Assessing Storm Damaged Forest Stands
Webinar Details
When:
Sep 15, 2021 1:00 pm US/Eastern
Length: 00:55 (hh:mm)
Advance Registration NOT required.
View now on-demand.
Presenter(s):
- Dr. David Dickens - Professor (Forest Productivity), University of Georgia
Virtual Event Format:
Group Viewing Available:
Dr. David Dickens (UGA), will provide a general overview of storm damage assessment and potential management strategies for landowners.
Longleaf pine hurricane damage. Photo by Dan Chapman, USFWS.
The ongoing climate crisis has led to an increase in extreme weather events like hurricanes and tornadoes in the southeastern U.S. Hurricanes cause extensive damage to forest stands from high winds and floods resulting from the heavy rains that accompany them. Hurricanes and tornadoes stress, damage, or kill trees by uprooting, breaking, bending, leaning, wounding, and flooding stands. This webinar will provide landowners with assessment tools, preventative action strategies and management plans to mitigate long term consequences and facilitate recovery. This webinar will cover such questions as: What kind of storm damage do individual pines and pine stands sustain? What are the ecological impacts of this damage? What management strategies are available?

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