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Greg Ruark, Assistant Director| Southern Research Station | 200 W.T. Weaver Blvd | Asheville, NC 28804

Forest Watershed Science

Greg Ruark, Assistant Director - Forest Watershed Science

Audio Welcome (mp3)

Welcome to the U.S. Forest Service, Southern Research Station, Forest Watershed Science Area Web page. Hi, I'm Dr. Greg Ruark, an Assistant Director for Research at the Station.

Most forest land in the Southeast is privately held, but increasingly these forests are being converted to other uses at an alarming rate. This results in diminished forest area, increased fragmentation, and the loss of key ecosystem services. Within this same landscape agricultural lands are being farmed intensively, with cropping often extending to the stream’s edge. Riparian forests that once protected water quality and stabilized stream banks have been removed. Layered onto this dynamically changing landscape are population increases, climate variability, episodic natural disturbances, invasive species, and changing markets; all of which can dramatically affect the availability and demand for water resources.

Forest landowners and users are changing as well, bringing a diversity of ideas on what is wanted from forest lands and forest experiences. A wide range of goals from forest ecosystem restoration to intensive forest management are desired by the diversity of private forest landowners and public forest users. In an effort to keep forests in forests, landowners are increasingly looking for alternative revenue sources, such as carbon sequestration, wildlife habitat, agroforestry, and biofuels production.   more...

The mission of the Forest Watershed Science area is to improve economic opportunities for forest landowners and to help sustain the provision of clean water, healthy aquatic systems, and freshwater fisheries. We provide landowners, land managers, policy makers, and the general public the knowledge and technologies needed to manage forests and agroforestry systems at local, watershed, and regional scales.

The Forest Watershed Science area is comprised of three Research Work Units. They are:  the Center for Forest Watershed Research, the Center for Bottomland Hardwood Research, and the USDA National Agroforestry Center.

This science area contains about 40 research scientists spanning a wide range of disciplines plus technicians and administrative support staff. Employees from the three research work units are deployed at 11 locations in eight states. They work in partnership with other scientists and natural resource managers in Federal, State, and local agencies, universities, and non-profit organizations to conduct research and develop technology on a broad suite of topics.

Thank you for visiting the Forest Watershed Science Web page. It is our hope that it will connect you with useful information about the work we do.

 


Forest Watershed ScienceForest waters (upland forests, working forest and agricultural lands, functioning wetlands, bottomland forests, and their components) will be increasingly relied upon to provide clean and dependable water to support aquatic ecosystems and satisfy the demands of a rapidly growing human population in the South. Water Science will provide the knowledge and tools required to manage the full range of forest water resources in a dynamic and complex landscape. Complete Charter...

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Map of Science Area: Forest Watershed Science
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