Bob,

Well alright, but Monica was probably looking forward to you getting your 
Speedos out.  You could give everyone along the river a thrill.

Ed

“To the attentive eye, each moment of the year has its own beauty, and in the 
same field, it beholds, every hour, a picture which was never seen before, and 
which shall never be seen again” - Ralph Waldo Emerson
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: [email protected] 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Sunday, September 20, 2009 6:17 PM
  Subject: [ENTS] Re: Skinner State Park


  Ed,


      We have a canoe and Monica is itching to use it more. I think we'll be 
investigating the islands in the Connecticut River via canoe.


  Bob

  ----- Original Message -----
  From: "Edward Frank" <[email protected]>
  To: [email protected]
  Sent: Sunday, September 20, 2009 11:16:19 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
  Subject: [ENTS] Re: Skinner State Park


  Bob,

  River islands are interesting in many ways.  Perhaps the forests on some of 
these islands are a type of sub-climax old growth.  By that I mean that 
frequent flooding prevents the establishment of what would be considered a 
normal old-growth forest on the islands.  Because of the flooding the tree ages 
are variable and of mixed ages.  The species composition is different from the 
forests on the shore.  In low islands and lower areas on higher islands the 
species are limited to those that are flood tolerant.  Less flood tolerant 
species are found only in areas that are rarely flooded.  Even the species that 
reach the island for colonization is affected by the presence of a river to 
cross.  The forest colonizers and dominant species are those that have seeds 
that can easily be spread by water and survive the process.  The second tier 
are those that can be carried to the island by birds or animals and be viable.  
The third and least frequent type of species present are those that must be 
carried by the wind a long distance, or other unusual circumstance, AND must 
land in a place suitable for sprouting, AND must be growing in a area where 
they can can survive the regular flooding.

  The species distributions are therefore quite different from the adjacent 
shore.  Along the Allegheny River they are dominated in low areas primarily by 
cottonwoods and silver maples.  In slightly higher areas there are basswoods 
and hawthorns.  On higher areas there are some pignut hickories and red oaks.  
Other trees are present only on the highest.  These boundaries are not distinct 
and sharp for the lower areas, but essentially trees like white pine are found 
only on the highest islands.  

  The thing to look for on most of these is whether or not the silvers and 
cottonwoods are reproducing or are they being overwhelmed by invasive plants.  
Here in PA the big problems are Japanese knotweed, reed canary grass, and 
multiflora roses.  Other invasives are also a problem.

  The character of the trees is also different than is found in a standard 
forest setting.  Because of the patchy nature of the tree cover and open areas 
on islands often flooded many of the largest trees have the characteristics of 
open grown specimens.  You should probably swim over and check it out (before 
it freezes over this winter.)

  Ed

  “To the attentive eye, each moment of the year has its own beauty, and in the 
same field, it beholds, every hour, a picture which was never seen before, and 
which shall never be seen again” - Ralph Waldo Emerson
    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: [email protected] 
    To: [email protected] 
    Sent: Sunday, September 20, 2009 8:40 AM
    Subject: [ENTS] Skinner State Park


    Lee, 


    I don't know if any of these images from Mount Holyoke will be of further 
help in illustrating patterns of land use and their impact on the forest cover, 
but here are 5 more images. Use them as you see fit. The visibility wasn't that 
good, so they aren't as clear as the images from Sugar Loaf. 


    These images were taken from slopes and summit of 878-foot Mount Holyoke. 
The summit of Mount Holyoke is about 770 feet above the Connecticut River . 
Mount Holyoke is a few miles south of Sugar Loaf. It is the mountain you see 
with the white house (old inn) when traveling south from Northampton toward 
Holyoke on I91 or Route 5.


    The first image shows some of the grasses growing among the basalt 
outcroppings on the spine of the ridge. Image #2 looks southwest toward the 
Berkshires. The 3rd image looks more directly west. The island in the 
Connecticut River was the primary subject of interest when I took the shot. 
These islands do get partially flooded in the spring, but can support 
surprisingly mature forests of silver maple, eastern cottonwood, hackberry, red 
maple, etc. The 4th image shows what the forest often looks like where the 
terrain favors the establishment of slightly larger trees on the ridge-line 
where the land that isn't so vertical. However, descending from the top, the 
trees are never really large until the lower slopes are reached. The last image 
shows part of the basalt outcropping that form the charismatic little mountains.


    On the crest of the Holyoke Range, hemlocks, red, white, and black oaks 
often dominate with a significant component of black birch. Pignut and shagbark 
hickories, white ash, and white pine are conspicuous, but not abundant. At 
spots chestnut oak makes an appearance, but doesn't dominate. American beech 
makes establishes its presence in colonies as to be expected. One sees an 
occasional eastern red cedar. On the lower slopes with more soil, sugar maple 
makes its presence known. There is some, but not a lot of white birch. I think 
Larry from Hampshire College has dated northern red oaks on Mt Holyoke to 
around 275 years. Hemlocks have been dated to the mid to high twos. Black birch 
to the lower twos.


    Bob






  

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