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Kentucky Heartwood

We need forests we can get lost in; trees that make us gape; streams we can drink from. 
​Wild places sustain and define us; ​we, in turn, must protect them.

Transition to native vegetation proposed for wildlife openings in London Ranger District: Comments due January 6, 2017.

1/2/2017

 
​The Forest Service has proposed positive changes in their management of maintained “wildlife openings” in two Wildlife Management Areas (WMAs) in the London Ranger District of the Daniel Boone National Forest in order to promote native vegetation. The 88 wildlife openings cover 131 acres in the Cane Creek WMA (Laurel County, including Van Hook Falls) and Mill Creek WMA (Jackson County, near S-Tree campground), and are maintained primarily for the benefit of game species and hunting opportunities. The Sheltowee Trace National Recreation Trail crosses both WMAs. The openings are currently managed through mowing in cooperation with the Kentucky Division of Fish and Wildlife Resources (KDFWR), and are mostly dominated by fescue, autumn olive, and other non-native invasive species. Wildlife openings are also sometimes planted with forage crops.
Picture
Wildlife opening in Stearns District showing autumn olive and fescue.
​The Forest Service has proposed a set of flexible management practices to remove invasive plants and transition vegetation in the openings to native grasses and pollinator habitat species. Proposed practices include plowing and disking, mastication, prescribed fire, and mowing. Herbicide use is not included in the proposal.
​
​While these maintained openings are not “natural,” historically the Cumberland Plateau had corridors or inclusions of grassy woodland and prairie-type communities, likely persisting through a combination of grazing and browsing by bison and other herbivores and periodic burning by Native Americans. These natural communities are nearly gone from the landscape. Transitioning wildlife openings to native vegetation will likely benefit a number of species, including pollinator species like the Monarch butterfly. It is also a highly preferable alternative to the current practices being used to meet the Forest Service’s game management objectives. 
Picture
Satellite image showing wildlife openings (pale green areas) in Mill Creek WMA.

​Comments are due January 6, 2017.
​
Comments can be emailed to: comments-southern-daniel-boone-london@fs.fed.us

Be sure to include “London Ranger District Wildlife Opening Maintenance” in the subject line and in your comment letter.

Comments can also be mailed to:

London Ranger Station
Jason Nedlo, District Ranger
Daniel Boone National Forest
761 South Laurel Road
London, Kentucky 40744

The Forest Service does not currently have a copy of the proposal on their website, but you can download it from our site by using the icon below. You can also download and read Kentucky Heartwood's comments below that.
wildlife_opening_maintenance_letter.pdf
File Size: 2429 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File

Kentucky Heartwood comments on the London Ranger District Wildlife Opening Maintenance project:
scoping_comments_wildlife_opening_maintainence.pdf
File Size: 246 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File

Picture
Discussing wildlife opening management with USFS in the Stearns District.
Anonymous
1/3/2017 06:20:14 am

Herbicide of invasive species and annual restoration work such as mowing or burning will be crucial for successful grassland wildlife habitats.
Also, it will be necessary to use locally collected seeds or match the species assemblages in extent grassland remnants to provide a true representation of regional niche habitats for wildlife. Good luck!

Jim Scheff
1/4/2017 01:37:29 pm

Thanks for your comments Will. I hope that you are able to send comments to the Forest Service!


Comments are closed.

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  • Home
  • News and Events
    • Newsletters
    • Forest Blog
    • Music Festival 2022 >
      • Music Festival Pics
    • Past Events >
      • Stonecoal hike
      • Hemlock volunteer days
      • Red Hickory and Herbal Medicine Hike
      • Red Hickory Hike April '22
      • Music Festival 2021
      • Bat Meter Deployment Field Trip 2021
      • Virtual Membership Meeting 2021
      • The Three R's with Davis Mounger
      • White fringeless orchid mural
  • Forest Watch
    • FOIA
    • Jellico >
      • ORG COMMENTS
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    • Blackwater (Cave Run Lake)
    • Red River Gorge
    • Pine Creek Forest Restoration Project
    • Greenwood
    • Pisgah Bay Project
    • Climax & Little Egypt >
      • Crooked Creek Photos 2011
      • Crooked Creek Photos 2010
    • Upper Rock Creek Logging >
      • Rock Creek Hike, November 2009
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