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Finding Aid
F. Robert Gartner Papers
SDSU-Archives UA 053.021 · Papers · 1919-2007

The F. Robert Gartner Papers document research, teaching, outreach, and professional writing on rangeland ecology and management in South Dakota and the northern Great Plains. Materials include field data, site files, photographs, slides, transparencies, negatives, manuscript drafts, reprints, and a large indexed library of collected publications. The collection records work on prescribed burning, range soils, plant physiology, hydrology, range improvement practices, wildlife interactions, livestock, erosion, and the classification and condition of range sites. Field projects and long-term studies are represented for Wind Cave National Park, Custer State Park, the Antelope Range Field Station, and numerous private ranches and grazing associations in the Black Hills region, including Baldwin, Canyon Lake Heights, Drageset, Fischbach, Harrington, Hart, Kammerer, Keffeler, Kovarik, Moreau, Murphy, Thompson, and Wood.

Teaching and outreach are reflected in presentations to professional societies, agricultural and conservation groups, and workshops on vegetation management, riparian classification, and range education. Activities files include Little International trips and South Dakota 4-H Roundup delegations. Photographs depict range sites, vegetation, soils, fire, water development, mechanical treatments, interseeding, grazing systems, wildlife, and research methods. Writings include Gartner’s articles, collaborative publications with colleagues, symposium papers, extension circulars, and guides on prescribed burning, Claypan soil improvement, range renovation, hydrologic effects, and Black Hills fire ecology. An indexed set of author and subject files supports the research library.

The collected publications form an extensive indexed reference library documenting research in range management, ecology, forestry, hydrology, fire science, wildlife, soils, and reclamation from the 1920s through the 1970s. These include experiment station bulletins, Forest Service and USDA circulars, professional society papers, state agricultural experiment reports, and selected reprints authored by leading scientists. Topics span seed germination, revegetation, soil-water relations, fertilization, grazing systems, wildlife–range interactions, timber management, watershed hydrology, snow management, prescribed fire, fire behavior, erosion control, reclamation of strip mines, and ecological foundations for multiple-use management. Wildlife research covers deer, elk, moose, bison, and grizzly bear in Yellowstone and western ecosystems, while reclamation literature addresses coal and strip mine revegetation in Montana, Wyoming, and New Mexico. Landmark syntheses such as status-of-knowledge reviews on ponderosa pine, alpine and semidesert ranges, chaparral, and watershed management are also represented.

The papers provide a record of applied range science centered on Black Hills and western South Dakota landscapes, documenting the development of prescribed fire use, vegetation monitoring, soil water instrumentation, and mechanical and seeding treatments. The depth of site-based data for Claypan and TCp range sites, long-term Harrington and Kovarik Ranch monitoring, and Wind Cave fire studies provides evidence for vegetation, soil, and forage productivity changes under different management regimes. Together the writings, photographs, data, and indexed publications situate Gartner’s work within broader scientific literature, creating a resource for documenting range conditions, management trials, reclamation efforts, and educational initiatives undertaken by South Dakota State University personnel and cooperating agencies during the twentieth century. Dates range from 1919 to 2007, with the bulk from the 1950s through the 1990s.

Gartner, F. Robert