General | NYFA Fri, 23 Apr 2021 01:16:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 /wp-content/uploads/2020/02/cropped-NYFA_Transparent_1-32x32.png General | NYFA 32 32 Legacy Lost /legacy-lost/ Fri, 23 Apr 2021 01:10:12 +0000 /?p=3737

A Brief History of Colonization and the Loss of Northeastern Old-Growth Forests

The first Europeans to arrive to eastern North America were greeted with what some have recently called the “Great American Forest.” This mainly uninterrupted wall stretching from the Atlantic to the Great Plains was composed of trees of every shape and dimension, from tiny saplings and mid-sized individuals that we’re accustomed to seeing in our forests today, to truly titanic and venerable specimens, some of which seemed to be as ancient as the very earth itself. The lushness, fecundity, and diversity of the scene overwhelmed the senses to those coming from the exhausted and overly tilled countryside of the Old World. While looked upon as a verdant Eden by some, to many of the early settlers, this untamed land, beset with wild animals and aboriginal inhabitants, and where even at noon, a perpetual twilight held sway underneath the dense and lofty canopy, was a fearsome wilderness that needed to be brought to heel and cultivated to satisfy Christian ideals.

Adriaen van der Donck, an early resident of 91Ƭ, was enraptured by every feature of his new home, from the native plants and wildlife, to the geology and even culture of its aboriginal inhabitants, documenting his experiences in his 1655 treatise,A Description of New Netherland. Despite his obvious love of the land, he quickly dismissed those who thought it prudent to make more liberal use of the forests, as he believed they contained “such an abundance of wood that it will never be wanting.” He further mentions that it was a common exercise of settlers to construct huge bonfires of wood, just because the material was in their way. The cornucopia appeared to be endless and inexhaustible. And so, the slaughter began.

While later generations would prove to be less wasteful of natural resources as quantities did inevitably begin to dwindle, this didn’t stop the razing of forests. Trees were cut for the production of boards and paper, with larger individuals, especially the exceedingly tall and lanky white pines, being used for ship masts; hemlocks were stripped of their tannin-rich bark for the leather industry; and a variety of trees were axed simply for use as firewood, hickory being especially prized.

Even the most ancient of trees weren’t spared. Early reports document eastern forests being filled with grand and stately trees of dimensions most Americans have never seen and can scarcely visualize. The botanist William Bartram in the late 1700’s described encountering a grove of black oaks in Georgia, some of which “measured eight, nine, ten, and eleven feet diameter five feet above the ground.” In the same area he encountered tulip trees and beeches that “were equally stately.” White Pines in Maine and elsewhere attained heights of 200 feet or more. A grove in Pennsylvania supposedly had some that hit the 230-foot mark. And the mast producing chestnut trees prized by everyone for its tasty nuts occasionally reached diameters of a dozen feet in moist and rich soils of sheltered mountain hollows. Forests took on a cathedral-like atmosphere.

Additionally, the scents that emanated from the forests and meadows possessed a potency that surprised newly arrived explorers. Robert Juet, a member of Henry Hudson’s 1609 expedition that first sailed up the river that would later be named in his captain’s honor, noted in his journal after speaking to those who had taken a small boat to explore the area near Manhattan: “The Lands they told us were as pleasant with Grasse and Flowers, and goodly Trees, as ever they had seene, and very sweet smells came from them.” Over a century later the taxonomist Peter Kalm would report a “most odoriferous effluvia” wafting in from a flower filled river bank in upstate 91Ƭ.

Over the years, logging and the clearing of land for crops and pasture gradually reduced forest cover by as much as 80% in the Northeast. By the 1850’s the damage was mostly complete. The elimination of forest and the ravenous killing of majestic apex predators, such as wolves, bears, and mountain lions, which were largely, if not wholly, extirpated from the sunny and open confines of Henry David Thoreau’s hometown of Concord, Massachusetts, made him lament the destruction wrought by his ancestors and contemporaries. He felt as though he was cheated and robbed. To him, such action was akin to desecrating a poem, in which his “ancestors have torn out many of the first leaves and grandest passages, and mutilated it in many places.” As a result, his “wish to know an entire heaven and an entire earth” was unable to be met.

Today around only one-half of one percent of original, untouched forest remains in the Northeast. These fragmented patches of old-growth forest are often located in inaccessible locations where it wasn’t possible or worth the trouble to clear the land. 91Ƭ holds the largest quantities of old-growth, the majority of it located in the Adirondack Preserve, followed behind by Maine, and then Pennsylvania.

Within the Adirondacks, the bulk of old-growth tracts reside in Hamilton County. Superb examples can be hiked through in the Ferris Lake Wild Forest. Most of the trails along the Powley-Piseco Road in Stratford pass through ancient forests composed of red spruce, sugar maple, and yellow birch.

Old-growth along the Big Alderbed Trail in the Ferris Lake Wild Forest.

Remnants also exist downstate—an old-growth hemlock stand resides at the Dover Stone Church Preserve in Dutchess County.

The author stands beside an ancient eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis) in Dover Plains.

Old-growth forests contain abundant supplies of much-needed coarse woody debris, such as this “nurse log.” Dover Stone Church Preserve.

And not far away, in Ulster County, centuries old dwarf pitch pine barrens repose atop the rare plant haven that is known as the Shawangunk Ridge.

A regenerating pitch pine (Pinus rigida) forest at the Sam’s Point Preserve seen three months after a wildfire.

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November Botanizing on a Saline Roadside /november-botanizing-on-a-saline-roadside/ /november-botanizing-on-a-saline-roadside/#comments Sat, 28 Nov 2020 00:45:43 +0000 /?p=3047

It’s nearly December. Goldenrods and asters are long gone, leaves have turned and fallen. Yet I remain in denial – I simply haven’t been able to call an end to the botanizing year.

Besides dried weeds, milkweed pods and other winter delights, there is still some green to be found. Take a look along roadsides – many verges are still green, and it’s not all grass.

I’m not sure exactly what caught my eye, but I stopped at a roadside recently and quickly realized there were some unfamiliar plants, probably because I haven’t spent a lot of time botanizing along weedy roadsides! It soon dawned on me that many of these plants are halophytes – plants that can tolerate runoff of the salt that is applied in the winter. Some are native, and have extended their range out of their native habitat (e.g. salt marshes or similar), while others are non-native, and do well in disturbed sites. All of the ones where I stopped can tolerate some salt just fine.

Here is a verge I stopped at last week, along the Lake Ontario Parkway in Hamlin, 91Ƭ (Monroe County), a little west of Rochester. It’s not exactly the kind of place that would invite most botanically-minded people! But as I looked more closely I saw some interesting plants.

I immediately saw this grass I didn’t recognize. It turned out to be bearded sprangletop, Diplachne fusca ssp. fascicularis (sometimes known as Leptochloa fusca ssp. fascicularis). I’ve now found it to be quite common at several places along the Lake Ontario Parkway. Formerly listed as a rare plant by the Heritage Program (S1S2) where it was known from salt marshes and other habitats close to the coast. It was just removed from the rare plant list this year, as it has become common throughout the state on saline roadsides.

Growing abundantly with the Diplachne was this European alkali grass, Puccinellia distans,. This non-native species, still in reasonably good shape in mid-November, is common on saline roadsides throughout the state.

Many species in the Amaranthaceae are also well represented in these types of salty roadsides. The fleshy-leaved, almost succulent, horned seablite, Suaeda calceoliformis is a treat to encounter. A native species found in salt marshes on Long Island, it is another one that has moved to saline roadsides as well.

Another fun plant growing on this salty verge is summer cypress, Bassia scoparia. I was finding lots of dried specimens of this species and struggled with the ID, until I found a still green one (on November 19!) and it readily keyed out, with its distinctive ciliate bracts subtending the tiny flowers.

Also growing here is oak-leaved goosefoot, Oxybasis glauca (formerly Chenopodium glaucum), a weed often found in, but not restricted to, saline habitats. Its distinctive leaves that are densely farinose, while the inflorescence is glabrous.

Two Atriplex species grow at this same roadside corner, sometimes side by side. Differences can be a little subtle but seaside orach, A. prostrata (on right if your reading this on a computer display, the lower of the three pics if reading this on your phone or tablet) often has downward pointing lobes on the lower leaves while A. patula may often not show lobes as all. Additionally there are differences in the bracts, with those ofA. patulabeing somewhat rhomboid (upper pic) , while those of A. prostrata (lower pic) are more typically triangular.

Plants in the Caryophyllaceae include a great many native and non-native weeds in 91Ƭ, including these two halophytes, both growing side by side at this very same intersection. Both in the genus Spergularia, growing here were the non-native greater salt marsh sand spurry, Spergularia media var. media and the native (but spreading along roadsides throughout 91Ƭ) lesser saltmarsh sand spurry, Spergularia marina. While some differences between these species can be subtle, a quick look at the seeds will easily diagnose them – S. media with the winged seeds, while S. marina without.

Greater Sand Spurry – Spergularia media var. media

Lesser Saltmarsh Sand Spurry – Spergularia marina

I was pleasantly surprised to find so much interesting diversity at a random roadside stop. Hooray for November botanizing!

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Report: Researchers Say Children Need Green Plant Interventions /report-researchers-say-children-need-green-plant-interventions/ Mon, 11 Apr 2011 19:59:41 +0000 http://nyflora.wordpress.com/?p=1610 This is an article from the :

Helsinki, Finland (SPX) Apr 5, 2011

Could “interventions” bring children closer to nature? Researchers in Finland think so. A new study published in HortTechnology compares urban and rural children’s relationships with plants and recommends horticultural interventions, especially for urban children. In Finland, a country famous for its forests and wilderness, researchers Taina Laaksoharju from the Department of Agricultural Sciences at the University of Helsinki and Erja Rappe of The Martha Association teamed up to investigate the role of vegetation in the lives of urban and rural children. “We were interested in finding out if it is true that children are not interested in plants or playing outdoors”, they noted. The study examined the relationships of 9- and 10-year-old Finnish school children to the environment and plants. Using a questionnaire of structured and open-ended questions, the researchers focused on two comparisons: children’s relationships with nature in rural and urban neighborhoods, and preferences for plants among boys and girls. 76 children-42 in the Helsinki suburb area and 34 in a rural area-participated in the study.

Results suggested that children living in rural surroundings had closer contact with nature than their urban counterparts. For example, more rural children considered people to be “part of nature” than did urban children. The researchers noted that, like children in other Western countries, Finnish children may be in danger of losing direct contact with the natural environment. “This suggests that further research is essential to understand children’s experiences if we are to enhance the crucial role of the environment in their lives”, they wrote. The children’s answers indicated that natural areas are important arenas for children’s free play and socializing. “In the suburbs, closer connections to nature are rare; interventions in schools, especially outdoor horticultural ones, can help children to build their relationship to vegetation.” The research also showed significant differences in the ways boys and girl experience green plants. Girls were more interested in plants in general, and were more eager to learn about plants than were the boys. Boys saw themselves as more independent of nature; more than 30% of the boys said that they could live without vegetation. Boys wrote that plants are meaningful mainly for nutrition and general living conditions, whereas girls appreciated the beauty of flowers and plants.

Laaksoharju and Rappe included recommendations for delivery of horticultural lessons based on remarks from the 9- and 10-year-old boys, who said that they did not like lectures, but enjoyed working with plants. “Learning by doing in an informal learning environment suits the kinesthetic boys better than sitting at a desk listening to a teacher”, they said. “Horticultural interventions can be effective starting points to add to children’s knowledge, affection, and interest toward greenery, but it is highly recommended that they take place outdoors rather than indoors.” The complete study and abstract are available at :

The 91Ƭ supports any program that will get kids out into nature to learn plants. Let us know if you are aware of any in 91Ƭ and we will post them.

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Put Down the Pills and Go Experience Nature /put-down-the-pills-and-go-experience-nature/ Fri, 04 Mar 2011 21:27:12 +0000 http://nyflora.wordpress.com/?p=1480 A recent article in USA Today talks about how doctors and nature preserves are teaming up to fill patient’s “nature prescriptions” where doctors prescribe a walk in a preserve as well as more healthy eating. For more on the article Sounds like we could have doctors prescribe a botany walk although “botany speed” is usually not very fast, especially for the first 100 feet from the parking lot.

Botany Speed.

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