Trip Report: Inside Mashomack s Deer Exclosures

Similar documents
Species Frequently Found in Native Plant Communities

Field emergence of native boreal forest species on reclaimed sites in northeastern Alberta

MHc37. Central Mesic Hardwood Forest (Western)

Natural Resources Group - Forest Restoration Team Fall 2004 Summary

PPA NATIVE PLANT SALE 2017

MHn35. Northern Mesic Hardwood Forest

Larval Hosts: plant these -- and feed baby birds!

Drained * Shrub. Drained Shrub. Moist - Well. Part Shade Acidic * Shrub. Part Shade Acidic * Shrub. Part Shade Acidic * Shrub. Well.

FAIRVIEW WIND PROJECT NATURAL HERITAGE ASSESSMENT AND ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STUDY. Appendix E. Vascular Plant List

Eleven Years of Old-growth Forest Dynamics Within. Wachusett Mountain State Reservation

FactSheet. Extension. Enhancing Food (Mast) Production for Woodland Wildlife in Ohio. The term mast was probably first used to describe

Southern Dry-Mesic Oak (Maple) Woodland

Wildflower Guide To the Chehalis Western Trail And the Yelm-Tenino Trail THURSTON COUNTY WASHINGTON

Natural Resources Group Forest Restoration Team Planting Report Fall 2009

Natural Resources Group Forest Restoration Team Planting Report Fall 2010

PPA NATIVE PLANT SALE 2017

Common name Scientific name Growth form Leaf type Soil type Flower & fruit dates Spicebush Lindera benzoin sh d w, m Mar-Apr; Aug-Sep

TREE SAMPLE OF BERKS COUNTY. Shea Eckert

Invasive Woody Plant Replacement List

Appendix VII-A-3. Upland Sites Summary of Ten Meter Square Survey at Site B/H-7 July 22, 2015

FDw24. Northwestern Dry-Mesic Oak Woodland

Core Eudicots. Vitales (tentatively placed in the Rosids) -Vitaceae grape family

PLANTS OF SALEM WOODS INVENTORY by Jeanne Stella

LOWER MERION TOWNSHIP LIST OF RECOMMENDED TREES FOR HOMEOWNERS

Wafer-ash. Summary. Protection Endangered in New York State, not listed federally.

PPA NATIVE PLANT SALE FALL 2016

Excerpts from October 12, 2009 Preliminary Wetland Mitigation Plan (pages 5-7) Moses Creek Mitigation Site

UNA 176: McKay Lake. Area Evaluation Summary Urban Natural Area 176: McKay Lake. Rating Assigned X X X X X X X X X.

Woody Plants Native to Nebraska

FDw34. Northwestern Mesic Aspen-Oak Woodland

Native Plant Availability List

Natural Resources Group Forest Restoration Team Spring 2004 Summary

Terrestrial Woodlands

Updated January 1st Botanical Name Common Name Size Available Price Qty Price Qty. 25+

Other Commonly Used Names: spreading false foxglove, spreading yellow false foxglove

Chris Evans, Illinois Wildlife Action Plan Invasive Species Campaign Coordinator

Spencer Environmental Appendix C: Vegetation Data

EVERGREEN SEEDLINGS Balsam Fir Norway Spruce White Cedar White Pine White Spruce

STAIR-SIDE FARM EDWIN GANO, CHRISTIAN PATTI, & JOSEPH TIDONA

Fire Adapted Plants and Plant Communities on the Delmarva Peninsula

Autumn Fruit & Seeds Eloise Butler Wildflower Garden

Planting Design Considerations for a Changing Climate As it relates to Natural Channel Design

Simple Meadow Bayscape - 60 square feet (contained in 11.5 x 6.5 foot area)

TOWN OF MIDLAND July 2012

American Chestnut Castanea dentata

A. Dugal Field Study Page 1 of 27 TABLE OF CONTENTS. A note from Mr. Albert Dugal, regarding the wetlands 2

Reznicek's Sedge. Summary. Protection Endangered in New York State, not listed federally.

american persimmon Creating Canopy 2019 Diospyros virginiana unusual fruit tree (native) height at maturity: feet spread at maturity: feet

Fairy Wand. Summary. Protection Endangered in New York State, not listed federally.

Common Name: AMERICAN MOUNTAIN-ASH

Native Tree/Shrub Descriptions

WOLF FIELD BOOK POISON PLANT IDENTIFICATION. Name: Leaves of Three - Let Them Be...

3197 S. CHICAGO ST. JOLIET, IL Follow us on Facebook

Client Wildscape for the Property Situated at: 5 Apbiol Road

2018 Fall Native Plant Sale Price List

Recommended Native Plant Species for Shoreland Restoration in Lincoln County

Brown Turkey fig. Creating Canopy Ficus carica Brown Turkey. fruit tree (self-pollinating) Height at Maturity: feet

Landscaping for Wildlife: Trees, Shrubs, and Vines

B/B5 ( Site)

TREES, SHRUBS and VINES OF BENNETT SPRING STATE PARK

white fringetree Creating Canopy 2017 Chionanthus virginicus small flowering tree Height at Maturity: feet Spread at Maturity: feet

NATIVE TREES (Native Shrubs following) FALL 2016

Winter Weeds Table of Contents

H '= "# p i. ln( p i. Successional changes in diversity. Species richness. Quantifying diversity - Species richness and relative abundance

Plant and Price List

Field Guide to the University of New Hampshire Kingman Farm Nature Trail

NATIVE TREES, SHRUBS & PERENNIALS

2018 Native Plant Availability Plant Sale Catalog

Winnakee Nature Preserve

Japanese Knotweed Red Winged Blackbird

A GUIDE TO WINTER TREES OF THE BLACKSTONE RIVER VALLEY IN MASSACHUSETTS

FGCCT Handout September 2017

NATURE TRAIL GUIDE SANDY BEACH GIRL GUIDE CAMP. Girl Guides of Canada Edmonton Area

2017 Tree & Prairie Seed Program Tree, Shrub & Prairie Plantings Friday-March 3, 2017

An Old Man's Walk in Cold Spring Park

Autumn Fruit & Seeds Eloise Butler Wildflower Garden

Summer. Key for. Pennsylvania. Trees. College of Agricultural Sciences Cooperative Extension. Protected Under 18 U.S.C. 707

Autumn Fruit & Seeds Elosie Butler Wildflower Garden

APPENDIX A Vegetation Inventory

Keys to Selected Native and Cultivated Woody Plants of Madison, Wisconsin

Climbing Fern. Summary. Protection Endangered in New York State, not listed federally.

NATIVE TREES. For Gardening and Landscaping. White Spruce (Picea glauca) Alternate-leaved Dogwood (Cornus alternifolia) Bur Oak (Quercus macrocarpa)

GRAND RIVER CONSERVATION AUTHORITY

AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION SERVICE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA -- U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE INSTITUTE OF AGRICULTURE ST. PAUL MINNESOTI' 5~

Botanical Name Common Name Size Available

5p. + 1p. + 10p. Copy/ full list in plastic NAP staff 2009) + Bioblitz list of FUNGI (05-09)

WEBELOS FORESTER. ONE LEAF TRAIL Lay a trail using one kind of leaf as a marker, letting the stem point in the direction to be followed.

APPENDIX L -2 RIPARIAN AREA IMPACT ASSESSMENT AND RESTORATION PLAN

ABOUT THE GUIDE The goal of this guide is to help identify native plants at various stages of growth. Color photos illustrate seed, seedling,

Butterfly Gardening. Chris Hartley The Sophia M. Sachs Butterfly House

Enhancing wild bees in cities: Practical approaches for gardeners. Dr. Scott MacIvor Assistant Professor April 27 th 2017

What is a Native Tree?

Ep161 More Spring West (0.4 ha) TL

name: St.Anne s Park

Wildlife Usage of the Plants of the Lost Pines Complex. Melanie Nash-Loop WFSC 636 Wildlife Habitat Management

Native Shrubs ( 3m hgt.) Hydro One Networks Right-of- Ways and Corridors R0

Creating Canopy 2012 Spreading roots for a greener region

Tree Identification Book. Tree ID Workshop Partners and Supporters

2016 Tree & Prairie Seed Program Tree, Shrub & Prairie Plantings "A civilization flourishes when people plant

Oakdale Cemetery Tree Inventory 6/15/2015

Transcription:

Trip Report: Inside Mashomack s Deer Exclosures July 29, 2011 Thomas J. Rawinski U.S. Forest Service Northeastern Area State and Private Forestry 271 Mast Road, Durham, NH (trawinski@fs.fed.us) On July 29, 2011 I had occasion to walk into two of the hectare-sized deer exclosures at The Nature Conservancy s Mashomack Preserve in Shelter Island, New York. I made some notes and took some pictures. One exclosure was in the area north of the house, and the other was in the area known as Section 6. This was the fourth growing season (2008 through 2011) for the plants within the exclosures. Detailed accounts of the vegetation development will be presented at a later date by Dr. Marc Abrams, who is conducting research here. How fascinating it was to see the plant life within the exclosures! Was this really Mashomack, where, for decades, the vegetation has been so ravaged by overly abundant deer? Was that really maple-leaf viburnum (Viburnum acerifolium) in fine fruit after only four short years? Young saplings of many tree species grew knee-high or taller on the forest floor. Forbs of many species showed flower buds, flowers, or fruit. Yes, it was clear that chronic browsing by deer had kept these plants suppressed. I could only imagine the abundance of native pollinators that now work these flowers. As managers strive to attain a balance between the needs of the deer and the health of the forest, one might consider a future in which most tree species are able to regenerate, and where most of the forbs are able to flower and set seed. One wouldn t expect anything close to the lush greenery presently found within the exclosures, but something in-between perhaps, where, with a bit of searching, one could find some individuals of most of the preferred forbs in flower or fruit. The deer-preferred forbs that I observed within the exclosures are listed in Table 1. Table 1 is by no means a complete list of deer-preferred forbs that one could use to gauge deer impacts in Mashomack s forest. For example, along one trail I spotted some wild sarsaparilla (Aralia nudicaulis), which has been all but eliminated from the interior forests. Similarly, bracken fern (Pteridium aquilinum) has also become scarce at Mashomack. The few fronds that I saw were alongside the main road. In the absence of excessive browse pressure, this fern would be common in the dry oak woods. 1

Table 1. Deer-preferred forbs observed within two deer exclosures at Mashomack Preserve. Dicots Native (N) / Introduced (I) Asteraceae (Aster Family) Eurybia divaricata White Wood Aster N Euthamia graminifolia Grass-leaf Goldenrod N Hieracium paniculatum Woodland Hawkweed N Lactuca canadensis Yellow Wild Lettuce N Nabalus trifoliolatus Fall-Rattlesnake-root N Solidago bicolor Silverrod N Solidago caesia Bluestem Goldenrod N Solidago rugosa Rough Goldenrod N Symphyotrichum laeve Smooth Aster N Symphyotrichum lateriflorum Calico Aster N Fabaceae (Bean Family) Desmodium nudiflorum Naked Tick-trefoil N Lespedeza intermedia Wand Bush-clover N Primulaceae (Primrose Family) Lysimachia quadrifolia Whorled Loosestrife N Trientalis borealis Starflower N Scrophulariaceae (Figwort Family) Aureolaria virginica Downy False Foxglove N Violaceae (Violet Family) Viola palmata Three-lobed Violet N Monocots Liliaceae (Lily Family) Maianthemum canadense Canada Mayflower N Maianthemum racemosum False Solomon's Seal N Polygonatum pubescens Solomon's Seal N Uvularia perfoliata Perfoliate Bellwort N In addition to the oaks, red maple, sassafras, and beech that grow well within the exclosures, a number of other woody species have become established, or are now released from suppression. These plants are listed in Table 2. Note that many of these, upon maturity, would provide soft mast for wildlife. The photographs in Figures 1, 2, 3, and 4 show vegetation conditions within and outside the fencing. 2

Table 2. Some woody plant species established or released from suppression within the Mashomack deer exclosures. Dicots Native (N) / Introduced (I) Anacardiaceae (Cashew Family) Rhus copallinum Winged Sumac N Rhus glabra Smooth Sumac N Toxicodendron radicans Poison-ivy N Asteraceae (Aster Family) Baccharis halimifolia Groundsel-tree N Betulaceae (Birch Family) Ostrya virginiana Hop-hornbeam N Caprifoliaceae (Honeysuckle Family) Viburnum acerifolium Maple-leaf Viburnum N Cornaceae (Dogwood Family) Cornus florida Flowering Dogwood N Rosaceae (Rose Family) Amelanchier arborea Serviceberry N Rubus allegheniensis Allegheny Blackberry N Rubus phoenicolasius Wine Raspberry I Salicaceae (Willow Family) Populus grandidentata Big-toothed Aspen N Populus tremuloides Trembling Aspen N Vitaceae (Grape Family) Parthenocissus quinquefolia Virginia Creeper N Vitis labrusca Fox Grape N 3

Figure 1. Vegetation conditions along a fence line. Figure 2. Vegetation conditions along a fence line. The crooked tree in the distance is the same tree appearing in Figure 1. 4

Figure 3. Young hop-hornbeam saplings dominate the forest floor in this photograph. Figure 4. A close-up of the hop-hornbeam saplings shown in Figure 3. 5