Dogwood Blog

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...

 
Lawsuit Filed to Stop Release of GE Eucalyptus in the South

Dogwood Alliance joins the Sierra Club, Global Justice Ecology Project and other organizations in a lawsuit to stop the release of GE eucalyptus in the South...

 
Sustaining Our Defense Against Climate Change

Dogwood Alliance releases Sustaining our Defense report detailing the importance of Southern Forests in the fight against climate change.

 
 
General Overview PDF Print E-mail

cumberland_.jpgAs Louis L'Amour put it, "The cities are for money but the high-up hills are purely for the soul." Nowhere may this be truer than in the Cumberland Plateau, a series of rivers, valleys, hills, mountains, coves, and gorges which stretch from eastern Kentucky and western West Virginia and Virginia through eastern Tennessee and northwestern Georgia to the northern stretches of Alabama. In the North it is known as the Alleghany Plateau and both are part of the larger Appalachian Mountains, thanks to local custom (as well as the presence of the Cumberland River), this region has the unique title of Cumberland Plateau. The region has long been known for its preserved beauty, winding between settled areas as its rivers and hills proceed south in an unceasing flow which has been until recently largely left alone by the hand of man. (The pic above reflects the natural beauty of the Cumberland Plateau captured amidst flowing water and beautiful trees.)

Historical Significance

The Cumberland Plateau was named for William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland, and son of Britain's George II. Ironically this duke was renowned in Britain for mercilessly driving back Scots into their native land, which then resulted in many leaving for the colonies and often settling in and around the Appalachian Mountains including the Cumberland Plateau. English and German settlers would often follow them and makeup part of the small, self-reliant mountain communities, many of which survive to this day.

Settlers and their descendents were early to record the intrinsic beauty of the area in all of its parts. The region has surely seen its share of tragedies including as one of the starting places of the infamous "Trail of Tears" for Cherokee Native Americans, a hotly and bloodily contested area during the Civil War, and then as a wellspring for companies seeking natural resources and cheap places to manufacture within the post-bellum south. Through all of these events the plateau and its surrounding areas remained a scenic backdrop to the often chaotic expansion of humanity and were often recognized as a beautiful-if not spiritual-land which was to be preserved. Indeed, today within the plateau there are a national park, twenty-one state parks, a national forest, a national river and recreation area, eighteen state natural areas, numerous state forests and recreation sites and wildlife management areas, two nationally designated wilderness areas, a national wild and scenic river, six state wild and scenic rivers, four national natural landmarks, a national monument, and part of a national military park. Lists of this sort are nearly unheard of in areas of the United States which have been settled for the amount of time that the plateau has been and speak to its enduring beauty and power as an environmental gem that its locals, and citizens from allover this country as well as the world, should not easily let go to urban development and industrial use.

Threats To the Plateau

As national and state authorities have realized the plateau serves as the South's most ecologically diverse region and has also been designated a U.S. BioGem by the Nature Conservancy and NRDC for this very reason. Tree species such as Yellow Poplar, Beech, Black Walnut, Basswood, Red and White Oaks, Hemlock, and Buckeye are among the twenty or so that once abounded here (and still do in certain locales), but are often replaced by Loblolly Pines and other invasive species in a bid by paper companies such as Bowaternow AbitibiBowater, Kimberly-Clark, Mead-Westvaco, Weyerhaeuser now Domtar, and American Packaging to maintain gigantic monoculture pine plantations that rob the Plateau of its natural beauty and diversity. According to one study by the University of the South's Analysis Lab over fifteen percent of intact native forest, (or 66,000 acres), in the Cumberland Plateau has disappeared since 1981. The importance of these areas cannot be stressed enough as they are home not only to some of the few remaining native hardwood forests in the country but also contain many species of fauna, some of which are found nowhere else on earth.

Unique Natural Habitats

The habitats of many foxes and bears are seriously threatened along with a whole host of bird species. Neotropical birds that migrate through the region such as thrushes, warblers, vireos, and buntings have had resting areas nonexistent along the plateau and some salamander and bat species are found solely within the area, and the same can be said for two species of turtles. These examples are just a small set of creatures whose entire existence depends upon the ecologically conscious maintenance of the Cumberland Plateau. By helping to protect the forests of the Cumberland Plateau, the Dogwood Alliance is attempting to not only preserve the diverse flora which inhabit the plateau but also the many fauna as well. Moreover, the small mountain communities which have survived centuries of urbanization and development and which are now threatened by an influx of second-home real estate ventures and uninhibited recreational use will benefit from protecting the plateau.

Leader in Southern Forest Protection

By encouraging corporate and individual consumers to purchase products that do not endanger the forests, such as recycled paper, and working with local and national interests to pressure paper companies to withdraw from the area the Dogwood Alliance has established itself as the leader in southern forest protection. With the help of many supporters and peers we have had tremendous success reaching an historic agreement with Bowater, Inc., the largest paper manufacturer operating on the Plateau to end conversion to pine plantations and improve overall forestry practices.

 

We encourage all who read this to help us in the fight to protect the Cumberland Plateau as the natural wonder that it is.  

 

 

 
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