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Page 1: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Forestry & Society

Wildlife Habitat

HORT RGSC 302

J.G. Mexal

Spring 2008

Page 2: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

What are the benefits??

Page 3: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Ivory-Billed Woodpecker Rediscovered in Big Woods of AR (Apr/05)

Singer Tract, LA, 1935. Photo credit: David Allen Colorized version of version

Page 4: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Monarch Butterfly

Neotropical Parrots

Wildlife in the Forest/Ciencia Forestal

Page 5: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

SUMATRA

BORNEO(P. p. pygmaeus)

(P. p. abelii)

http://www.cia.gov/nic/PDF_GIF_confreports/asiaUSoutlook/southeast_asia_map.gif

ORANGUTAN (Pongo pygmaeus)

Page 6: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Forestry & SocietyWildlife Habitat/Guanaco in Chile

Page 7: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Forestry & SocietyWildlife Habitat

Page 8: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Jaguars in the Chiracahuas

Page 9: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Wildlife Corridors

Page 10: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Forestry & Society

Wildlife Habitat/U.Mass. CES 1993

Page 11: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Florida Sand Pine Forests

“The endangered bird lives in young sand pines that grow low to the ground, trees that generally are less than 15 years old.”

“a mature sand pine forest, you are not going to find successful gopher tortoise burrows….”

Page 12: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Forestry & Society

Wildlife Habitat• Concerns:

– Big animals• deer, elk, turkey, bear, cougar• thermal cover, hiding cover, food, corridors (forest

fragmentation

– Little animals• fish, prey (mice, etc), insects

– Threatened & Endangered Species• western goshawk, red cockaded woodpecker, spotted owl

(Mexican & northern), wolf

Page 13: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Meadow Conversion & Grazing

• Conifer invasion into meadow coincided with cessation of sheep grazing in Three Sisters Wilderness

• Stand replacement fires can require centuries to convert back to forests

• Invasion essentially complete after 30 yrs or so in both cases

Avg age ≈90yrs

≈50yrs

≈20yrs

Page 14: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Bird response to prescribed fireScience Findings PNW Station May’08

Species Response

Black-backed woodpecker +++

American robin +++

Western bluebird ++

White breasted nuthatch +

Hairy woodpecker +

Western wood pewee ½+

Gray flycatcher ½+

Pine siskin -

Swainson’s thrush -

Ruby-crowned kinglet -

Cassin’s vireo -

Clark’s nutcracker --

Page 15: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Forestry & SocietyWildlife Habitat/Harvesting decreases standing deadwood (Science Findings 42:3/02)

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W-conifer Mixedconifer

SW mixedconifer

E mixedconifer

Oak/Doug-fir

E pond.pine

LPP Juniper

UnharvestedHarvested

Forest Type

Snags (>20”)/ac

Page 16: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Red-cockaded Woodpecker PreyWild. Soc. Bull. 31:131:’02

Number/tree Biomass (mg/tree)

Page 17: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Eastern Wild Turkey

• Habitat: A mixture of mature hardwood forests and open fields. Understory vegetation.Food: Acorns and other mast (hard fruit), fleshy fruits, corn, a variety of seeds, and invertebrates. Young turkeys (particularly) feed heavily on insects.

• Interesting facts: Turkeys frequently can be seen foraging in the fields that border forestland.

• Connecticut Dept. of Environmental Protection

Nature Photography by Gary D.TonhouseWildlife Gallery 1997-2003

Page 18: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Northern Bobwhite Quail

• Habitat-weedy/brushy-found in roadsides & successional areas-non-migrant (300 ac)-woodlands/crop fields-endangered

• Food: corn, seeds, insects

Source: All Things Quail

Page 19: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Forestry & SocietyWildlife Habitat/clearcuts have food!

y = 18.2x + 18.6

R2 = 0.48

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30

60

90

120

150

Clearcut Shelterwood Single-tree Unharvested Group

Oak/Hickory (tpa)Hard Mast Index

71%22%

17%

10%

17%

% of total BA

Page 20: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Forestry & SocietyWildlife Habitat/clearcuts have food!

0

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UnharvestedSingle-tree

GroupShelterwood

Clearcut

Yr-1Yr-3Yr-5

Harvest method

Soft mast cover (%)Ouachita NF, AR/OK

Wildlife Soc. Bull. 27:915:99

Page 21: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Forestry & SocietyWildlife Habitat/clearcuts have food!

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UnharvestedSingle-tree

GroupShelterwood

Clearcut

Yr-1Yr-3Yr-5

Harvest method

Soft mast production (kg/ha)Ouachita NF, AR/OK

Wildlife Soc. Bull. 27:915:99

A

B

C

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Forestry & SocietyWildlife Habitat/clearcuts have food!

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0 5 10 15 20 25

Yr-1Yr-3Yr-5

Pine BA (m2/ha)

Soft mast production (kg/ha)Ouachita NF, AR/OK

Wildlife Soc. Bull. 27:915:99

ClearcutGroupShelterwoodSingle-treeUnharvested

Page 23: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Forestry & SocietyWildlife Habitat/soft mast species

• muscadine grapes• blueberries• blackberries• wild roses• sumac• American beautyberry• hackberry• dogwood

• plums• cherries• mulberry• pokeberry• holly• sassafras• green briers• poison ivy

Wildlife Soc. Bull. 27:915:99

Page 24: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Flying Squirrel Population (food for spotted owl) Science Findings 80/ Feb’06

Squirrel/ha

Biomass (kg/ha)

Squirrel Survival (%)

Page 25: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Forestry & Society

Wildlife Habitat/Small mammals vs patch size/ SEAFWA Proc. 1997

0

1

2

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P. polin

otus

P. gossypinus

S. hisp

idus

R. humilu

s

All species

<6 ha10-15 ha>25 ha

Individuals captures/100 nights

Page 26: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Forestry & Society

Wildlife Habitat/Small mammals vs patch size/ SEAFWA Proc. 1997

Clearcutsize

Speciesrichness

Shannon’sdiversityindex (H’)

Variance ofH’

Small(<6 ha)

1 0.00 0.00

Medium(10-15 ha)

3 1.08 0.21

Large(>25 ha)

6 1.45 0.23

Page 27: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Forestry & Society

Wildlife Habitat/Small mammals vs patch size/ SEAFWA Proc. 1997

• 542 captures (307 individuals)– Peromyscus polionotus (44%) [field mice]– Sigmodon hispidus (36%) [cotton

rats]– Peromyscus gossypinus (16%)– Reithrodontomys humilus (2%)– Neotoma floridana (1% [wood rats]– Mus musculus (0.3%)

Page 28: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

White-tailed Deer

• The white-tailed deer is an herbivore or plant eater. It follows well-used trails to its feeding areas.

• It eats green plants in the spring and summer. In the fall, it eats corn, acorns and other nuts. In the winter, it eats the buds and twigs of woody plants.If deer have enough food, water, shelter, population can grow quickly.

• Live in wooded areasNew Hampshire Public Television

Frizzell 2003 – Valley Forge

Page 29: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Forestry & SocietyWildlife Habitat/clearcuts have food!

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Pre-logging

1 2 3 4 5

Clearcut (wet)Clearcut (dry)Uncut

Years after Logging

Ungulate Fecal Groups (no/ha)

Page 30: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Forestry & SocietyWildlife Habitat/Elk like clearcuts!

Science Findings 22/feb2000 PNW Res. Stn.

Elk Body Weight Change (%)- OR

Page 31: Forestry & Society Wildlife Habitat

Forestry & SocietyWildlife Habitat/review questions

• Why are forest gaps good for wildlife?

• Why are forest gaps bad for wildlife?

• What kinds of trees do wildlife need?

• How do you keep the ‘critters’ and the ‘loggers’ happy?Pileated woodpecker


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