Robinson Forest

The Jones Center at Ichauway was one of five of the original ASCC sites. The mission of The Jones Center at Ichauway is to understand, demonstrate, and promote excellence in natural resource management and conservation. Ichauway is a 28,500-acre property that supports a diverse range of ecological communities including upland longleaf pine forests, riparian hardwood forests, isolated depressional wetlands, agricultural fields, shrub-scrub uplands, and human cultural zones. Ichauway was established as a quail hunting reserve in the 1920s by Robert W. Woodruff, and is located on the Dougherty Plain, a karst topography dominated by sandy soils. The Ichawaynochaway Creek flows through Ichauway, and the Flint River forms 13 miles of the property’s eastern boundary.

Key Projected

Climate Change Impacts

Potential climate change impacts for The Jones Center at Ichauway include:

  • Increased temperatures and drought severity
  • Variable precipitation amounts and extreme weather events
  • Increased insects, pathogens, and invasive species
  • Reduced ability to use prescribed fire as a management tool and increased concerns about wildfires

Climate change will present challenges and opportunities for accomplishing the management objectives for red pine woodlandsecosystems, like those on the Cutfoot Experimental Forest, including:

Fire in Transition Plot_SBigelow (1)

Challenges

  • Impacts on plant and animal species of conservation concern
  • Increased tree mortality rates due to drought and wind disturbances
  • Reduced number of days with ideal conditions for prescribed fire use

 

Opportunities

  • Increased use of climate-adapted tree and groundcover species
  • Greater reliance on low-density management to increase water yields
  • Consider a range of site qualities that may be appropriate for long-term success of adaptation approaches

Management Goals & Treatments

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Resistance

Resilience

Resilience

Transition (1)

Transition

Implementation

 

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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

Monitoring is an essential component of the 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:

  • Fuelbed continuity and prescribed burning effectiveness
  • Diversity of groundcover and woody understory plants
    Stand-level water use and water yield
  • Canopy tree growth
  • Activity patterns of large and small mammals

Progress & Next Steps

The Jones Center at Ichauway installed permanent sample plots and collected pre-treatment data. Harvesting took place in the winter of 2017/2018. Monitoring is enhanced by remotely sensed data collected annually by NEON.

Site Leads & Partners

Joshua Puhlick (The Jones Center at Ichauway) is the site lead for The Jones Center at Ichauway ASCC site. Key collaborators include Steven Brantley, Scott Taylor, Brandon Rutledge, and Scott Smith (The Jones Center at Ichauway).

Joshua Puhlick
Site Lead

Ecological Silviculture The Jones Center at Ichauway 3988 Jones Center Drive Newton, GA 39870-8522 Phone: 229-734-4706 [email protected]