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FOREST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES TO IMPROVE WILDLIFE

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Indigo Bunting. Ovenbird. Ruby-throated Hummingbird. Veery. Forest Management Systems ... Indigo Bunting. Pheasants. Wild Turkeys. Rabbits. Insects. WT Deer ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: FOREST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES TO IMPROVE WILDLIFE


1
FOREST MANAGEMENT PRACTICES TO IMPROVE WILDLIFE
  • TERRY HAINDFIELD
  • IOWA DNR
  • WILDLIFE BIOLOGIST
  • TRI-STATE FOREST STEWARDSHIP CONFERENCE
  • MARCH 8, 2008

2
PRESENTATION OUTLINE
  • Wildlife Needs
  • Succession
  • Neotropical Migratory Birds
  • Forest Management Systems
  • Iowa DNR Forest Wildlife Stewardship Plans
  • You the Landowner
  • Forest Management Practices for Wildlife
  • Questions??

3
Forest Wildlife Needs
  • Habitat
  • Food
  • Water
  • Cover
  • Space
  • Arrangement
  • Breeding/nesting
  • Rearing young/feeding
  • Escape
  • Resting
  • Mary Ellen Leicht

4
SUCCESSION!
  • The sequence of plant communities that occur
    over time
  • The process that replaces one group of species
    with a different group of species in continual
    stages

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6
Succession Stages
  • Herbaceous plants grasses and forbs (flowers)
  • Woody shrubs/saplings Aspen, dogwood, plum
  • Pole size/small trees Ash, Cherry, Elm
  • Large trees Oak/Hickory (mast)
  • Climax Maple/Basswood

7
Neotropical Migratory Birds (NTMBs)! WHAT?
  • Migratory bird that winters in Neotropical
    regions (Mexico, Central and South America) and
    nests in U.S. or Canada

8
NTMBs
  • Cerulean Warbler
  • Acadian Flycatcher
  • Scarlet Tanager
  • Rose-breasted Grossbeak
  • Baltimore Oriole
  • Prothonotary Warbler
  • Golden-winged Warbler
  • Indigo Bunting
  • Ovenbird
  • Ruby-throated Hummingbird
  • Veery

9
Forest Management Systems
  • 1) Early Successional
  • 2) Even Age
  • 3) Uneven Age
  • 4) Viewshed

10
1) Early Successional
  • Early stages of woody growth
  • High stem density of both trees and shrubs
  • Edges, openings, or stands with aspen/shrubs
  • Aspen root suckers
  • 15 year rotation cut 1/3 every 5 years

11
When should I chose Early Successional?
  • Lack of that habitat on your land
  • Proper species present aspen, shrubs, etc
  • Desire those wildlife species in E.S. habitat
  • Buffer the existing forest Edge Feathering
  • Brown-headed Cowbird parasitism
  • John Gavin

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14
Early SuccessionalWildlife Species
  • Ruffed Grouse
  • Woodcock
  • Eastern Towhee
  • Golden-winged Warbler
  • Yellow Billed Cuckoo
  • Indigo Bunting
  • Pheasants
  • Wild Turkeys
  • Rabbits
  • Insects
  • WT Deer
  • Fox
  • Weasels
  • Snakes

15
2) Even Age
  • Stand of trees approx. the same age
  • Clearcutting is the usual harvest method
  • Or variation like shelterwood or seed tree before
    a final clearcut
  • Oak/hickory usually (shade-intolerant)
  • /- 125 year rotation
  • After a clearcut, next cut would be in 125 years
  • 2133 or backtrack to 1883!

16
When should I chose Even Age?
  • Warm, dry sites
  • South, west slopes
  • Flat or gradual slopes
  • Oak and Hickory (Walnut) present
  • Planting new stands
  • As many places as feasible
  • When wildlife need mast

17
Even Age Wildlife Species
  • 1-10 years Ruffed Grouse,
  • Eastern Towhee, Deer, Cardinal
  • 20-60 years BW Warbler, Ovenbird, Gray Fox
  • 60-125 years Scarlet Tanager, Cerulean Warbler,
    Wild Turkey, Gray and Fox Squirrel

18
3) Uneven Age
  • Stand of trees with all tree sizes represented
  • Harvests are individual trees or group of trees
  • Always have large trees
  • Layers of different aged trees
  • /- 20 year re-entry for harvests
  • Favors shade-tolerant species (maple/basswood)

19
When should I chose Uneven Age?
  • Cool, moist sites
  • North slopes
  • Steep slopes
  • NTMBs

20
Uneven Age Wildlife Species
  • NTMBs (Also NTMBs in E.Succ. And Even Age)
  • Southern Flying Squirrel
  • Bats
  • Woodpeckers
  • Reptiles/Amphibians
  • Turkeys

21
4) Viewshed
  • Virtually untouched stands of trees
  • Maybe some management or harvest a tree or so

22
When should I chose Viewshed?
  • Very steep forested areas
  • Fragile slopes
  • Aesthetics
  • TE species
  • Stream corridors
  • Inaccessible

23
Viewshed Wildlife Species
  • Pleistocene Snails TE spp. (Algific Talus
    Slopes)
  • NTMBs
  • Wild Turkey roost sites
  • Bald Eagle nesting and winter roost sites
  • Turkey Vulture roosts
  • Peregrine Falcon
  • Bobcat
  • Snakes and Skinks

24
IOWA DNR Forest Wildlife Stewardship Plans
  • FWSPs on Wildlife Management Areas
  • 3 primary factors
  • Succession of Oak/Hickory to Maple/Basswood
  • Loss of Early Successional forest habitat
  • Lack of proper management of mature forests for
    interior bird species

25
FWSP
  • DNR Wildlife Biologist and DNR Forester
  • Stand map and determine priorities
  • Plans written guided by State Wildlife Action
    Plan
  • Wildlife Species of Greatest Conservation Need

26
Interesting Findings
  • WMAs 20 to 25 pole size trees
  • Backtrack 30 years 20 to 25 Early Successional
    habitat Ruffed Grouse (Woodcock, E. Towhee)
  • Now 1-3
  • Lots of Maple/Basswood cant reverse
  • Mature stands can be reached in 50-60 years
    rather than 80-100 with management

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29
You the Landowner
  • Inventory What you have, what you are missing
  • Professional Forester/Wildlife Biologist
  • Stand Map Tree and shrub inventory
  • Species and age class (size)
  • Adjacent Landscape (maps)
  • Neighbors Management, priorities, interests,
    opportunities
  • Aspen, oak, age, cropfields (food)

30
You the Landowner
  • Species to hunt vs. non-game or both
  • Financial income harvests
  • Fall color
  • resources for management
  • Cant make orange juice from apples
  • Too small of forest
  • Wrong species (trees/shrubs)
  • Wrong age class
  • Location

31
Forest Management PracticesTo Create Wildlife
Habitat
  • 1) Crop Tree Release
  • 2) Weed Tree Removal
  • 3) Harvests
  • 4) Planting
  • 5) Miscellaneous

32
1) Crop Tree Release
  • Removal of trees that are competing with the tree
    you want to mature
  • Wildlife benefits
  • Best trees for wildlife faster (food, structure,
    etc)
  • Faster to obtain mature stand
  • Felled trees produce structural cover

33
Crop Tree Release
34
2) Weed Tree Removal
  • Reduction or elimination of trees or shrubs that
    are undesirable in a stand
  • Invasives
  • Over stocking of a species
  • Wildlife benefits
  • Faster to obtain mature stand
  • Selects for better food or cover for wildlife
  • Weeding a garden

35
3) Harvests
  • Clearcutting (Even Age)
  • Early Successional
  • Can be commercial sale 1st time
  • 15 year rotation (1/3 each year)
  • Commercial Harvest
  • Wildlife get 15 years of Early Successional
    habitat
  • Tree tops excellent wildlife habitat (turkey
    nests, amphibians/reptiles)
  • Leave some scattered large trees
  • Small Whats small? Whats too small?

36
Harvests
  • Single Tree/ Group Selection (Uneven Age)
  • DO NOT HIGH-GRADE!
  • Good for many NTMBs
  • Single Tree
  • Remove mature and defective trees
  • Remove unwanted small trees that are damaged or
    defective
  • May favor oaks but remember, eventually it will
    be shade-tolerant species (Maple/Basswood)
  • Minimal disturbance but re-entry every 20 years

37
Harvests
  • Single Tree/ Group Selection (Uneven Age)
  • Group Tree
  • 1/10 to 1/2 acre canopy openings
  • Enhances layering (trees and shrubs)
  • Keep some large trees in canopy
  • Again, favor oaks for as long as you can

38
4) Planting
  • Start from beginning Control of tree/shrub
    species and subsequent wildlife desired.
  • Fill openings (if desired)
  • Option of planting forest edge rather than
    cutting to create Early Successional habitat
  • Create missing link

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40
5) Miscellaneous
  • Snags
  • Pruning
  • Brushpiles
  • Reserve trees
  • Avoid fragmentation
  • Openings
  • Access roads/lanes
  • Fire

41
Fire?
42
FIRE!!!
43
Yes, Fire
44
Questions?
45
Photo credits Grouse-Rick Baetsen Scarlet
tanager-Kevin Karlson Northern Monkshood-U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service by Bob Clearwater
Sunset-Terry Haindfield
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47
Wildlife Examples
  • Ruffed Grouse
  • Wild Turkey
  • Neotropical Migratory Birds
  • Whitetail Deer
  • Reptiles/Amphibians

48
Ruffed Grouse
  • Early successional habitat a must
  • Aspen, shrubs, cedar, oak saplings
  • 8000-12,000 vertical stems/acre
  • Drumming sites, brood rearing, escape/protection
  • Feeding berries, grapes, hazelnut
  • 25-80 year old stands nesting, buds, catkins,
    acorns
  • Cedar blocks winter

49
Wild Turkey
50
NTMBs
51
Whitetail Deer
52
Reptiles Amphibians
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