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Private land management is more important than public land in sustaining oaks in temperate forests in the eastern U.S.

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Shengwu Duan, Hong S. He, Lauren S. Pile Knapp, Thomas W. Bonnot, and Jacob S. Fraser, 2024-02-14, Private land management is more important than public land in sustaining oaks in temperate forests in the eastern U.S.: Journal of Environmental Management, v. 352.

Summary

Preserving the abundance and stocking of oaks (Quercus spp.) has become increasingly challenging in temperate hardwood forests of the eastern US in recent decades due to a remarkable shift in dominance to mesophytic species (e.g., red maple Acer rubrum). Studies have shown that efforts to sustain oaks while restraining maples yield limited success. Given that a significant portion of forestlands in the eastern U.S. are privately owned, it is critical to assess whether current forest management on cross-ownership forests can achieve those objectives. However, such assessments are rare. In this study, we employed a landscape modeling approach to investigate the long-term outcomes (i.e., 150-year forest composition and structure) of business-as-usual [...]

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  • Midwest CASC
  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers

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citationTypeJournal Article
journalJournal of Environmental Management
parts
typeDOI
valuehttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2023.120013
typeVolume
value352

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