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Forest Development
Forest
development is done to improve the forest resource. The definition
of “improve” generally means anything done to help us reach our
forestry goals and to enhance the value of the forest in ways that
can be measured in dollars, in forest health, in forest diversity,
or in aesthetic qualities.
What is done to any given area is
often guided by the ecological native plant community (look for more
information on the MN DNR's website here:
http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/npc/index.html).
Determining the native plant community allows foresters to know not
only what will grow well, but also what has grown in similar areas
in the past.
Several examples of forest
development done on Fond du Lac Band owned forests exist.
Recently several
previously open areas around Deadfish Lake, and south of Hwy 2 near
Twin Lakes road have been planted with white pine, red pine, and
white spruce. This was done to increase the conifer component of the
forest; which, historically, had many more conifers than exist
today. Deer love pine trees. Often forestry staff will have to place
tree cages around each young tree to keep hungry deer from nipping
the buds off these seedlings.
Red oak was planted throughout an
area on Tribal land near Whitetail Road. This was done to increase
the oak component of that stand providing diversity and food for
wildlife.
A few years after a timber sale
forestry crews “crown released” young oak trees. This means going
in, finding young oak trees, and thinning the trees around them so
they have more room to grow.
Some pine plantations have been
thinned while still fairly small (called a “pre-commercial
thinning”). This was done to favor the growth of the healthiest and
best trees within that plantation.
An area near First Bridge on
Ditchbank Road will have the soil “scarified” in patches (an acre or
less in size) which means the duff layer and leaves will be raked
back to expose bare soil. This will be done to help prepare a
seedbed for paper birch which ordinarily establishes itself after a
fire has burned away the leaf layer. The birch seeds will naturally
fall into these areas
from nearby birch
trees over late summer and Fall. A timber sale will remove most of
the overstory trees the following winter. This will allow full
sunlight to reach the ground. Exposed to full sunlight, the birch
seeds will germinate and new birch trees will grow!
These are just some examples of the
forest development projects forestry has done over the years. More
information can always be found by contacting Fond du Lac Forestry
staff.
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