Turning Back The Pages

I commend Weantinoge Heritage’s thorough removal of non-native invasive species along Cobble Brook, but many native plants were also removed. Over 25 large, mature clumps (10 to 15 stems each, 3 to 5 inches in diameter, were previously 15 to 20 feet tall) of speckled alder were removed while only five clumps were preserved. This is not "maintenance"! (No Inland-Wetlands permit was required because this was called "routine maintenance" by Harry White, Weantinoge Preserves manager.)

This amounts to over 80 percent removal of the beaver’s prime food source and construction material. If the natives were vine-choked, then the vines can be cut, left to die and removed next year when they’ve released their grasp.Time spent removing over 250 mature alders could have been better spent removing the invasives from around them and maintaining the existing trees.

It may be cheaper and easier to cut down everything under 8 inches in diameter, but reestablishment of this wetland habitat will now be much more difficult. These plants were 15 to 20 years old and a replanting scheme will take years to establish. Regeneration from cut stumps will be prolific, but how will the sprouts be protected from hungry deer and future brushcutting crews?

Other native shrubs on the burn piles include spicebush, pussywillow, gray dogwood, red twig dogwood, and red cedar, all important food sources for returning warblers, vireos and thrushes. Where will they now go for food and cover? The beaver have moved back to the center of Studio Hill Circle (as has been going on for decades!) where there is plenty of alder and other natives. When they eat most of this crop, they would usually move back down to the Cobble where their previously cut alders would have regenerated. It will be many years before that section of the brook can support beaver again, never mind trout.

There is very little dense shade left to keep the water cold enough for trout. I see very little habitat management taking place on Cobble Brook. This was prime riparian habitat that was destroyed right down to the water’s edge for nearly half of a mile of brook. What happened to a buffer zone? What about soil erosion and brook siltation? The cobble hasn’t looked so bare since cows were in there over 20 years ago. Still think this was cheaper?

I think land trusts have an obligation to show the public how habitats are properly managed. In fact, Weantinoge’s own trail book, "Weantinoge Walks" (by John McNeely, 1997), says, " A conservation easement requires the private landowner to maintain the conservation values of the property," especially if it is called a "nature preserve." If money is an issue, then do a little less, just do it properly. This is usually more cost-effective in the long run. There is grant money available from DEP’s Landowner Incentive Program; Naomi Land Trust in Sherman was just awarded thousands of dollars for similar work.

The Kent Conservation Commission would like to see a multi-year habitat management plan for the recovery of natives and suppression of invasives put forth by Weantinoge. A huge seedbank of invasives has now been released since most of the overshading plants have been removed. The honeysuckle, multiflora rose, barberry and bittersweet will be back with a vengeance. We would be more than willing to mark the native stumps so they will have a chance to recover, or help in any other way to recover important habitat.

Shaun McAvoy

, Chairman, Kent Conservation Commission

 

Kent

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