200 YEARS OF FOREST COVER CHANGES IN TOMPKINS COUNTY, NEW-YORK

Citation
Be. Smith et al., 200 YEARS OF FOREST COVER CHANGES IN TOMPKINS COUNTY, NEW-YORK, Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 120(3), 1993, pp. 229-247
Citations number
63
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences
ISSN journal
00409618
Volume
120
Issue
3
Year of publication
1993
Pages
229 - 247
Database
ISI
SICI code
0040-9618(1993)120:3<229:2YOFCC>2.0.ZU;2-9
Abstract
The amount of land in forest within Tompkins County from the time of E uropean settlement (1790) to the present was determined from land surv ey records, aerial photographs, and field reconnaissance. Forest cover in Tompkins County dropped from almost 100% in 1790 to 19% by 1900, t hen increased to 28% by 1938 and over 50% in 1980. Thus over half of t he forest in Tompkins County today is post-agricultural. The number, s ize, shape, and distribution of forest stands within the landscape cha nged during a century of conversion of agricultural to forested lands. From 1900 to 1980, there was more forest in the southern part of the county, where the topography is hillier and soils are more acidic. For a portion of the county with extensive clearing for agriculture, the Ludlowville quadrangle, we mapped the outline of all forest stands pre sent in 1900, 1938, and 1980. Post-agricultural forest developed predo minantly on the steeper lakeside and streamside slopes rather than on the flatter uplands. Throughout the period 1900-1980 the majority of t he forest stands were quite small, < 10 ha in area. The distance from random points in forest to the nearest edge of the stand was often les s than 50 m, except for some extensive stands on the slopes in 1980. T he development of forest on former agricultural lands has resulted in the coalescence of stands, and the degree of fragmentation and isolati on of forest stands in the Ludlowville quadrangle of Tompkins County i s much reduced today compared to 1900.