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The
New Jersey Pine Barrens
The
Outer Coastal Plain of New Jersey is a largely undeveloped pine region
in the northeastern US. The pine barrens comprise 550,000 ha of upland
and wetland vegetation. The species diversity of the vegetation in the
upland forests is relatively low. Pine (pitch pine, Pinus rigida and shortleaf
pine, P. echinata) and oak (black oak, Quercus velutina, white oak, Q.
alba, scarlet oak, Q. coccinea and chestnut oak Q. prinus) dominate the
canopy layer and ericaceous species (blueberry, Vaccinium pallidum and
huckleberry, Gaylussacia baccata). dominate the shrub layer. Atlantic
white cedar (Chamaecyparis thyoides) dominates the wetlands. In addition,
some 4,000 – 9,000 ha (depending on definition) of this area is occupied
by dwarf or pygmy pine plains. Soils underlying this region primarily
consist of unconsolidated deposits of sand with some clay, silt and gravel.
The soils are not well developed; they are low in organic matter content,
strongly acidic and very low in natural fertility, forming sandy podsols
of the Lakehurst and Woodmansie soil series.
Much
of the forest is owned and managed by the State Forest Service and Fish
Game and Wildlife, although some tracts are in private ownership.
The
seasonally dry ecosystem is prone to wildfire and many pine barrens plant
species have evolved adaptations to cope with this periodic disturbance.
This history of fire pre-dating European colonization, logging and fires
in the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries are largely responsible for
the appearance of the forests today. While wildfires are still common,
their identification and successful control has improved greatly in the
second half of the 20th century. It is estimated that an average point
in the pine barrens upland forest burns at about a 65 year interval versus
a 20 year interval earlier in the 20th century. Prescribed burning has
been used in the New Jersey pine barrens by the forest service since the
late 1930’s. Originally used for its effect on stand composition and wildlife
habitat management, it is now practiced to reduce fuel load and the consequent
risk of wildfire.
The area
has been given MAB designation as a reserve as it contains protected and
endangered flora and fauna. It was the first such area in the USA to be
given state protection through a comprehensive management plan that led
to the initiation of the Pinelands Commission as a regulatory body within
the state of New Jersey to oversee development and conservation. A number
of non-profit advocacy organizations exist in the region (Pinelands Preservation
Alliance, New Jersey Conservation Foundation and The Nature Conservancy)
that provide information and public education on the history and conservation
of the area.
Further
reading about the pine barrens:
Boyd,
H. P. (1991) A Field Guide to the Pine Barrens of New Jersey. Plexus Publishing,
NJ.
Forman,
R. T. T. (Ed.) 1979 Pine Barrens: Ecosystem and Landscape Academic Press,
New York.
Collins,
B. R. and Russell, E. W. B. (1988) Protecting the New Jersey Pinelands,
Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick, NJ.
Collins,
B. R. and Anderson, K. H. (1994) Plant Communities of New Jersey: A Study
in Landscape Diversity. Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick, NJ.
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