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Oak Regeneration
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by
Josselyn Lucas
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published
Feb 21, 2023
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last modified
Jun 25, 2023 11:03 PM
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filed under:
Golden-Winged Warbler,
Multimedia,
Eastern Deciduous Forests,
White Oak Initiative
Competing species in the white oak range are shading out young white oaks thus preventing regeneration, resulting in a non-sustainable demographic dominated by older trees. Dr. Jeff Larkin is a professor of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation at IUP, as well as the Forest Bird Habitat Coordinator for the American Bird Conservancy. He says: it's just as important for landowners and forest managers to 'look down' as it is to 'look up' when it comes to oak forest management and stewardship. These photos, taken by Dr. Larkin, demonstrate white oak regeneration within the forest understory.
Located in
Information Materials
/
Multimedia
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Oak Regeneration
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by
Josselyn Lucas
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published
Feb 24, 2023
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last modified
Nov 03, 2023 09:34 PM
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filed under:
WLFW Deciduous Forests in East/Central,
Golden-Winged Warbler,
WLFW,
News,
Eastern Deciduous Forests
Competing species in the white oak range are shading out young white oaks thus preventing regeneration, resulting in a non-sustainable demographic dominated by older trees. Dr. Jeff Larkin is a professor of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation at IUP, as well as the Forest Bird Habitat Coordinator for the American Bird Conservancy. He says: it's just as important for landowners and forest managers to 'look down' as it is to 'look up' when it comes to oak forest management and stewardship. These photos, taken by Dr. Larkin, demonstrate white oak regeneration within the forest understory.
Located in
Information Materials
/
Multimedia
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Light Weight Tracking Technology Could Help Reveal Mysteries of Golden-winged Warbler Decline
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by
Rhishja Cota
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published
Oct 24, 2022
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last modified
Nov 03, 2023 09:37 PM
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filed under:
Eastern Deciduous Forests,
Audubon North Carolina,
Bird monitoring,
WLFW,
Wildlife Conservation,
Songbird migration,
Golden-Winged Warbler,
Endangered Species,
News,
Working Lands for Wildlife,
Birds
Audubon and partners across the South and Midwest are using radio tags to track a rare songbird.
Located in
News & Events