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Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest |
Not
many in India would have heard of Hubbard Brook which, in fact, is an
experimental forest. It is a massive slice of forest of 7800 acres in the White
Mountains of New Hampshire in the US. While the forest has been there since
perhaps the beginning of time the experimental forest came about around 63 year
ago. Located in its own little valley, forested with beeches, birches, sugar
maple and what have you it has spectacular cobalt blue skies and clear streams
that run down to a mirror-like lake. Sounds just like heaven on earth.
While
it is indeed so, a large variety of experiments are also conducted here. With
as many as five dozen collaborators working on numerous projects that are
generally about learning and monitoring the flow of nutrients through the ecosystem,
tracking animal population over time or learning the way the northern forests
would react to drought or climate change, the Experimental Forest has been at
the forefront of several crucial findings. Open to public the Forest has been basically
a place of learning for more than sixty years.
As far back as in 1963 some scientists began
to look at rain samples collected from the forest. They soon discovered that
something was wrong. One of the samples that was collected was as acidic as
vinegar and having almost its pH level. Later they found that the rain was
acidic and eventually their findings revealed the first instance of acid rain
that was traced to industrial pollution. It was the first documentation of acid
rain in America that led to the amendment to the Clean Air Act by George Bush to
specifically address the dangers of acid rain. Since then scientists have
monitored water and air quality and several other variables accumulating
continuous date over decades making the Experimental Forest very valuable from a
scientific perspective.
The
site manager Ian Halm says data of a year or two might be important but it is
the long term data over decades that give a clearer picture to gauge what we,
humans, are doing to the environment. Earlier, he says, when he started it was
all manual work with “strip charts and charts on drums”. He goes on to say that
“now it is all electronic. Every hour data is wirelessly uploaded to the
headquarters”. If something goes wrong Halm says he knows immediately. Every
morning his team checks out the computer screens and ensures things are normal
in the forest. Earlier, in the event of something going wrong one had to hike
up to the spot to check things out. Now, however, if one happened to visit the
Experimental Forest one would find some mysterious things like trees dotted
with tiny metal tags that “jingle like collars of a pack of dogs” but they continuously indulge in transmitting data
Among
about 60 scientists working in Hubbard Brook there is one from the University
of Boston - Dr. Pamela Templer. Her team uses snow shovels and
heating cables to study another important long term trend that may be affecting
the forests and that is climate change. She said the idea was to create
conditions that the forests are likely to encounter in the future. Her studies
have predicted that the North East of US may warm up by as much as 10 degrees
Fahrenheit which would mean a warmer growing season and less winter snow.
By using the buried cables like
underground space heaters to warm the soil and by manually clearing the
overground snow Templer is “simulating warmer future world”
According
to Templer, “Forests provide a whole suite of wonderful resources for us,
including clean water, clean air, habitat for animals and plants. We need to know
how they might change in the future if we want to preserve and manage them.
Whether through logging, urbanization and climate change humans have been making
an impact. Now we need to understand the true extent of it, and the Hubbard
Brook Experimental Forest is one place to find out”.
One
wonders whether such experimental forests have been created in this country where
trees and forests are apparently not priority areas for the governments. Forests are there for the mere asking and permission is given to clear-fell them.
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