Water Resources Project, completed; PeriUrban Agriculture in Africa, ongoing
Findings Sustainable development depends on equitable economic growth with local participation; pastoralists often prove to be effective range managers; contract farming of horticultural products can increase incomes of small farmers, particularly women, depending on product type and market

Internal Organization
Chief official Professor Michael M. Horowitz, Executive Director
Professional staff 10
Total staff 15

Facilities
Office Ca. 6,500 ft²
Library Ca. 20,000 items, with emphasis on fugitive or "grey" literature
Computer catalog Yes, using Pro-Cite bibliographic software
Computer searches Available
Local databases Special bibliographies on Women in Pastoral and Agropastoral Production; Contract Farming; PeriUrban Agriculture; Senegal River Basin; Social and Institutional Literature on Niger, Liberia, Oman, Yemen
Formal networks Bitnet
Exchange Facilities Visiting scholars are welcome to use the Library and Facilities of the Institute; contact the Executive Director

Publications
Serials Development Anthropology Network (2 issues per year, $ 15 per year)
Other Working papers (available from IDA), Monographs in Development Anthropology Series (available from Westview Press)
Publications list Available

History
Established in 1976

 

New Mexico State University (NMSU)
AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION

Mail address PO Box 30003, Dpt. 3BF, Las Cruces, NM 88003
Telephone +1 (505) 6463125 Fax +1 (505) 646-5975 E-mail [email protected] (Dr. Gary L. Cunningham, Associate Dean and Director)

Sponsoring agency NMSU, USDA Cooperative States Research Service
Nature Academic
Mission Research
Financial support State appropriation, federal grants, federal appropriation
Working languages English, Spanish
Scope of interest Drought-resistant varieties, reclamation, wildlife, taxonomy, toxicology (Las Cruces); grazing (College Ranch)

Research program
Locations Las Cruces and College Ranch
Subjects See Scope of interest
Status
Ongoing

Internal Organization
Chief official Dr. Gary L. Cunningham, Associate Dean and Director
Divisions (1) Agronomy and Horticulture, (2) Animal and Range Sciences, (3) Fish and Wildlife, (4) Agricultural Economics, (5) Entomology, Plant Pathology and Weed Science
Division heads (1) LeRoy Daugherty (E-mail: [email protected]), (2) Bobby Rankin (E-mail. [email protected]), (3) Charles Davis (E-mail: [email protected] ), (4) John Waelti (E-mail: [email protected] ), (5) Grant Kinzer (E-mail. [email protected] )
Professional staff 113
Total staff 230

Facilities
Office 208,440 ft²
Library NMSU library, general collection, cat I million items
Computer catalog Yes, using VTLS
Remote access Available
Formal networks Internet
Subcenters Corona Ranch - grazing, livestock and wildlife interactions; Las Lunas - revegetation; Mora- revegetation (reforestation)
Exchange Facilities Gerald Thomas Chair

Publications
Serials Ag Experiment Station Bulletin, Ag Experiment Station Research Report, Ag Experiment Station/Cooperative Extension Service Technical Report, Resources (magazine)
Publications list Available; request from Agricultural Communications

History
Las Cruces College established in 1888; NMSU established in 1960

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