Forest
Roads Negatively Affect Wildlife, Study Found
Results
suggest forest roads might harm animals well beyond road boundaries
COLUMBIA, Mo. - Roads used for natural resource extraction, such as logging or
oil and mineral removal, often run through otherwise undisturbed forested
areas. A new study led by a
"Our results may exemplify a problem created by current and past land use
activities in all forested regions, especially those related to road building
for natural-resource extraction," said Ray Semlitsch,
Curators' professor of biology in MU's
The study monitored salamander populations in the southern Appalachian
Mountain region in the
"Woodland salamanders are small, lungless,
sedentary and strongly dependent on cool, moist forest habitat, which makes
them excellent indicators of environmental stress or change," Semlitsch
said. "Our study found that forest roads negatively impact salamanders
and probably other forms of wildlife as well. Extraction of timber 80 years
ago has created a significant ecological 'footprint' in a forest that
supersedes regeneration of the forest itself. Assuming current timber
management practices harvest trees at intervals of 80 to 100 years, footprints
of logging roads from past harvests will not be gone before a new footprint is
laid down, and effects will accumulate over time, eventually fragmenting
forests into ever-smaller patches of suitable habitat."
The study used a model to predict how much of the national forest was
potentially unsuitable for salamanders due to roads and road-effect zones
around roads. Using a relatively conservative road-effect size of 35 meters on
each side of a road, the study found that 28.6 percent of the entire district
was unsuitable habitat for the salamanders; using a higher estimate of 60 to
80 meters based on their work and others, the percentage of unsuitable forest
habitat rose to between 36.9 and 42.8 percent.
Prior to this study, there was little data about the ecological impact of
low-use and abandoned roads in heavily forested areas. Collaborators in the
study included former MU graduate student Travis J. Ryan of Butler University;
Kevin Hamed of Virginia Highlands Community
College; Matt Chatfield of the University of Michigan; Bethany Drehman;
Nicole Pekarek of Asheville-Buncombe Technical
Community College; Mike Spath of Highlands
Biological Station; and Angie Watland of the
Clinch Valley Program, which is part of The Nature Conservancy. The study has
been accepted for publication and will soon be published in the journal
Conservation Biology.
See: http://munews.missouri.edu/NewsBureauSingleNews.cfm?newsid=11842