Adirondack Explorer

Forestry for the birds

Sometimes cutting down a tree is the best prescription for saving a fast-disappearing bird.

In New York, at least, where two-thirds of the state is forested and most trees are what ecologists would call middle-aged, there’s precious little young forest for songbirds that need it for nesting or foraging. Some of these birds—especially the golden-winged warbler, a 4 ½-inch summer visitor—are in steep decline. The warbler’s Appalachian population, stretching as far north as the Champlain Valley, has lost 66 percent of its members in 50 years. It is projected to lose more than half of the remaining birds in the next decade.

With that in the back of his mind, Bruce Cushing bent over a downed beech in September, revving his chainsaw to trim the limbs for stacking to the side of his access path—an old skid road from the logging that preceded his purchase of the land. Later he would paint the stump with an herbicide, hoping to kill the spindly beech shoots that radiated from the parent tree and threatened to close the forest canopy around it.

His plan is to create a patchy mix of hardwoods, evergreens and shrubs on his hundred-acre woodlot on the Adirondack Park’s southeast fringe, east

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Adirondack Explorer

Adirondack Explorer2 min read
Brief Bio
Age: 51 Birthplace: Horseheads Residence: Newcomb Occupation: Senior Research Associate and Associate Director of the Adirondack Ecological Center (AEC), a field research station of the State University of New York College of Environmental Science an
Adirondack Explorer1 min read
Adirondack Explorer
Publisher: Tracy Ormsbee tracy@adirondackexplorer.org Editor: James M. Odato jim@adirondackexplorer.org Associate Publisher: Betsy Dirnberger betsy@adirondackexplorer.org Designer: Kelly Hofschneider design@adirondackexplorer.org Digital Editor: Meli
Adirondack Explorer3 min read
It's Debatable
The climate crisis is here, now. We can see its effects in every season, as ubiquitous as the yellow skies from last summer’s choking wildfire smoke. Whether it’s overflowing rivers, deadly blizzards, drenching rains, or rising seas, climate change i

Related Books & Audiobooks