PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New study: Aggressive conifer removal benefits Sierra aspen

2014-11-20
(Press-News.org) Chester, CA-- A study just published by Point Blue Conservation Science shows the benefits of an aggressive approach to restoring Sierra Nevada aspen stands (Populus tremuloides).

Most of the aspen stands that dotted the Sierra Nevada less than a century ago are gone or in poor health. Aspen stands can increase groundwater, enrich soils and support a higher diversity of plants and wildlife, relative to adjacent forest types. Keeping aspen stands as part of our forests is critical to maintaining a healthy Sierra Nevada forest ecosystem for people and wildlife.

The study, published in Restoration Ecology, documents the effectiveness of using traditional logging equipment to remove all but the largest Ponderosa pine, white fir and other conifers encroaching on remnant aspen stands. The study's authors used focal bird species as a way to measure if aspen stands were restored.

"Aspen thrive in the time between frequent wildfires," said Ryan Burnett, Sierra Nevada Group director and one of the study's authors. "Without fire, the conifers take over. Aspen stands now make up less than one percent of the Sierra Nevada landscape. We wanted to see if healthy aspen stands could be restored with a fairly aggressive approach."

Beginning in 1999, the U.S. Forest Service removed conifers from over 140 aspen stands in the Lassen National Forest. Site size ranged from one to 99 acres. They removed the majority of the canopy cover, leaving only the legacy conifers that were alive before widespread fire suppression policies.

Point Blue began annual spring bird and vegetation surveys in 2004 on both treated and untreated aspen stands, surveying 180 different sites during the nine-year study. The scientists selected two groups of focal bird species as the primary indicators of ecological change, 10 species associated with aspen habitat and six species for conifer habitat.

Within a few years, the aspen stands teemed with focal bird species during the breeding season, including mountain bluebirds, tree swallows, and hairy woodpeckers, and the trees showed overall revived health.

"The bird density was so high. There were so many singing that we had trouble writing them all down," says Brent Campos, Point Blue's northern Sierra project leader and lead author of the study. "Birds are good indicators of an aspen stand's health and we were surprised by the dramatic and quick response."

The bird numbers published in the article are significant when considering multiple species over thousands of acres. For example, the numbers of red-breasted sapsuckers more than tripled from an average of .84 birds per acre before treatment to 2.85 birds per acre on restored sites. Multiply that by the 1,000 or more acres the Forest Service has now restored Sierra-wide and that means habitat for nearly 2,000 more red-breasted sapsuckers.

Some of the bird species associated with conifer habitat decreased in restored sites. According to Burnett, these species, such as golden-crowned kinglet and red-breasted nuthatch, are among some of the most common bird species occupying Sierra forest habitat.

"These aspen stands were being swallowed up by the conifer sea around them," Burnett says. "Our study suggests aggressive mechanical removal of conifers can restore aspen stands and benefit birds and ecosystem health. I'd like to see land managers increase the pace and scale of aspen rehabilitation throughout the Sierra Nevada."

INFORMATION:

Link to article: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/rec.12114/abstract Study citation: Campos, B. R. and Burnett, R. D. 2014. Avian Response to Mechanical Aspen Restoration in Sierra Nevada Coniferous Forest. Restoration Ecology, Vol. 22, No. 5, pp. 616-624. About Point Blue Conservation Science: Our mission is to advance the conservation of birds, other wildlife and ecosystems through science, partnerships and outreach. Our 140 scientists, along with educators and restoration specialists, work to reduce the impacts of habitat loss, climate change and other environmental threats while promoting nature-based solutions for wildlife and people, on land and at sea. Visit Point Blue at http://www.pointblue.org.

Melissa Pitkin, Outreach Director, (831) 423-8202, mpitkin@pointblue.org Ryan Burnett, Sierra Nevada Group Director, (530) 258-2869, rburnett@pointblue.org



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

UC Irvine-Italian researchers create first inhibitor for enzyme linked to cancers

UC Irvine-Italian researchers create first inhibitor for enzyme linked to cancers
2014-11-20
Irvine, Calif., Nov. 20, 2014 -- Recent studies showing acid ceramidase (AC) to be upregulated in melanoma, lung and prostate cancers have made the enzyme a desired target for novel synthetic inhibitor compounds. This week in Angewandte Chemie, a top journal in chemistry, UC Irvine and Italian Institute of Technology scientists describe the very first class of AC inhibitors that may aid in the efficacy of chemotherapies. AC, which is encoded by the ASAH1 gene, plays an important role in the regulation of cell fate, setting the balance between pro-aging/death and pro-life ...

Cost of meeting basic needs rising faster than wages in Washington state

2014-11-20
A Washington family of four must spend 46 percent more on average to make ends meet today than 13 years ago, according to a new report from the University of Washington. The Self-Sufficiency Standard for Washington State 2014, released Thursday (Nov. 20), provides a sobering look at how much it costs individuals and families statewide to meet basic needs -- and how far short they're falling. The study found that Washington families with two adults, a preschooler and a school-aged child saw the costs of meeting their most basic requirements jump as much as 72 percent ...

Discovery sheds light on nuclear reactor fuel behavior during a severe event

2014-11-20
A new discovery about the atomic structure of uranium dioxide will help scientists select the best computational model to simulate severe nuclear reactor accidents. Using the Advanced Photon Source (APS), a Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science User Facility, researchers from DOE's Argonne National Laboratory and Brookhaven National Laboratory, along with Materials Development, Inc., Stony Brook University, and Carnegie Institution of Washington, found that the atomic structure of uranium dioxide (UO2) changes significantly when it melts. UO2 is the primary ...

Economic burden of prediabetes up 74 percent over five years

2014-11-20
The economic burden of diabetes in America continues to climb, exceeding more than $322 billion in excess medical costs and lost productivity in 2012, or more than $1,000 for every American, according to a study being published in the December issue of Diabetes Care that also includes a state-by-state breakdown of the prevalence and costs associated with diabetes. Additionally, increased costs associated with prediabetes and undiagnosed diabetes highlight the growing importance of prevention and early intervention. The study, which follows up on a similar report published ...

Moffitt researchers use evolutionary principles to model cancer mutations

2014-11-20
TAMPA, Fla. - Moffitt Cancer Center researchers are taking a unique approach to understanding and investigating cancer by utilizing evolutionary principles and computational modeling to examine the role of specific genetic mutations in the Darwinian struggle among tumor and normal cells during cancer growth. Cells become malignant by acquiring genetic mutations that lead to increased survival and reproduction. Many researchers in the past have viewed cancer progression as the result of unlimited accumulation of these genetic mutations. However, Moffitt researchers ...

Study: Obesity fuels silent heart damage

2014-11-20
Fast facts: The study shows that obesity leads to subclinical heart muscle injury and increases the risk for heart failure even among people without overt heart disease and independently of other cardiovascular risk factors such as diabetes, high blood pressure and high cholesterol. The silent heart damage was detected by using an ultrasensitive test that measures the levels of a protein released by the cells of the heart muscle during injury. The findings suggest that obesity is an independent driver of heart muscle damage, and that obese individuals, even when free ...

Mass. General-developed system reveals how our brains and bodies change as we fall asleep

Mass. General-developed system reveals how our brains and bodies change as we fall asleep
2014-11-20
Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) investigators have developed a system to accurately track the dynamic process of falling asleep, something has not been possible with existing techniques. In their report in the October issue of the open-access journal PLOS Computational Biology, the research team describes how combining key physiologic measurements with a behavioral task that does not interfere with sleep onset gives a better picture of the gradual process of falling asleep. In addition to being a powerful tool for future research, the system could provide valuable ...

Deep-earth carbon offers clues on origin of life on Earth

2014-11-20
New findings by a Johns Hopkins University-led team reveal long unknown details about carbon deep beneath the Earth's surface and suggest ways this subterranean carbon might have influenced the history of life on the planet. The team also developed a new, related theory about how diamonds form in the Earth's mantle. For decades scientists have had little understanding of how carbon behaved deep below the Earth's surface even as they learned more and more about the element's vital role at the planet's crust. Using a model created by Johns Hopkins geochemist Dimitri ...

A global report card: Are children better off than they were 25 years ago?

2014-11-20
Twenty-five years ago this month, the countries that compose the United Nations reached a landmark agreement that laid the foundation for much-needed strengthening of children's rights and protections in nearly every country around the world. Today, the Convention on the Rights of the Child remains the only formal global effort to improve children's rights and the most widely ratified human rights treaty in history. Only three U.N. member nations have not ratified the treaty: Somalia, South Sudan and the United States. "The Convention on the Rights of the Child is a ...

An Ebola virus protein can cause massive inflammation and leaky blood vessels

An Ebola virus protein can cause massive inflammation and leaky blood vessels
2014-11-20
Ebola GP protein covers the virus' surface and is shed from infected cells during infection. A study published on November 20th in PLOS Pathogens reports that shed GP can trigger massive dysregulation of the immune response and affect the permeability of blood vessels Ebola virus has seven genes. One of them, called GP, codes for two related proteins: a shorter secreted one and a longer one that spans the viral wall and sticks out of its surface. During virus infection, some of the surface GP is cut off by a human enzyme and is subsequently shed from infected cells. High ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Findings of large-scale study on 572 Asian families supports gene-directed management of BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene carriers in Singapore

Many children with symptoms of brain injuries and concussions are missing out on vital checks, national US study finds

Genetic hope in fight against devastating wheat disease

Mutualism, from biology to organic chemistry?

POSTECH Professor Yong-Young Noh resolves two decades of oxide semiconductor challenges, which Is published in prestigious journal Nature

Could fishponds help with Hawaiʻi’s food sustainability?

International network in Asia and Europe to uncover the mysteries of marine life

Anthropologist documents how women and shepherds historically reduced wildfire risk in Central Italy

Living at higher altitudes in India linked to increased risk of childhood stunting

Scientists discover a new signaling pathway and design a novel drug for liver fibrosis

High-precision blood glucose level prediction achieved by few-molecule reservoir computing

The importance of communicating to the public during a pandemic, and the personal risk it can lead to

Improving health communication to save lives during epidemics

Antimicrobial-resistant hospital infections remain at least 12% above pre-pandemic levels, major US study finds

German study finds antibiotic use in patients hospitalised with COVID-19 appears to have no beneficial effect on clinical outcomes

Targeting specific protein regions offers a new treatment approach in medulloblastoma

$2.7 million grant to explore hypoxia’s impact on blood stem cells

Cardiovascular societies propel plans forward for a new American Board of Cardiovascular Medicine

Hebrew SeniorLife selected for nationwide collaborative to accelerate system-wide spread of age-friendly care for older adults

New tool helps identify babies at high-risk for RSV

Reno/Sparks selected to be part of Urban Heat Mapping Campaign

Advance in the treatment of acute heart failure identified

AGS honors Dr. Rainier P. Soriano with Dennis W. Jahnigen Memorial Award at #AGS24 for proven excellence in geriatrics education

New offshore wind turbines can take away energy from existing ones

Unprecedented research probes the relationship between sleep and memory in napping babies and young children

Job losses help explain increase in drug deaths among Black Americans

Nationwide, 32 local schools win NFL PLAY 60 grants for physical activity

Exposure to noise – even while in the egg – impairs bird development and fitness

Vitamin D availability enhances antitumor microbes in mice

Conservation actions have improved the state of biodiversity worldwide

[Press-News.org] New study: Aggressive conifer removal benefits Sierra aspen