Texas A&M AgriLife Research
Texas A&M AgriLife Research (formally known as Texas Agricultural Experiment Station) has a long history of conducting research that has served rural and urban Texans for the past 125 years. Today the more than 1700 employees of AgriLife Research conduct research statewide that strives to improve the quality, safety, and profitability of our food, feed, and fiber system.
In collaboration with Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service and member universities of the Texas A&M University System, AgriLife Research strives to fulfill the land grant mission of research, extension, teaching, and service in Agriculture, Life Sciences, and Natural Resources.
Copyright 2005. All rights reserved.
Contents of this community
Recent Submissions
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
Empowering landowners: AgriLife Extension programs promote water and natural resource conservation (Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2014)
-
(Texas Water Resources Institute, 2002)Healthy rangelands are relatively efficient at conserving rainfall, but they may become dysfunctional in this regard as vegetative cover diminishes and aggregation of the surface soil layer is destroyed by overgrazing, ...