MOFEP: scoping the forests of the future.If long-term ecosystem management is a goal for the future, it will need long-term research to back it up. To do that, forest and wildlife managers must set aside land, have budgetary support, and have plenty of researchers available--all with long-term commitment. A promising effort for joining these needs was initiated in 1990 by Missouri's Department of Conservation in cooperation with the University of Missouri's School of Natural Resources. Working under the acronym MOFEP MOFEP Missouri Ozark Forest Ecosystem Project (Missouri Ozark Forest Ecosystem Project The Missouri Ozark Forest Ecosystem Project, or MOFEP, is a century-long ecological experiment to assess logging practices in the Missouri Ozark forest. Its goal is to find out a logging method that best balances the demand for wood products with forest preservation. ), the two groups have as their goal applying long-term ecosystem research to 9,200 acres of relatively mature second-growth Ozark forestland for·est·land n. A section of land covered with forest or set aside for the cultivation of forests. . Three timber-management strategies will be applied: even-aged, which means clearcutting; uneven-aged, or selective harvesting from trees of all age groups; and no harvesting at all. These strategies will be studied for up to 100 years--the average rotation period In astronomy, a rotation period is the time an astronomical object takes to complete one revolution around its rotation axis relative to the background stars. For the Earth this is a sidereal day. for Ozark forest growth. And each will be replicated on three separate pieces of land ranging in size from 657 to 1,302 acres. Of the nine study plots, the six designated for harvesting will be kept undisturbed until September Until September is a 1984 romantic drama set in France. It stars Karen Allen as an American tourist in Paris who falls in love with a married Frenchman (Thierry Lhermitte). External links '96 so that pre-harvest biological studies can be conducted. These studies include just about anything that will provide ongoing measurements of biological diversity. Among them: trees and their growth rates Growth Rates The compounded annualized rate of growth of a company's revenues, earnings, dividends, or other figures. Notes: Remember, historically high growth rates don't always mean a high rate of growth looking into the future. , all other plants by species, mammals, interior woodland songbirds, insect life from soil to tree-tops all reptiles and amphibians amphibians members of the animal class Amphibia. Includes frogs, toads, newts, salamanders and cecilians all capable of living on land or in water. , and nonliving factors. All will be investigated before and after logging and during regeneration; they will also be investigated periodically on the three control areas not slated for logging. "This project promises a roots-to-crown, bugs-to-birds view of how Ozark forestland will respond to different timbering tim·ber·ing n. Timber or objects and structures made of it. strategies," said project coordinator Brian Brookshire. Additionally, MOFEP will allow scientists to document how Ozark forest change over time with no human intervention. This sort of long-term research should answer many questions and perhaps help resolve controversies about methods of harvesting timber. But MOFEP also promises endless opportunities for university graduate students. Al Vogt, director of the School of Natural Resources at the University of Missouri, Columbia, says faculty and students there look forward to interacting with researchers from other universities, an ongoing part of the program. Students from Southeast Missouri State University Missouri State University is a state university located in Springfield, Missouri. It is the state's second largest university in student enrollment, second only to the University of Missouri. From 1972 to 2005, Missouri State was known as Southwest Missouri State University. conducted a study in forest nutrient recycling. Under the guidance of Michigan Tech professor Jiquan Chen, graduate students are investigating biological microclimates around the edges of logging operations. The research arm of the U.S. Forest Service is involved in MOFEP, as are staff biologists and foresters with the Missouri Department of Conservation. Interested research institutions can write Brian Brookshire, MOFEP coordinator, at Missouri Department of Conservation, P.O. Box 180, Jefferson City, MO 65102. |
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