Dear ENTS,

 Just wanted to give the group a big heads up on a long article on
Harvard Forest and Dr. David Foster, among others, in last Sunday's NY
Times. Doesn't seem forests get this kind of coverage often.

 First two paragraphs:

"Over the winter, David Foster wanted to cut down some trees. His
neighbor didn’t want him to. Foster is the director of the Harvard
Forest, a 3,500-acre experimental forest in the middle of
Massachusetts. When you are the director of an experimental forest,
people aren’t sure you should be cutting down trees. “We’re cutting an
acre of forest, nonnative conifers,” he told me calmly on a day in
February, while grabbing some snowshoes. A forest ecologist will tell
you that if you cut down some woods — not all the woods, but some of
them — a new forest will quickly replace them. There’s a joke in
Massachusetts that if you forget to cut your lawn, you will have a
forest. For an ecologist, tree-cutting can be a stimulus plan that
actually works.

This cycle of forest succession is an observation that Foster
attributes to Henry David Thoreau; when Foster is walking in the
forest, something he does a lot, he will spot some young white pine
trees, for example, in a freshly cut field and say, “There’s Henry
Thoreau for you!”"

The full article is here:

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/19/magazine/19Forest-t.html?_r=2&ref=magazine&pagewanted=all

 neil
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