ACE Basin National Wildlife Refuge Forest Inventory and Carbon Stock Analysis
Abstract
The ACE Basin National Wildlife Refuge (NWR) is 11,815 acres of critical wildlife
habitat in South Carolina’s Lowcountry region. The Refuge contains a mosaic of forest
types, including upland pine and hardwood, bottomland hardwood, and cypress-tupelo
swamps. Periodic forest inventories serve to update Refuge managers on current forest
conditions and identify areas outside of desired forest conditions. Desired Forest
Conditions (DFC) are defined forest composition and structure metrics representing
critical wildlife habitat. Active forest management, including thinning and prescribed
fire, is often used on NWRs to meet DFC metrics, and thereby promote and enhance wildlife
habitat. This project consisted of a 10-week forest inventory field assessment of
ACE Basin NWR to evaluate current forest conditions in relation to DFC metrics. A
subsequent analysis quantified how potential forest management activities to achieve
DFC metrics would affect carbon stocks. Project findings suggest that most Refuge
forests are outside of desired conditions and require a suite of management activities
to achieve optimal wildlife habitat. These activities, however, will reduce forest
carbon stocks and this project suggests forest management practices that may address
these tradeoffs.
Type
Master's projectPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24056Citation
Murphy, Mary Carlton (2021). ACE Basin National Wildlife Refuge Forest Inventory and Carbon Stock Analysis. Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24056.Collections
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