The Chippewa National Forest (CNF) is participating in a study called the Adaptive Silviculture for Climate Change (ASCC) Network. The goals of this project are to test different silvicultural approaches to climate change and forest health adaptation that will also serve as useful examples across the U.S. and Canada.
The National ASCC Network leads worked with the Chippewa National Forest and local partners to design and implement a silvicultural study for climate change adaptation on the Cutfoot Experimental Forest in Minnesota.
The installation on the Chippewa National Forest Cutfoot Experimental Forest, located on the Chippewa National Forest and the homeland of the Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe, was the first ASCC project site to be planned and implemented. The Cutfoot Experimental Forest (CEF) covers approximately 3,3000 acres, the majority of the CEF which consists of natural-origin red pine-dominated stands. The native pre-European settlement ecosystem of the CEF was largely fire-dependent, mixed-species, pine woodland. The stands identified for the ASCC project are dominated by red pine that originated following a wildfire roughly 100 years ago.
Climate Change Impacts
Key projected climate change impacts that the project team considered for the region encompassing the Cutfoot Experimental Forest ASCC site include:
Climate change will present challenges and opportunities for accomplishing the management objectives for red pine woodlandsecosystems, like those on the Cutfoot Experimental Forest, including:
A team of natural resource specialists from the Chippewa National Forest (CNF) and regional scientists participated in a three-day workshop in July 2013 to develop the ASCC treatments for the site. The team developed a set of management objectives, desired future conditions, and silvicultural tactics for each adaptation option: Resistance, Resilience, & Transition.
Monitoring is an essential component of the Cutfoot ASCC study. Research partners from several institutions are working together to investigate the effectiveness of different silvicultural treatments aimed at creating adaptive ecosystems. Some of the monitoring items include:
The Cutfoot Experimental Forest ASCC project site will be tended and monitored into the future. This includes vegetation control around planted seedlings and deer browse protection on pine seedlings. A second entry into the resistance treatment will likely be planned to keep the residual basal area at 90-100 ft2/ac. Team members are using the Forest Vegetation Simulator (FVS) to model forest growth and survival to assess how well each treatment meets its associated DFCs under climate change scenarios.
Brian Palik (USDA Forest Service, Northern Research Station) is the site lead for the Cutfoot Experimental Forest ASCC project site. Site level coordination is supported by Doug Kastendick (USDA Forest Service, Northern Research Station). Key partners include the Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe, the Chippewa National Forest, Linda Nagel (Utah State University), Tony D’Amato (University of Vermont), Peter Clark (University of Vermont), Miranda Curzon (Iowa State University), and Rebecca Montgomery, Jamie Mosel, Josh Kragthorpe (University of Minnesota), .Toni Lynn Morelli (USGS), Alexej Siren (University of New Hampshire)
Research Ecologist Northern Research Station, USDA Forest Service Forestry Sciences Laboratory 1831 Hwy. 169. E. Grand Rapids, MN 55744 Phone: 218-326-7116 [email protected]