MOVE PHOTO MONDAY JULY 4, 2016 - This May 2016 photo provided by Aron Flanders, of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service shows reduced eastern red cedar infestation in southern Barber County in Kansas after the Anderson Creek wildfire. The wildfire that scorched nearly 600 square miles of land in Oklahoma and Kansas in March 2016 destroyed homes, killed livestock and damaged thousands of miles of fence. But conservation experts say it also cleared out more eastern red cedar trees in less than a week than local efforts to eradicate the invasive species could have accomplished in decades. (Aron Flanders/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service via AP) / Dodge City Daily Globe
By Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The wildfire that scorched nearly 600 square miles of land in Oklahoma and Kansas in March cleared…