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General Benefits of Old-Growth

Authored By: H. M. Rauscher

Old-growth forests can provide many services and support many desirable uses.  Giles (2000) listed some important and obvious benefits:

  • Aesthetic appreciation
  • Education
  • Recreation
  • Preservation of genetic material for unknown future services
    • Potential for discovering medicinal plants
    • Potential for bioengineering
    • Source of potential inoculum for recovering forests
  • Research of natural processes
  • Watershed protection and runoff control
    • Protection from erosion
    • Reduces peak flows of floods
    • Filters and slows water
  • Retention of plant and animal diversity
  • Carbon storage and therefore a potential buffer of global warming
  • Provides habitat for a wide variety of animal and invertebrate species
    • Supports a rich insect faunal community.
    • Provides habitat for rare and endangered animal species.
    • Provides a multi-layered, three dimensional habitat with complex structure.
    • Provides vertical structure to increase bird diversity.
    • Provides micro-"travel lanes," both fallen and standing trees for many animals.
    • Provides critical habitat for several species of reptiles and amphibians.
    • Provides critical habitat for several species of tree bats.
    • Produces abundant and varied mast for animal consumption.
    • Provides sources of mycorrhizal fungi as wildlife food and for invaluable tree-growth enhancement
    • Produces relatively large amounts of dead wood as habitat for arthropods that are a food base for birds and some mammals.
    • Provides perching and cavity sites, particularly for the larger birds and mammals (e.g., pileated woodpecker, bears, raccoons).
  • Produces climatic modification due to changes in albedo and wind effects.

Many of these listed benefits are applicable to all forests, but old-growth may produce them in greater abundance.

Encyclopedia ID: p1849



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