Click to edit Master title style. BRIEF HISTORY OF LONGLEAF PINE Rise and fall of LLP Forest Management for Longleaf an Overview Local/State/Federal Efforts.

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Presentation transcript:

Click to edit Master title style

BRIEF HISTORY OF LONGLEAF PINE Rise and fall of LLP Forest Management for Longleaf an Overview Local/State/Federal Efforts to Reforest Longleaf

Click to edit Master title style “a continuous, measureless forest, an ocean of trees” -J. D. Schoepf (1780)

Click to edit Master title style History of Longleaf Pine in the Colonies At time of settlement (1600s), there were as much as 93 million acres of longleaf pine-dominated forests in The United States. Naval stores industry began when John Smith exported the first “tryalls of Pitch and Tarre”. Pitch was used for sealing boat hulls; tar was the grease for wagon axles. Both tar kilns and boxing of live trees were used to produce/collect pine tar and crude gum.

Click to edit Master title style Reasons for Early Stand Conversion Longleaf was seen to have slow growth compared to other southern pines, so foresters recommended conversion. Fire suppression was seen as a major mission of the Forest Service which provided a competitive advantage to loblolly and slash. The housing boom after WWII with a large need for “yellow pine” for homes, loblolly and slash pine were preferentially chosen for reforestation.

Click to edit Master title style Historic Range of Longleaf Pine Ecosystem

Click to edit Master title style Longleaf: “The Forest that Fire Made”

Click to edit Master title style Longleaf – Bluestem Flatwoods of Southeast Virginia Longleaf – Wiregrass Savannas/Flatwoods of the Atlantic and Gulf Coast

Click to edit Master title style Montane longleaf pine woodlands of Northeast Alabama and Northwest Georgia

Click to edit Master title style Longleaf pine Sandhills of Virginia through Georgia

Click to edit Master title style Source: U.S. Forest Service

Click to edit Master title style Source: U.S. Forest Service Forest Landowner Trends

Click to edit Master title style Why are you interested in learning more about longleaf pine e.g. family history, prescribed fire, NRCS cost share? Longleaf Forests offer viable resources to forest landowners– What are some of the concerns you had in planting longleaf on your lands or client properties? Longleaf forests can provide multiple benefits- economic, ecological, and social. What values do you think are most important to you? QUESTIONS

Click to edit Master title style Forest Management Considerations and Concerns Misconceptions of Longleaf Pine Forest Products Working Lands Values

Click to edit Master title style Misconceptions of Longleaf Pine Slow growth compared to loblolly – Because longleaf stays in grass stage for up to five years it is perceived to be slow growing, but at 30 years it has comparable growth to other southern pines. Only grows on poor sites – With most longleaf only surviving in areas were slash and loblolly are not competitive, current landowners don’t believe it will do well on high site index sites. Longleaf are not as economical as other southern pines – With most southern pines pole timber is estimated to be 20-25% of well managed stands, longleaf stands typically provide 70-80% of poles at harvest.

Click to edit Master title style Longleaf Pine Values: Forest Products

Click to edit Master title style Forest Health Longleaf are less susceptible to pests like the southern pine beetle and are more fire tolerant, which has proven to lower certain forest pests as well Longleaf in natural stands is more tolerant to wind throw from various natural disasters Longleaf lives for longer than other southern pines providing long-term habitat for game species and stronger wood for timber sales

Click to edit Master title style Longleaf Pine Values: Aesthetics

Click to edit Master title style Longleaf Pine Values: Wildlife Habitat

Click to edit Master title style Wildlife Values of Longleaf Pine The longleaf pine–grassland forest may well be the most diverse North American ecosystem north of the tropics, containing rare plants and animals not found anywhere else The understory contains from 150 to 300 species of groundcover per acre 36 mammals, 170 reptiles and amphibians 100 birds, insects, and around 900 plants ~ 30 federally listed species

Click to edit Master title style Distinct and Diverse Forest Type Species diversity is distributed across 12 longleaf pine ecological systems (NatureServe) Hydrologically ranging from sandhills to mesic wet savannas Geographically ranging from the Atlantic Coastal Plain to the West Gulf Coastal Plain

Click to edit Master title style What benefits are you looking for in longleaf pine management? How will longleaf management change the way you manage your property or client lands? What are some concerns new concerns you might have to longleaf management? QUESTIONS

Click to edit Master title style America’s Longleaf a Restoration Initiative Conservation Plan Plan Highlights Local Implementation Teams

Click to edit Master title style Conservation Plan America’s Longleaf Initiative established Draft a Range-wide LLP Conservation Plan Intensive Charrette, over 120 professionals Released March Key actions identified in the plan

Click to edit Master title style LLP Conservation Plan Provides a “road map” to conserve longleaf range- wide Establishes goal to move from 3.4 million existing acres to 8 million acres in 15 years (80% of increase on private lands) Establishes 6 overarching strategies to achieve the goals from local to national levels

Click to edit Master title style Six Overarching Strategies 1. Public Lands 2. Private Lands 3. Economic and Market-based 4. Fire Management 5. Understory and Overstory 6. Climate Change

Click to edit Master title style

Key Actions… Initiate actions to stand-up local teams within Significant Geographic Areas to further area- specific planning and on-the-ground actions. Local Implementation Teams

Click to edit Master title style Significant Landscapes and State/Local Teams Under America’s Longleaf Restoration Initiative State Teams Local Teams

Click to edit Master title style Local Team Functions Convene Characterize/Assess/Map/Prioritize Set State-Level Goals Propose High Priority Strategies/Timeline Implement Strategies/Objectives Secure Resources Measure Progress

Click to edit Master title style QUESTIONS You seem to have a lot of structure in these local teams– how do they interact or do they with NRCS state Technical Committees, Stewardship Committees, or other institutional bodies that might have overlapping conservation priorities? How do local teams interact with one another? Do they have similar organizational structures or focus areas? How do local efforts contribute to the overall effort? Who determines what those efforts are? What regional structure serves to link these local efforts? How do local teams find support for their identified priority work?

Click to edit Master title style The beginning…