Ecological Restoration
When the Lake George Land Conservancy establishes a
preserve, ecological restoration is often needed to help restore areas of the
property to a more natural state and to help re-establish the natural processes
that should occur. Methods that have been employed to assist the restoration
include the planting of native trees in former logging landings and gravel pits,
hydroseeding the same areas, and controlling invasive plants.
With the help of volunteers and
local school groups, native tree seedlings have been planted to help give
natural forest succession a boost in areas that have been scarred by past
activities. Tree species that have been planted include eastern hemlock, red
oak, green ash, shagbark hickory, and red-osier dogwood. Once planted, tree
tubes are placed over the trees to prevent damage from wildlife, and netting is
placed over the tops of the tubes to prevent birds from flying into the tubes.
Without the netting, a bird may fly down into the tubes, but the tubes are not
wide enough for the birds to extend their wings and fly out, resulting in the
bird being trapped.
With the help of the Warren County Soil and Water
Conservation District, two sites protected by the LGLC, the Gull Bay Preserve
and the Cat and Thomas Mountains Preserve, were hydroseeded with seeds of native plants.
These two areas were previously used as gravel pits, and are susceptible to
erosion because the ground cover has been removed. At the recommendation
of botanists, a mixture of herbaceous plants (fox sedge, Canada wildrye,
switchgrass, Virginia wildrye, and sand lovegrass) were mixed with mulch and
lime and sprayed over the bare ground.