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Friday, June 01, 2007

Twining prickles



A biologist who works at this particular wildlife refuge emailed me a plant list -- more then 400 species! -- and mentioned the positive effects prescribed burning has had on restoring the land so it can host that much variety.

5 comments:

  1. Oh, I like this arabesque vining.

    A place I stayed recently seemed buried in pine needles and ticks--and all I could think was how much the grounds needed a controlled burn.

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  2. This is a beautiful photograph.. as always. Thanks.

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  3. There's a place for everything in the natural order, even things that seem destructive to us. I had the privilege of taking a helicoptor ride over the volcano on the big island of Hawaii. The pilot showed us brand new lava fields - barren and blighted looking. Then he showed us fifty year old lava fields, full of growing things. The one hundred year old fields were jungles. Incredible.

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  4. Anonymous4:21 PM

    Prescribed burning is an essential management tool for almost any native prairie (and some woodlands, too), even in eastern Pennsylvania. so that much doesn't surprise me. I was struck, though, that the wildlife refuge managers describe the areas designated for burning as "burn units" - just like a hospital!

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  5. I recall a similar twining plant from northern Florida. Nice contrast with the charred stump.

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