http://blogs.usda.gov/2016/05/12/climate-smart-restoration-of-appalachian-forests/?utm_content=bufferd5244&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

Climate Smart Restoration of Appalachian Forests

As the climate changes, and our forests are affected, the need to reclaim
impacted areas and restore native species becomes more important than ever.
The U.S. Forest Service’s Monongahela National Forest is at the forefront
of not only forest restoration, but also helping those landscapes adapt to
climate change.

The red spruce forests of the Appalachian highlands are an integral part of
the regional biodiversity, providing habitat and food for the northern
flying squirrel and the Cheat Mountain Salamander, and the ecosystem
supports 240 rare species in West Virginia alone. Additionally, the forests
blanket the headwaters of five major river systems upstream of millions of
people living and working in the Charleston, West Virginia; Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania and Washington D.C. regions.

“Different soils have the ability to store different amounts of carbon, and
Appalachian soils have potential to store carbon for the long-term if
managed correctly. There is evidence of this in the soil profiles under the
historic red spruce ecosystem,” said Stephanie Connolly, Forest Soil
Scientist on the Monongahela forest.

Most of the soil carbon in the world is found in the cool, moist conifer
forests of the north. There is more carbon in the soils than in the
atmosphere and the vegetation combined. Historically, timber harvesting of
red spruce has resulted in large losses of soil carbon into the atmosphere.
Forest Service scientists are helping figure out how to better manage these
forests long term to restore lost soil carbon.

The restoration of red spruce to its historic range could restore much of
the lost soil carbon within a century, improve wildlife habitat, and
protect water resources. In West Virginia alone, recent data suggests that
carbon—equivalent to 56.4 million barrels of oil—could be taken out of the
atmosphere and incorporated in the forest floor within 80 years.

Regional Forester Review at the Lambert Run Red Spruce Restoration Project
with forest leadership, forest staff, and partners. Photo credit: Crystal
Simons, Davis and Elkins College Student Intern

One example of this work is the work of Monongahela National Forest staff
and their partners at The West Virginia Highlands Conservancy and The
Nature Conservancy who are working to restore historic red spruce forests
on lands that were previously strip-mined for coal. The Lambert Run
lands were mined in the 1970s and 1980s resulting in heavy soil compaction
and the introduction of non-native plants. While earlier restoration
efforts stabilized the land for erosion control, many areas remain in a
condition scientist term “arrested succession.”

The partnership uses machinery to break soil compaction and allow water to
infiltrate the ground making it healthier to support the native spruce and
reestablish critical habitat. Wetlands are being constructed to retain
water and support native plant systems. Hardwoods and Norway pine are being
removed from the Lambert Run in preparation for the planting of red spruce
seedlings.

After this kind of restoration work prepares the soil, the Monongahela
forest staff work with climate change specialists to create
adaptation management plans to enhance long-term resiliency of the newly
restored forests. Together partnerships like this return forested areas
into living tools that benefit all of us now and for generations to come

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