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Native Plants and Their Role in the Upper Penns Creek Watershed – a Growing Greener Grant Project
In Spring of 2001 the Pennsylvania Native Plant Society began a Growing Greener Grant project funded by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Resources under the education and outreach category. The focus of this project was to investigate the role of native plants in the Upper Penns Creek watershed and their relationship to water quality.

Another component of the project was to compile a website overview of the study findings. This site includes a complete list of survey sites, a plant list, and an interactive Floristic Quality Assessment Calculator, as well as numerous resources and information on Heritage Sites and Outreach Projects.

Click here to visit the website.


Point Lookout Study
In April 2000, wildfire burned 130 acres at Point Lookout, south of Havice Valley Road, in the eastern end of Mifflin County. After this wildfire occurred, resource managers within the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources had several questions about regrowth, and when Helen Roback of the Pennsylvania Native Plant Society called them offering to do inventory work on state land, the Point Lookout Study was born.

The first question was "How does fire within the forest affect new growth and species diversity, and how much does deer browsing affect the appearance of new species?” The second question that arose later was "How would fire affect the new growth and species diversity in an area without or having little established or competitive regeneration in an area harvested down to shelterwood stocking levels?"

Several plots were set up to study these questions. For comparison, an area of similar elevation, aspect, and vegetative type was chosen in an area that had not been burned. In March 2001, a shelterwood regeneration cut occurred on about one acre of the burned area, and in June 2001 a one acre plot was cut in the unburned area. The study will compare vegetative regrowth in four treatment areas or locations. Within these locations a fenced and unfenced area has been designated for study.

The Pennsylvania Native Plants Society has agreed to conduct the repeated inventory of established plots within these treatment areas. Four volunteers are suggested for each study area, and at least two visits per year are requested. The study areas are:

1. Burned, uncut; fenced and unfenced
2. Burned, shelterwood cut; fenced and unfenced
3. Not burned, uncut; fenced and unfenced
4. Not burned, shelterwood cut; fenced and unfenced

DCNR has established the boundaries of these areas and erected the fences. We met with the DCNR representative, Mark Potter, to begin this project. The study will continue for at least six years, and DCNR will analyze and summarize the data which has been collected. This project allows PNPS members to make a significant contribution to knowledge about regeneration of forests in Pennsylvania, which could affect future land management decisions.

For further information call Helen Roback at 814-867-3522.