A new multimedia project from the
Natural Resources Conservation Service highlights practices to promote
golden-winged warbler and other species that depend on young forest habitats.
Featured in the project are a couple of our Pennsylvania woodland owners.
Natural Resources Conservation
Service, Working Lands for Wildlife
Close your eyes and imagine you're in
a forest. What does it look like?
You may be picturing a very old
forest with big trees and an open forest floor that is easy to navigate.
But as you know, we have forests of
all shapes and sizes. And that's a good thing. Healthy forests, just like
healthy human populations, are sustained by a diversity of ages and types.
In many parts of the United States,
forests are becoming largely homogeneous, or uniform, and in places like the
Appalachian Mountains, young forest and mature, old growth forests are in short
supply.
A lack of diverse forests has
negative impacts on wildlife and the economy, as different age classes support
higher biodiversity and provide a more sustainable source of income for forest
landowners.
Landscape-level clearing of forests
in the late 1800s and early 1900s created a landscape of even-aged forests.
Nowadays, unsustainable logging, mineral extraction, development, fire
suppression and invasive plants continue to threaten the diversity and health
of Eastern forests.
Historically, fires, storms, floods and other
disturbances altered forests, making room for new, younger to sprout.
To view the full multimedia site and read the rest of the story click here.
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