Rocky Mountain Research Station Logo beginning of contentUSDA Forest Service
Rocky Mountain Research Station
Forestry Sciences Laboratory - Moscow, Idaho
Moscow Home

Fire Effects  |  Risk Evaluation  |  White Pine Blister Rust  |  Decomposition Processes  |  Long-Term Soil Productivity  |  Microbial Processes  |  Publications  |  Microbial Processes Home


Long-Term Soil Productivity Study:

LTSP Home

Objectives of this Study

Tour a Study Site
  (Treatments)

Study Details

Results to Date

Forest Locations

  1. Map of Sites
  2. Locations We Manage
  3. U.S. Regions
  4. Sites Outside U.S.
  5. Affiliated Sites

Cooperating Investigators

LTSP Related Publications


Contact:
Debbie Page-Dumroese
email Debbie

Last Revised:

Contact Webmaster
email webmaster

Microbial Processes > Long-Term Soil Productivity (LTSP) Study > Forest Locations > Central States

The upland oak-hickory forest is the single most extensive forest type in the Nation, south of Alaska. Covering over 114 million acres from central Texas to the Dakotas, and eastward to the Appalachian Mountains, this forest is found in all topographic positions with moist subhumid to dry subhumid climates. Soils often are gravelly and are formed from a variety of materials of glacial and sedimentary origin. LTSP collaboration between the Forest Service's North Central and Northeastern Research Stations and the Eastern Region is underway in Missouri and West Virginia.

Lake States >