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From
the quarantined headquarters of the
Big
Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny:“PROJECT 2020”
by
Joe Ewing
High HareMan
Big Woods Hare
Hunters of the Allegheny
In March 2020 The Big Woods Hare Hunters of the
Allegheny announced a new habitat project on the Allegheny. In
cooperation with Seneca Resources, a National Fuel Gas Company, the conservation
minded hare hunters started an ongoing habitat reclamation project to improve
nesting and escape cover for eastern cottontail rabbits, ruffed grouse,
pheasants, song birds and all small animals on land owned by Seneca
Resources in Forest County, Pennsylvania.
The project includes hinge-cutting of fire cherry, black birch, quaking aspen and other nondescript trees, creating brush piles, mitigation of invasive species and planting native trees and shrubs. The hare hunters wish to express our deepest appreciation to Seneca Resources Company for their exceptional and continuing cooperation, guidance and expertise in the successful launching of this project. And, to Mr. Erick Byers, Company Land Forester, for his guidance and expertise.
The project includes hinge-cutting of fire cherry, black birch, quaking aspen and other nondescript trees, creating brush piles, mitigation of invasive species and planting native trees and shrubs. The hare hunters wish to express our deepest appreciation to Seneca Resources Company for their exceptional and continuing cooperation, guidance and expertise in the successful launching of this project. And, to Mr. Erick Byers, Company Land Forester, for his guidance and expertise.
In
the fall of 2019 after considerable consideration, discussion and with a certain
amount of trepidation the Big Woods Hare Hunters of the Allegheny acknowledged
it was time to quit delaying, procrastinating and stalling and take action on
conservation and biodiversity by creating habitat for cottontail rabbits,
ruffed grouse, woodcock, song birds and other small animals.
There was no debate as to where we should execute
our project. The members consciously determined we should do this on private
land. We would strive to obtain permission for the project on land where we
have been training beagles for the last decade. The site is a 600-acre tract of successional forest repopulated with fire cherry, black birch and other
worthless trees. The trees are growing quickly providing less cover for wildlife
and more shading of the undergrowth. Cottontail rabbits, ruffed grouse, wild
turkey, song birds and occasionally an itinerant pheasant can be found on the
property along with the usual predators. Maintaining food and escape cover and
providing nesting cover for these animals became our goal. Snowshoe hare have
been found within five miles of the project site but have not been observed in
this locality.
Matt Baker, January 2020 |
Ruffed
grouse are found in the proposed project area which was a major consideration
in choosing the site. A headline in the Pennsylvania Outdoor News
reads “Grouse are in big trouble in Pa.” (Ironically, the grouse article
appeared on the same page as the blurb announcing our project). The article went
on, “Ruffed grouse is in trouble in Pennsylvania and other nearby states in its
native range. The decline continues to grow in Pennsylvania and biologists
point to two main causes: widespread loss of young forest habitat and deaths
from the mosquito-borne West Nile virus.”
The
Pennsylvania Game Commission estimates the state has lost 20-30% of its grouse
population in the last four years. The Ruffed Grouse Society thinks grouse may
well be on their way to endangered status nationwide unless there is a
concentrated effort to protect and expand their habitat.
Many
words have been written by others repeating the needs of the eastern cottontail
rabbit and ruffed grouse. A word used for both cottontail and hare is
“fragmentation”. Words we read over and over are; “young forest habitat”,
“rejuvenating forests” and “successional forests”. Whatever we call our forests
they must meet the challenge of providing food and cover for wildlife along
with our “concentrated effort to protect and expand their habitat”. We can
break it all down to a few words; food, escape and nesting cover.
Providing
habitat on private land, even posted land, makes perfect sense to the Big Woods
Hare Hunters of the Allegheny. More than 1400 species have been listed as
“threatened” or “endangered” since the Endangered Species Act of 1973 was written.
Threatened species are those at risk of becoming endangered in the near term
and endangered is species at risk for becoming extinct in the foreseeable
future. “Roughly half of these species find 80 percent or more of their habitat
on private land. This reality along with the fact 60 percent of the land in the
United States is privately owned, makes private landowners critical partners in
the nation’s efforts to recover species on the brink of extinction.”—Catherine
E. Spencer, research fellow with the Property and Environment Research Center
(PERC) in American Hunter magazine, November 2019 issue.
In Pennsylvania 12 million acres of forest
land is under private ownership. In May of 2004, the Pennsylvania Game Commission (PGC)
created a Private Landowner Assistance Program and hired a Regional Wildlife
Diversity Biologist to facilitate the program and aid interested landowners in
developing habitat management plans in each of the state's six geographic
regions. A team of PGC biologists assists private landowners in
making their property more attractive for wildlife, particularly species of
greatest conservation need. It does not matter if the land is open to hunting. Wherever we make habitat we must do
everything in our power to improve the ecosystem and the biodiversity of our forests.
I
will keep readers of this blog up to date on “Project 2020” in future
issues showing the progress. On more than one day several volunteer members
were hard at work cutting trees and making brush piles. I will feature these
members in a future blogs. It will be interesting to see before and after
pictures. The project area is greening up and the song birds and rabbits love
the food and cover.
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