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Submission Number: 75
Submission ID: 86
Submission UUID: 4a619dc3-4ee2-47ec-92da-e56f62b10760

Created: Wed, 12/17/2025 - 15:16
Completed: Wed, 12/17/2025 - 15:44
Changed: Tue, 12/23/2025 - 13:48

Remote IP address: 2605:59c8:19ff:cc08:a807:87c6:41eb:659e
Submitted by: ronit.lunken
Language: English

Is draft: No

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and University of Vermont: Nulhegan Basin, Silvio O. Conte National Fish and Wildlife Refuge

Forest type, Forest health, Management type
forest adaptation, wildlife habitat

Tony_VDT_Figure_enhanced.JPG

Site map with treatment images. Treatments shown from left to right: No harvest control; Variable density thinning gap, thinned matrix, and patch reserve. (Image: Tony D'Amato)

A variety of adaptation treatments were implemented at this site within the Silvio O. Conte National Fish and Wildlife Refuge, and are being monitored by researchers with the University of Vermont. The treatments are designed to test various approaches intended to increase structural complexity and species diversity within the forest, with the ultimate goal of improving habitat for specific wildlife species and forest adaptation to a changing climate.


Site Location

Brighton, Vermont

Nulhegan Basin Division of the Silvio O. Conte National Fish and Wildlife Refuge

44.820102

-71.721658

From Brighton, VT travel east on VT Route 105 approximately 12 miles to Stone Dam Road. Turn north on Stone Dam Road and follow for 4 miles. Continue on Canal Road for an additional mile.

Seasonal access by vehicle; year-round access by foot.

United State Fish and Wildlife Service

+1 802-962-5240

jeremy_goetz@fws.gov

Stand Information

550 acres

Spruce-fir

Depending upon the past harvest intensity, portions of the forest are in: stem exclusion, understory reintiation, and stand initiation.

spruce budworm

balsam woolly adelgid

Hydric, Tunbridge-Dixfield-Wilmington complex; Cabot-silt loam

1980


Pre-treatment Conditions

3

Fri, 12/10/2021 - 00:00
Thu, 03/10/2022 - 00:00

This stand initiated after a widespread spruce budworm salvage harvest between approximately 1975 and 1985 by St. Regis Paper and Pulp and Champion International.

Abies balsamea (balsam fir)

50%

Picea rubens (red spruce)

25%

Acer rubrum (red maple)

25%

Overstory basal area ranged from 95-175 ft2/ac and averaged 133 ft2/ac

hymenomycetes


Silviculture Prescription

A variety of adaptation treatments were implemented at this site within the Silvio O. Conte National Fish and Wildlife Refuge, and are being monitored by researchers with the University of Vermont. The treatments are designed to test various approaches intended to increase structural complexity and species diversity within the forest, with the ultimate goal of improving habitat for specific wildlife species.

Promote diverse age classes; Maintain and restore a diversity of native species; Retain biological legacies like dead downed wood and standing snags; Improve vertical and horizontal canopy structure; Reduce impacts to soils and nutrient cycling; Protect, favor, and restore native species that are expected to be adapted to future conditions.

Specific management goals for the project area include: Improve vertical and horizontal canopy diversity; improve tree species diversity in both overstory and understory; increase desirable species such as red spruce, white pine, northern white-cedar; reduce the preponderance of balsam fir; increase structural complexity (including downed woody material, tip-up mounds, and legacy trees); and create a greater diversity of wildlife habitat.

3 research treatments were applied: 1) Patch cuts (3 acres in size) with approximately 10% of the existing overstory left as reserves. 8-10 trees per acre were felled or tipped and left for downed dead wood. 2) Variable density thinning with 20% of the stand area in gaps approximately ¼-1/2 acre in size, 20% of stand in skips approximately ¼-1/2 acre in size, and 60% of stand thinned to approximately 120 sqft of basal area. Retention was left in gaps. 8-10 trees per acre were felled or tipped and left for downed dead wood. 3) No harvest controls.

Regeneration goals are focused on promoting future adapted species like white pine, red spruce, northern white-cedar while reducing balsam fir.

Variable density thinning and clearcut

  • forest health
  • threatened/endangered species
  • species or ecosystem restoration
  • climate change
  • wildlife habitat
  • carbon
  • landscape context

The prescription was developed in part by following the Adaptation Workbook as part of the NIACS Climate Change Response Framework. Learn more at the link below.

Komatsu dangle-head processor; TimberPro TF830 forwarder

The harvest was largely uneventful, though the hydric soils did pose some challenges with rutting in places due to the large forwarder used. Temperatures remained below freezing during harvest for the most part.


Post-treatment

yes

yes

Patch clearcut units averaged 64 ft2/ac at the treatment level, with patches averaging 31 ft2/ac and unharvested areas around patches averaging 112 ft2/ac. Variable density thinning units averaged 86 ft2/ac at the treatment level, with unharvested skips averaging 110 ft2/ac, thinned matrix areas averaging 94 ft2/ac, and gaps averaging 39 ft2/ac.

Planting seedling survival ranged from 46-88% over the first three years with highest rates of survival for containerized red spruce planting stock (76-88% survival depending on the source).


Miscellaneous

Future treatment plans include long-term research and monitoring. No future entries are proposed.

Basal Area Pre Harvest: 95-175 ft2/ac (averaged 133 ft2/ac); Basal Area Post Harvest: Patch clearcut units averaged 64 ft2/ac at the treatment level, with patches averaging 31 ft2/ac and unharvested areas around patches averaging 112 ft2/ac. Variable density thinning units averaged 86 ft2/ac at the treatment level, with unharvested skips averaging 110 ft2/ac, thinned matrix areas averaging 94 ft2/ac, and gaps averaging 39 ft2/ac.

Spruce, fir, adaptation, climate, silviculture, research, variable density thinning, Canada warbler, US Fish and Wildlife

no


Statistics

133

  • feet squared per acre


Contact Information

Jeremy Goetz

Forester

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

jeremy_goetz@fws.gov
+1 802-962-5240
Silvio O. Conte National Fish and Wildlife Refuge – Nulhegan Basin Division 5396 Route 105
Brunswick, Vermont. 05905

Supplementary Content

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