Research Themes 2001-2016

From 2001 to 2016, the NSRC supported Northern Forest research projects placed into one of four research themes.
Search for 2001-2016 projects by Research Theme below.

Theme One. Sustaining productive forest communities: Balancing ecological, social, and economic considerations
    Directed through the University of Vermont
    Contact: Dr. Breck Bowden
Theme One supported research focused on sustainable solutions to the integrated social, economic, and ecological challenges of communities, businesses, and working landscapes in the Northern Forest.  Topics included sustainable forest management, community and economic development, ecological economics and ecosystem services, recreation and tourism, and watershed science and planning. Full theme description

Theme Two. Sustaining ecosystem health in northern forests
    Directed through the University of New Hampshire
    Contact: Dr. William McDowell
Theme Two supported research to improve understanding of the health and productivity of forest and associated aquatic ecosystems in the Northern Forest. Scientific issues addressed primarily involved hydrological and biogeochemical processes in forested ecosystems and surface waters and how changes in these processes affect forest and associated aquatic ecosystems. Full theme description

Theme Three. Forest productivity and forest products
    Directed through the University of Maine
    Contact: Dr. Aaron Weiskittel
Theme Three supported research that quantified, improved and sustained productivity of the products-based economy of the Northern Forest.  Aspects of primary interest included underlying biological processes, management practices, and methods of prediction that influence future wood supplies and forest conditions. Full theme description

Theme Four. Biodiversity and Protected Area Management
    Directed through SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry
    Contact: Dr. René Germain
Theme Four supported research focused on protecting and enhancing the economic and ecological health of the Northern Forest, including jobs, clean water, recreational opportunities, and biological diversity.  Important changes in forestland ownership and the economy require timely consideration of strategies to secure the continuing health of these lands and communities.  Topics included forest biodiversity, conservation, ecological services to society, and protected area management. Full theme description

 

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2013

Jessica Leahy & Emily Silver: Attitudes of Small Woodland Owners Toward Harvesting for Bioenergy Markets
Principal Investigator: Jessica Leahy
Project Award Year: 2013
Colin Beier & Daniel Bishop: Climate Change, Acid Rain, and Insect Defoliation Interact to Decrease Sugar Maple Growth
Principal Investigator: Colin Beier
Project Award Year: 2013
Michael Day: Commercial Thinning Can Reduce Spruce-Fir Recovery from Budworm Defoliation
Principal Investigator: MIchael Day
Project Award Year: 2013
René  Germain: Costs of Best Management Practices for Loggers on Family Forests in the Northern Forest
Principal Investigator: René Germain
Project Award Year: 2013
Gary Lovett: Damage from Invasive Forest Pests Costs Billions a Year
Principal Investigator: Gary Lovett
Project Award Year: 2013
Stephen Shaler & Melanie Blumentritt: Environmental Advantages of Torrefied Wood Pellets Over Coal for Electricity Production
Principal Investigator: Stephen Shaler
Project Award Year: 2013
Jeffrey Benjamin & Patrick Hiesl: Evaluating Use of a Harvester and a Feller-Buncher in 40-Year-Old Forest Stands in Maine
Principal Investigator: Jeffrey Benjamin
Project Award Year: 2013
William Keeton: Forest Ecosystem Management Demonstration Project: Carbon and Methane Responses One Decade Later
Principal Investigator: William Keeton
Project Award Year: 2013
Erin Simons-Legaard: Future Distribution and Productivity of Spruce-Fir Under Climate Change
Principal Investigator: Erin Simons-Legaard
Project Award Year: 2013
Nicholas Gotelli & Allyson Degrassi: Hemlock Woolly Adelgid in Hemlock Forests Affects Small Mammal Communities
Principal Investigator: Nicholas Gotelli
Project Award Year: 2013

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