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Acorns, Birds, Reptiles, Amphibians, and More: Responses to Forest Disturbances
Manage episode 303476370 series 2813642
What happens when you do a shelterwood cut, conduct a prescribed burn, or have some other natural or human-made disturbance event in oak hickory forests? What happens to the acorn crop? How do different types of wildlife respond? What about the other vegetation in the woods?
In this Backyard Ecology episode I talk with Dr. Cathryn Greenberg. Katie is a Research Ecologist with the US Forest Service, Southern Research Station. She has been involved in multiple long-term studies looking at how different species, or groups of animals, respond to forest disturbances, both natural disturbances (wind, wildfires, etc.) and human-created disturbances (logging, prescribed burns, etc.). These forest disturbances can cause openings in the closed canopy of mature forests or may be more low-grade and not have much of an impact on the canopy.
Two aspects that make Katie's research unique are:
- she and her colleagues have taken more of an ecological approach and studied the responses of many different types of organisms instead of focusing on only one type, and
- her studies are long-term projects that in many cases last 10-20 years.
We talked about a wide variety of topics including how forest disturbances such as shelterwood cuts can affect acorn production. We also discussed the impacts of different types of forest disturbances on breeding songbirds populations and diversity, as well as, on reptile and amphibian populations. We even took a side tangent to discuss a long-term study she and her colleagues have conducted looking at amphibian use of ephemeral pools in Florida.
One important concept to recognize from her research is that forest disturbances don't affect all species the same, even within the same general "group," such as songbirds. Some may benefit from the disturbances; some not-so-much, at least temporarily. Like with anything else, there isn't a one-size-fits- all answer. We wrap up with Katie reminding us how important it is to know our goals and what we are trying to accomplish with our land management.
Links:
- Katie's email: [email protected]
- Summaries / Compass Live articles about Katie's research
- Books that Katie has edited
- Natural Disturbances and Historic Range of Variation: Type, Frequency, Severity, and Post-disturbance Structure in Central Hardwood Forests USA
- Sustaining Young Forest Communities: Ecology and Management of early successional habitats in the central hardwood region, USA
- Backyard Ecology's website
- My email: [email protected]
Episode image:
- White oak acorns.
- Photo credit: Paul Wray, Bugwood.org, cc-by 3.0
113 에피소드
Manage episode 303476370 series 2813642
What happens when you do a shelterwood cut, conduct a prescribed burn, or have some other natural or human-made disturbance event in oak hickory forests? What happens to the acorn crop? How do different types of wildlife respond? What about the other vegetation in the woods?
In this Backyard Ecology episode I talk with Dr. Cathryn Greenberg. Katie is a Research Ecologist with the US Forest Service, Southern Research Station. She has been involved in multiple long-term studies looking at how different species, or groups of animals, respond to forest disturbances, both natural disturbances (wind, wildfires, etc.) and human-created disturbances (logging, prescribed burns, etc.). These forest disturbances can cause openings in the closed canopy of mature forests or may be more low-grade and not have much of an impact on the canopy.
Two aspects that make Katie's research unique are:
- she and her colleagues have taken more of an ecological approach and studied the responses of many different types of organisms instead of focusing on only one type, and
- her studies are long-term projects that in many cases last 10-20 years.
We talked about a wide variety of topics including how forest disturbances such as shelterwood cuts can affect acorn production. We also discussed the impacts of different types of forest disturbances on breeding songbirds populations and diversity, as well as, on reptile and amphibian populations. We even took a side tangent to discuss a long-term study she and her colleagues have conducted looking at amphibian use of ephemeral pools in Florida.
One important concept to recognize from her research is that forest disturbances don't affect all species the same, even within the same general "group," such as songbirds. Some may benefit from the disturbances; some not-so-much, at least temporarily. Like with anything else, there isn't a one-size-fits- all answer. We wrap up with Katie reminding us how important it is to know our goals and what we are trying to accomplish with our land management.
Links:
- Katie's email: [email protected]
- Summaries / Compass Live articles about Katie's research
- Books that Katie has edited
- Natural Disturbances and Historic Range of Variation: Type, Frequency, Severity, and Post-disturbance Structure in Central Hardwood Forests USA
- Sustaining Young Forest Communities: Ecology and Management of early successional habitats in the central hardwood region, USA
- Backyard Ecology's website
- My email: [email protected]
Episode image:
- White oak acorns.
- Photo credit: Paul Wray, Bugwood.org, cc-by 3.0
113 에피소드
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