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St. Paul District
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District foresters turn island into large Petri dish

Published Sept. 18, 2013
Dan Reburn, operations, drives a boat to a Mississippi River island near Red Wing, Minn., June 10.

Dan Reburn, operations, drives a boat to a Mississippi River island near Red Wing, Minn., June 10.

Bobby Jackson, operations, conducts research along the Mississippi River near Red Wing, Minn., June 10. The district’s foresters are planting thousands of trees to help improve the wildlife habitat in the area.

Bobby Jackson, operations, conducts research along the Mississippi River near Red Wing, Minn., June 10. The district’s foresters are planting thousands of trees to help improve the wildlife habitat in the area.

Ray Marinan, a natural resource specialist with the St. Paul District observes a bald eagle with a spotting scope. He is monitoring for any signs of disturbance to eagles as a result of reforestation activities in the area.

Ray Marinan, a natural resource specialist with the St. Paul District observes a bald eagle with a spotting scope. He is monitoring for any signs of disturbance to eagles as a result of reforestation activities in the area.

Dan Reburn, left, operations, and Bobby Jackson, operations, discuss a reforestation project during a tree planting on a Mississippi River island near Red Wing, Minn., June 10.

Dan Reburn, left, operations, and Bobby Jackson, operations, discuss a reforestation project during a tree planting on a Mississippi River island near Red Wing, Minn., June 10.

The district recently finished a three-year reforestation project with a massive planting of 7,000 trees. The Gores Reforestation Project is intended to enhance wildlife habitat and manage invasive species on a Mississippi River island located near Red Wing, Minn., which is public land managed by the Corps. Reed canary grass, an invasive, has slowly been taking over this island.

The project included having 60 acres on the island broken into three 20-acre sites, each using one of three ‘silviculture’ treatments, to include clear cutting, group selections (removing a percentage of the trees in small groups) and shelter wood (removing overgrown trees to release established seedlings), to determine which treatment works best. Bobby Jackson, Corps forester and project manager, said the Corps and Minnesota Department of Natural Resources will monitor the site for an additional five years to determine which method yields the best results.

“Our main objective is to ultimately have a new forest made up of native trees that provide high level habitat for the next 50 to 100 years,” said Jackson. “We want to be able to manage the spread of reed canary grass, because we know we can’t control it.”

Additional partners are working with the district to collect more data during the life of the project for a number of different research projects. Jackson said the U.S. Geological Survey is monitoring bird response pre and post – harvesting to document bird response in each treatment. They are also testing two different types of deer enclosures on the new seedlings. He said, Minnesota, Iowa and Wisconsin DNRs and Pierce and Vernon counties in Wisconsin are studying the planting of enriched American Elm at the site to see how they compare in survival and growth in each treatment, as well as how they compare with other types of native hardwood species also being planted.

Since the site is natural habitat and ever fluctuating, due to it being on a river island, Jackson said the project has involved a lot of adaptive management. For example, he said, he had to change one of the sites at the last minute with the contractor standing there due to high water content in the soils where it wasn’t anticipated. 

“Overall, it’s been very challenging, but the data we obtain from this project will help us at our other sites,” he said, explaining that the data will assist the many agencies working on the Mississippi River in coming up with a cost effective, consistent management plan for reforestation along the river.