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To: HangnJudge
And we need to take it back and explain change is a natural event.
Much of our deforestation has occurred naturally. We are losing our oaks here in the mid-Missouri Ozarks because the oaks took over when other trees were removed or died out. Too many oaks accelerated oak borer populations and this has kicked off a big increase in woodpeckers and bluebirds, etc.
Nobody 'did' this.
48 posted on 04/15/2004 5:48:57 PM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks
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To: Eric in the Ozarks
The Smokies have some natural change from storms, fire, and native pine beetles, but most of the forest composition change is coming from introduced pests. The most spectacular, at the present time, is the damage from the balsam wooly alegid. It bores into Fraser fir trees and eventually kills them. Much of the high country above fifty-five hundred feet is more or less denuded. Almost all the mature Fraser firs are dead; seedlings tend to die off after they reach the thirty year mark or so.

I understand that other insects are migrating into the Park from outside, among them foreign pests that infect hemlocks and oaks: two of the most common trees in the Park. One can imagine what would happen if both species died out on a scale equitable with, say, the American chestnut. It would not be pretty. Of course, the environment will eventually adjust, with other species filling in the gaps. The impact would still be immense, though, as anyone familiar the abundance and role of the hemlock and oak in the mountains could attest.

52 posted on 04/15/2004 6:05:22 PM PDT by Cleburne
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To: Eric in the Ozarks
"Much of our deforestation has occurred naturally. We are losing our oaks here in the mid-Missouri Ozarks because the oaks took over when other trees were removed or died out. Too many oaks accelerated oak borer populations and this has kicked off a big increase in woodpeckers and bluebirds, etc.
Nobody 'did' this."



Actually, from your own words (because I'm not familiar with the Missouri oak situation), it appears that the oak population boomed when "other trees were removed or died out". Since oaks don't generally have massive natural die-outs, it sounds like human activities involving the removal of other trees certainly aided the oak boom, whose downstream effects include a boom in the Woody Woodpecker and bluebird populaces (a good thing, IMO).

100 posted on 04/16/2004 9:19:38 AM PDT by Blzbba
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