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A Crowning Achievement

The Nature Conservancy plants 34,000 native red spruce trees to help bring back West Virginia’s mountaintop forests

The Nature Conservancy completed a major restoration project in the high-elevation forest of West Virginia’s Randolph County this month, planting 34,000 red spruce trees in land that is now part of the Monongahela National Forest.

The trees were planted over a three-week period on the slopes of Mount Porte Crayon, about 30 miles from Elkins. The project was funded by a $250,000 climate adaptation grant from theWildlife Conservation Society and is part of a larger effort by the Central Appalachian Spruce Restoration Initiative to bring back West Virginia’s iconic mountaintop forests.

“These little spruce trees are only about 12-18 inches tall now, but when they’re older they’ll be the foundation of a thriving forest ecosystem,” said Andrea Brandon, coordinator of the Conservancy’s Central Appalachian Program. “This forest serves as a natural stronghold in the face of climate change. It is home to a wide variety of birds, including the Blackburnian warbler, to Virginia big-eared bats, native brook trout and to the threatened Cheat Mountain salamander.”

The high-elevation spruce forest targeted for restoration also provides habitat for the West Virginia northern flying squirrel – an animal that was recently removed from the national list of endangered species after a recovery effort of more than 25 years.

Brandon said less than 10 percent remains of the over 500,000 acres of high-elevation red spruce that once blanketed West Virginia’s high country. The Central Appalachian Spruce Restoration Initiative, a partnership of public agencies and conservation groups created through the leadership of the Conservancy, has re-planted more than 1,000 acres of red spruce over the past few years.

“While we have been making large strides in red spruce restoration efforts and while the squirrel has been delisted it is by no means time to move onto the next thing. It’s going be a continuous effort,” she said.

The land that was replanted is part of a five-year effort by the Conservancy that protected 2,000 acres adjacent to the Roaring Plains Wilderness Area near Dolly Sods and the Conservancy’s Bear Rocks Preserve.

News release produced by The Nature Conservancy.

Filed under: News, Forests, Habitat