Southern Research Station Headquarters - Asheville, NC
Main Logo of Southern Research Station, Stating: Southern Research Station - Asheville, NC, with a saying of 'Science you can use!'
[Images] Five photos of different landscape

Congressional Corner

For an in-depth look at State-by-State summaries & forest facts:





Forest Facts

  • total forestland area = 1,251,700
  • total timberland area = 1,161,000
    • softwood area = 217,300
    • hardwood area = 715,400
  • national forest system = 352,292
  • private lands = 1,100,000





Small logo of the USDASmall logo of the Forest Service Shield


Nebraska

[Photo] Nebraska and the Research Work Unit Locations

 

More Water Quality per Buffer Buck: Using Soil Surveys to Guide the Placement of Water Quality Buffers
Data Query Tool for Invasive Plant Inventory on FIA Plots
Timber Product Output (TPO) in the South in 2005

More Water Quality per Buffer Buck: Using Soil Surveys to Guide the Placement of Water Quality Buffers
The landscape-scale water quality benefits of establishing vegetated buffers, like riparian forest buffers, around cropland will accrue to a greater extent if they are applied on sites having greater buffering capability than if they are applied evenly across the landscape.
...more..

Data Query Tool for Invasive Plant Inventory on FIA Plots
In 2001, the SRS Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) program started systematically surveying FIA plots for the presence and relative abundance of more than 25 non-native invasive plants.
...more...

Timber Product Output (TPO) in the South in 2005
The South’s forest industry is a multi-billion dollar economic engine that employs hundreds of thousands of employees across the region.
...more...

Examination of Differences between African American Visitation to National Forests in the South and Hispanic Visitation to National Forests in the Southwest Southern Biofuels Assessment Program Recreation Visits to Wilderness and Primitive Areas
Differences between African American and Hispanic Visitation to National Forests
Recent data from the Forest Service's on-site National Visitor Use Monitoring Survey (NVUM) shows that visits made by African Americans
...more...
Southern Biofuels Assessment Program
Woody biomass is primarily a raw material for either structural wood-based composites or as a thermal feedstock for the generation of energy.
...more..
Recreation Visits to Wilderness and Primitive Areas
Station researchers, using data from the Census, the National Visitor Use Monitoring Project, and the National Survey on Recreation and the Environment developed models to examine national participation and use of wilderness and primitive areas for outdoor recreation.
...more...
National Leader in Recreation Research
National Leader in Recreation Research
For over 30 years the Forest Service and the Recreation Research Unit in Athens, Georgia has been a recognized leader in forming partnerships to address needs for information and technology to support better policy and management of public lands.
...more... 
   

Other Accomplishments

  • Providing Tools for Modeling and Reporting Carbon Sequestering in Agroforestry—Studies have been initiated on how agroforestry and other tree-based buffer plantings might be incorporated into carbon accounting tools such as COMET-VR. (read the details)
  • Green Infrastructure Training—Agroforestry embraces the concept of Working Trees- the right tree, in the right place, to provide forest-based ecosystem services valued by landowners and society. (read the details)



























Research Accomplishments in Nebraska

More Water Quality per Buffer Buck: Using Soil Surveys to Guide the Placement of Water Quality Buffers

The landscape-scale water quality benefits of establishing vegetated buffers, like riparian forest buffers, around cropland will accrue to a greater extent if they are applied on sites having greater buffering capability than if they are applied evenly across the landscape. This scientific information must be translated into easy-to-use tools that can accurately identify those critical locations. National Agroforestry Center (NAC) scientists have produced a tool that utilizes readily available USDA-Natural Resource Conservation Service county-level soil surveys to support a targeted approach to the placement and design of water quality buffers. Simple methods were developed from process-based mathematical models for rating soil map units, using information provided in county soil surveys, to identify relatively better locations for placing buffers for controlling sediment and dissolved pollutants in surface runoff and dissolved pollutants in groundwater. These methods also provide estimates of how effective a standard buffer design would be in each location for controlling pollutants in surface runoff. Mike Dosskey (mdosskey@fs.fed.us)
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Data Query Tool for Invasive Plant Inventory on FIA Plots


In 2001, the SRS Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) program started systematically surveying FIA plots for the presence and relative abundance of more than 25 non-native invasive plants. Because this information has been collected regionally, the data have not been publicly available through the national FIA data Web site. However, a new tool that has been made available through the SRS FIA Web site (http://srsfia2.fs.fed.us)/nonnative_invasive/Southern_Nonnative_Invasives.htm) now enables users of FIA data to access data on non-native invasive plant occurrence on forestland by county.  Other details also are provided to enable knowledgeable individuals to map, model, and analyze these regional observations in combination with tree, forest condition, and plot attributes from the national FIA Web site.  Potential users include the US Geological Survey’s National Biological Information Infrastructure and the National Institute of Invasive Species Science, FS Forest Health Protection and other Federal agencies, The Nature Conservancy’s NatureServe, and State and regional exotic pest plant councils. Ray Sheffield (rsheffield@fs.fed.us) and Ted Ridley (tridley@fs.fed.us)
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Timber Product Output (TPO) in the South in 2005


The South’s forest industry is a multi-billion dollar economic engine that employs hundreds of thousands of employees across the region.  In most southern States, forest industry ranks in the top three manufacturers of industrial products.  The southern States account for nearly 60 percent of the Nation’s total timber product output.  The SRS Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) unit and the State forestry agencies across the South have completed the 2005 forest industry surveys for roundwood harvest and consumption in the southern US. The study shows that industrial TPO in the southern States jumped from 8.2 to 8.7 billion cubic feet between 2003 and 2005. Softwood product output was up 6 percent to 6.4 billion cubic feet and accounted for nearly three-quarters of total product output.  In August, the 2005 TPO data was made available at the FIA website, at http://srsfia2.fs.fed.us)/php/tpo2/tpo.php. This information will be used not only by the State forestry agencies but also by forest industry analysts and economists, university personnel, and individuals interested in how the forest resource is being utilized. The annual Southern Pulpwood report for 2005 has been published.  Individual State-level TPO assessments for 2005 will be published during the next FY. Tony Johnson (tjohnson09@fs.fed.us)
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Examination of Differences between African American Visitation to National Forests in the South and Hispanic Visitation to National Forests in the Southwest


Recent data from the Forest Service’s on-site National Visitor Use Monitoring Survey (NVUM) shows that visits made by African Americans to national forests in the South account for very low visitation percentages in the region. This is surprising given that African Americans are highly concentrated in the South, and that both rural and urban black populations live proximal to national forests in several southern States.  In contrast, Hispanic visits to national forests in the Southwest are high, relative to their population proportion. We examined additional national level household data from the National Survey on Recreation and the Environment (NSRE) relating to awareness of Federal lands and management to help understand the discrepancy between Hispanic and Black recreational use of Federal lands.  We hypothesized that awareness of Federal agencies, knowledge of management objectives, and attitudes about user fees would explain Black/Hispanic visitation differences; however, strong differences remained after accounting for these factors. To help understand these differences, more precise data may be obtained from both institutional and personal factors, including regional differences in agency support for visitor diversity; sub-cultural values as they relate to wild land places; and private land ownership in each region for the respective groups. C. Y. Johnson (cjohnson09@fs.fed.us)
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Southern Biofuels Assessment Program


Woody biomass is primarily a raw material for either structural wood-based composites or as a thermal feedstock for the generation of energy. One of the ways energy can be recovered from wood is by a thermochemical process in which wood particles are subjected to extremely high temperatures in an anaerobic environment. This process yields synthesis gas (“syngas”) that is a mixture of methane, hydrogen, carbon monoxide, and carbon dioxide.  Syngas can be used as a gaseous fuel or as the starting material in a secondary reaction that yields liquid transportation fuels such as ethanol, gasoline, or diesel. There exists two basic obstacles to the production of bioenergy from woody biomass:  (1) the lack of information regarding the chemical and physical composition of woody biomass from southern forests and plantations; (2) lack of efficient conversion technologies. Southern Research Station scientists are undergoing an extensive study over the next 5-year period that will investigate three areas of bioenergy research. The first area will be woody raw material characterization, done in conjunction with other work such as forest genetics, tree breeding and physiology research with genomics technology to determine the effects of specific genes and gene combinations on bioenergy traits and overall feedstock performance.  Secondly, we will evaluate the efficacy of various conversion techniques (gasification, pyrolysis, fermentation) in relation to the chemical/physical composition of the woody biomass. Finally, we will evaluate the impact of biomass removals on fuels loading, soil quality, water quality, and forest ecosystem health. Les Groom (lgroom@fs.fed.us)
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Recreation Visits to Wilderness and Primitive Areas


Station researchers, using data from the Census, the National Visitor Use Monitoring Project, and the National Survey on Recreation and the Environment developed models to examine national participation and use of wilderness and primitive areas for outdoor recreation. Their findings corroborated previous studies suggesting that racial minorities, immigrants, urbanites, and females participate less in primitive area recreation. In related work, they examined the relationship between visitation and personal, structural, and psychological constraints to wildland recreation use. Seventeen structural, personal, and psychological constraints related to health, facilities, socioeconomic standing, and other personal factors were examined using regression methods. Results revealed minorities, women, lower levels of income and education, and elderly populations were more likely to perceive they were significantly constrained from visiting wilderness.  Using Census data and estimated models, the researchers projected future participation and use in order to assess recreation pressure on wildlands.  In general, their findings indicate that over the next 40 years, wildland recreation users and use will increase but at a rate less than general population growth.  In fact, per capita participation in wildland recreation is expected to drop more than 15 percent.  Nevertheless, when combined with a nearly 50 percent increase expected in the general population, a net increase in participants of about 25 percent and about a 20 percent increase in wildland site visits annually.  Furthermore, if management and acculturation can influence a reduction in perceived constraints by certain demographics, the increases are likely to be greater. The increase in site visits combined with a dwindling amount of wildland acreage due to development pressures  will present challenges to land managers and to the Agency’s goal of providing  high-quality outdoor recreation opportunities while sustaining natural system quality. J. M. Bowker (mbowker@fs.fed.us)
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National Leader in Recreation Research


For over 30 years the Forest Service and the Recreation Research Unit in Athens, Georgia has been a recognized leader in forming partnerships to address needs for information and technology to support better policy and management of public lands.  This on-going partnership has involved multiple Federal agencies, State associations, private associations and universities.  Projects have included the Federal Estate Visitors Survey, the Public Area Recreation Visitors Survey, the Customer Use Survey, the National Visitor Use Monitoring Survey, the National Recreation Survey, and most recently the National Survey on Recreation and the Environment (NSRE).  The NSRE involves the Forest Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Environmental Protection Agency, the United States Coast Guard, the National Park Service, the Bureau of Land Management, other Federal agencies, the National Association of Recreation Resource Planners, the University of Georgia, the University of Tennessee, and the State University of New York. H. Ken Cordell (kcordell@fs.fed.us)
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Other Accomplishments


Providing Tools for Modeling and Reporting Carbon Sequestering in Agroforestry

Studies have been initiated on how agroforestry and other tree-based buffer plantings might be incorporated into carbon accounting tools such as COMET-VR. Modeling efforts are focused on predicting growth and succession of woody plant species under different climate and management scenarios. Both types of efforts require biomass equations that can accurately reflect these species under the more open-grown conditions found in agricultural settings. The potential to sequester carbon in agroforestry plantings like windbreaks, riparian forest buffers, living snow fences, and center pivot corners is substantial at the state level.
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Green Infrastructure Training

Agroforestry embraces the concept of Working Trees- the right tree, in the right place, to provide forest-based ecosystem services valued by landowners and society. Many agroforestry technologies that were originally designed for farms and ranches can be modified to help communities. This is especially true for issues like storm water runoff, riparian restoration, green space, and wildlife habitat. Agroforestry solutions can readily be applied at the urban/rural interface and in many cases within an urban area. NAC joined with others to provide training to several communities on green infrastructure approaches that focus on the development strategies that retain ecological functions on the landscape.
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