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...

 
 
Endangered Forests Types PDF Print E-mail

Old-Growth Deciduous Forests - Southeast

Old-Growth Deciduous Forest Although forests predominate in the South, less than 585,790 acres of old-growth forest exist (White and others 1998). The remaining old-growth forests tend to be on steeper, rockier, or mesic sites difficult to farm or harvest. Old-growth forest composition varies with forest type, but characteristics generally associated with old-growth forests include large, old trees; accumulations of woody debris; and multi-layered canopies.

Southern Appalachian Spruce Fir

Red Spruce

The spruce-fir community is confined to the highest peaks of Virginia, Tennessee, and North Carolina. Red spruce communities occur at an approximate elevation of 4,500 feet. In the northern limit of its range, Fraser fir is replaced with balsam fir. This community is characterized by relatively high moisture levels, short growing seasons, acidic soils, and extreme weather conditions. The flora is distinctive. The community reproduces in small-scale patches resulting from wind disturbance.

The presettlement extent of the Southern Appalachian spruce-fir community has been estimated as 30,000-35,000 acres (White and others 1998). These remote forests remained relatively undisturbed until the widespread harvests of the late 1800's (White and others 1998). In 1934, the majority of the remaining spruce-fir forest went into public protection with the establishment of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

Bottomland and Floodplain Forests

Cypress The forested wetlands of the Coastal Plain, Piedmont, and Continental Interior provinces include bottomland hardwood forests and deepwater alluvial swamps. Bottomland hardwoods are located along waterways and in low-lying areas such as the Mississippi Delta region. Common tree species include ash, sycamore, water tupelo, cypress, willow, cottonwood, elm, oaks, river birch, silver maple sweetgum, black walnut, and pine. Vegetative composition and structure vary with flooding duration. Trees are vulnerable to prolonged changes in hydrology and are characterized by rapid growth. Bottomland hardwoods are found almost exclusively on alluvial soils that are associated with old riverbeds, existing streams, and impoundments and their terraces. Soils are saturated year-round or nearly so; the understory is sparse with vines and shrubby vegetation.

Longleaf Pine and Southern Pinelands

Longleaf Pine

Longleaf pine historically dominated Coastal Plain sites from southern Virginia to eastern Texas. It also occurred on sites in the Piedmont, Southern Ridge and Valley, and Southern Blue Ridge provinces (Figure 22). This community once covered over 40 percent of the entire region, but it has declined by more than 98 percent (Noss and others 1995).


Atlantic White Cedar Swamps

Atlantic White Cedar Atlantic white cedar once was distributed from southern Virginia to interior Georgia and from the Florida Panhandle along the Gulf of Mexico to Mississippi. Drainage, development, and harvest without regeneration have reduced Atlantic white cedar to 10 percent of its original extent.

 
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