Dogwood Blog

In Fond Memory of Jimmy Chandler, one of South Carolina’s True Environmental Heroes

His death is a huge loss to the environmental movement in the South, what we have gained through his life is even greater.

 

 
Comments Keep Rolling in on the KFC Campaign

A choice sampling of some of the great feedback we have been receiving on our KFC campaign... keep it coming!

 
Spelling Out Our Demands on KFC

Announcing a new eight part series highlighting what we are demanding KFC do to protect our forests...

 
Ant-biomass Lobby Takes to the Halls of Congress

Our friends at various groups around the country fighting wood-burning biomass facilities took to the halls of Congress today to lobby for the end of unjust subsidies for biomass...

 
 
General Overview PDF Print E-mail

The global significance of the region’s natural diversity

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From the cypress swamps, pine bogs and pocosins of the Middle Atlantic and Gulf coasts to the mixed pine-oak and hardwood forests of the Piedmont and Cumberland Plateau to the rich and diverse landscapes of the Appalachians and Ozarks, Southern forests are places of amazing natural beauty. Our forests are home to more plants and wildlife than any other region in North America and in the case of freshwater aquatic diversity, more than anywhere else in the world.

Southern forests provide an amazing array of resources that are integral to both our quality of life and are an essential part of our cultural heritage. Millions of people in the south rely on clean drinking water from our forested watersheds. We all rely on clean and healthy air to breathe. Our forests act as important air filters and also play a very important role in moderating climate and preventing flooding.

For generations, our forests have supported community saw mills and local wood products industries like manufacturing of fine furniture, hardwood flooring and high quality lumber. They are also an amazing resource for medicinal plants such as ginseng and golden seal. We hunt in our coastal forests for game species like deer and grouse, fish our mountain streams for brook trout and photograph migratory songbirds making stopovers between the Boreal forests of Canada and South American rain forests. In addition to hunting, fishing and bird-watching, forest based recreation such as hiking, mountain biking and whitewater rafting bring hundreds of millions of dollars to our local economies in the south every year. Our whitewater paddling is considered by most experts to be some of the best in the entire world. In addition to work and play, our forests provide an amazing place to find peace and solitude and refresh and replenish our spirits.  When you think of biodiversity, the tropical rainforest of the Amazon or Indonesia might come to mind, but you do not have to travel beyond Southern forests to find biodiversity of global importance.

Southern Forests are home to:

· The highest concentration of tree species diversity in North America.

· The highest concentration of aquatic diversity in the continental United    

  States, including the richest temperate freshwater ecosystem in the world.

· The highest concentration of wetlands in the U.S., 75% of which are forested.

Nowhere in America are there a greater variety of native plant communities, native plant species, or rare and endemic plants.  Endemism is the ecological state of being unique to a place. Endemic species are not naturally found elsewhere. The place must be a discrete geographical unit, such as an island, habitat type, or other defined area or zone. For example, the Waccamaw Kill fish is endemic to Southeastern North Carolina, meaning it is exclusively found in Lake Waccamaw.

 

 

 
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