2013 Research Highlights

Which Tree Species are Most at Risk?
Project CAPTURE helps managers prioritize threatened species for management and conservation

hardwoods.pngA variety of threats, most importantly climate change and insect and disease infestation, will increase the likelihood that a given forest tree species will experience population-level or species-level extinction during the next century. The risk of such outcomes will vary because species differ widely in their physiological tolerances, life-history strategies, dispersal abilities, and susceptibility to pests and pathogens. Prioritizing species and populations for management and conservation activities, therefore, will be a critical challenge for the USDA Forest Service, other federal and state agencies, and nonprofit organizations. To address this challenge, a cooperating scientist with the Eastern Forest Environmental Threat Assessment Center is leading the three-year Project CAPTURE (Conservation Assessment and Prioritization of Forest Trees Under Risk of Extirpation), with collaborators throughout the Forest Service, to determine which forest tree species and populations to target for monitoring, management, and conservation across multiple scales.

Project CAPTURE will train resource managers and scientists to evaluate the genetic resources of forest tree species regionally and nationally through the application of an established prioritization framework. Following this training, these resource managers and scientists will participate in a collaborative process to build expert consensus. This consensus will focus on specific conservation and management objectives of the prioritization process, risk and conservation factors to include in the assessment, and how the framework should be applied to meet the defined objectives.

Right: An eastern hardwood forest


Forest Service Partners/Collaborators: Southern and Pacific Northwest Regions; Forest Health Monitoring Program

External Partners/Collaborators: North Carolina State University (NCSU)

Contact: Kevin Potter, NCSU cooperating scientist, (919) 549-4071, kevin.potter@usda.gov


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