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BIOL 309 Reflection

Sage Church

Throughout the course of this class I have had to utilize many of the skills and concepts I have learned here at Longwood University, as well as learn a few new skills. This course has helped solidify some note taking and test taking skills, refresh biological concepts, as well as to teach me how to broaden my horizon and address papers to a wider audience.  All told this class helped bring together a lot of things for me as a Life Science concentrating Environmental Science major.

First, this was the most I have had to take notes and study in a long while. This was a good wake up call that these are still important skills to maintain. It was also important to do some reading and research, as well as to interpret data, which I also had not had to do much of this school year. This was a very helpful refresher going into having to write all my term papers this past month or so. 

Secondly, I had not taken a normal biology class in almost three years, and all those major biological and cellular concepts can be hard to remember. This class was helpful in that it was basically a built in review of those basic concepts, while expanding on them and applying them to plants.  

The final, and most impactful, thing I learned in this class was how to write a general audience paper. Being a science major all we ever write is scientific papers, and half of my classes my first two years here were focused on teaching us how to write a scientific paper. However, anytime I have to write something else I have to stop and think about it because all I know how to write is scientific articles. This general audience paper was a good learning experience because we were still trying to convey scientific information, just in a more generalized may. 

In conclusion, this was a good class for me to take at this point in my college career to help polish off some of the less thought about skills. This was an important learning experience, and interesting class as a whole.   

General Audience Paper

Sage Church

Trees can’t escape like we can: How natural disturbances affect the lives of trees.

Massive ice storms have rocked the East coast and Texas in recent weeks and everybody knows about all about the vast human impacts of these storms. However, not many people stop to think about how ecosystems, and much specifically plants are affected by these storms, and other natural disturbances. Trees and branches falling over and breaking constantly during and after ice storms, and with the possible increase of large storm events due to climate change it is important to know what kind of lasting impacts they could have on a forest ecosystem. A review article was written on this very topic in Nova Scotia, Canada, focusing on how major natural disturbances affect the trees and the ecology of forests in Nova Scotia. Trees are looked at because they are large and out in the open, and they are the basis of the ecosystems in which they reside. The natural disturbances reviewed for their effects on forest ecosystems in Nova Scotia included, but were not limited to, insect infestations, fire, wind, ice storms, disease, and drought.    

The forests of Nova Scotia are largely pines, spruce, and other conifers with a sprinkling of deciduous trees (trees that lose all their leaves at once, such as most oaks and maples). This makes these forests especially susceptible to spruce budworms and Spruce Beetles (Dendroctonus rufipennis Kirby), pictured below, which can destroy entire areas (Anthony et al., 2020). These beetle outbreaks were actually determined to be one of the worst natural disturbances in Nova Scotia’s forests. Once a stand of trees is infested by these beetles it can be very quickly destroyed. 

One of the other most severe disturbances in this area is lightning damage and fires. Due to the prevalence of pines and spruce in the area there is an increased risk of fire. Humans have also increased risks of fires in many areas because fire is a natural part of the ecosystem and we often prevent it. This leads to a build up in flammable material and increased fire danger. When the balance of the system is tipped like this it can cause issues because there is a fine line between beneficial fires and destructive fires. 

The final major disturbance in the forests of Nova Scotia is wind. High winds coupled with the right soil type, recentness of precipitation, and other factors can be very damaging to trees. It can cause lots of damage to the limbs and branches, but whole trees will also break or fall over in high winds. Some will even be completely uprooted especially if the ground is soft.  Tropical storms and hurricanes are always a big deal, but they can be especially bad here because tropical storms only occur about every four years and hurricanes every seven (Anthony et al., 2020). 

A few other slightly more straight forward and less impactful disturbances are ice storms  and droughts. Droughts can have lasting effects on the forest ecosystem, but if they are not extremely severe they will most likely not  result in a severe die off of trees. Ice Storms can also be very damaging to trees. They break branches and up root whole trees, but it can almost be like a natural pruning of the forest. However, they can cause some large trees to fall as illustrated in the image below.    

This information is vital to the proper management and restoration of our forests. It helps us understand the trends and ebb and flow of the forest system, as well as what needs to be done to help protect the forests from nature disturbances that are intensified by human activity. Disturbances that are more of an anomaly than the norm in an area are more devastating than those that happen more frequently. Therefore, as stated in the review article hurricanes are infrequent in Nova Scotia and cause great harm to the forests of that area. However, ice storms are fairly regular and less harsh on the ecosystem of Nova Scotia. Somewhere like Florida or Texas, or even North Carolina that gets plenty of hurricanes they may not have as great of an impact, but ice storms are a huge shock there. It’s all about balance in forest systems and the more anomalies and severe weather events we have the worse the damages on forests will be. Therefore, even though these are all natural disturbances there are still anthropogenic impacts that intensify them, and it is our responsibility to find the solutions to these impacts. This directly ties back inot climate change, and our efforts to slow and stop the anthropogenic causes of climate change.           

References

Anthony, T., MacLean, D., Neily, P., Stewart, B., Quigley, E., Basquill, S., Boone, C., Gilby, D., & Pulsiferet, M.. 2020. A review of natural disturbances to inform implementation

of ecological forestry in Nova Scotia, Canada. Environmental Reviews. 28(4): 387-414.

Welcome!

Hi, I am Sage Church and I am an Integrated Environmental Science major with a Life Sciences concentration at Longwood University. I also have minors in Spanish and Biology, and I am a member of the Cormier Honors College and the LIFE STEM program. I run Cross Country here at Longwood and I am currently working on research with Dr. Jackson.