Forest Society of Maine

Your land trust for Maine's North Woods.
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Maine’s North Woods is a bird sanctuary. Let’s keep it that way.

May 7, 2024 By Annie

A new study makes it clear that our state’s undeveloped, unfragmented forests should not be lost.

By Karin R. Tilberg, Forest Society of Maine President/CEO. Published in the Portland Press Herald.

This time of year, I wake up and almost immediately begin identifying bird songs. When traveling, I listen to bird song tapes. I keep binoculars nearby.

Spring and songbirds go together and bring enjoyment and awe to many across Maine. What may not be well known is that a large portion of Maine’s North Woods has been deemed an “Important Bird Area” of global significance (Northern Forest Block) for migratory songbirds by National Audubon. The vast undeveloped interior forests are critical as habitat for birds.

Dr. John Hagan led a team of researchers in a recent replica of an extensive study of birds and forestry conducted 30 years ago, published last month. The research was prompted by the deeply troubling fact that North American breeding bird populations have declined by an estimated three billion individuals, or almost 30%, since 1970.

Habitat loss and degradation are considered the primary drivers of declines.

Maine’s commercial forest landscape is the largest contiguous tract of intact (non-developed) forest east of the Mississippi and forms the heart of the largest globally significant Important Bird Area in the lower 48 states. Species such as the Red-eyed Vireo, White-throated Sparrow, Golden -crowned Kinglet, Black-throated Green Warbler, and many others depend on this area for part of their lives. Hagan and his team asked, “What role does this ten-million-acre area play in regional and national scale bird conservation today?”

They wondered how changing ownership and harvesting patterns over the past 30 years may have affected bird populations – positively or negatively? Given the alarming backdrop of national declines in many forest birds, the researchers were surprised to find that 33 (70%) of the 47 species studied showed increases in abundance in the last 30 years. There was also an increase in the number of birds in each research plot from the 1990’s to 2020’s – a 37% increase.

This increase in bird density is the main story to emerge from replication of the 1990s study.

In fact, Dr. Hagan summarizes that the North Woods are serving as a “bird sanctuary” for the nation, supporting National Audubon’s IBA designation.

More research is needed to understand all the forces at work, and some species showed declines in population, but an essential underlying message of the work is that Maine’s undeveloped, unfragmented forests should not be lost.

The Forest Society of Maine, along with many other organizations, is working with willing forest landowners to ensure just that. FSM negotiates and then holds conservation easements in perpetuity that prevent development and fragmentation of large tracts of forest – now one million acres and counting.

In fact, 91% of FSM’s easement acreage lies within the National Audubon Important Bird Area, and state and other NGO conservation lands add to the conservation effort in this IBA.

There are so many benefits that flow from Maine’s uniquely intact forested landscape – work opportunities, locally sourced wood products, carbon sequestration and storage, outdoor recreation, clean water, and fish and wildlife habitats. Let’s celebrate the good news that Maine’s forests are providing habitat for millions of songbirds as they herald spring and renewed life. This new study is proof that our land conservation efforts are working.

Filed Under: Blog

Give thanks for the forest and the ocean

December 27, 2023 By Annie

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Scammon Ridge: Conservation can help nature weather forces of change in Maine

September 13, 2023 By Annie

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Hidden Benefits of Maine’s Forests

May 31, 2023 By Annie

The following was published in the Bangor Daily News Outdoors and Adventure magazine in April 2023. Click the article to enlarge.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Maine Voices: Our forests offer a valuable buffer against climate change

November 2, 2022 By Annie

The Forest Society of Maine’s President/CEO Karin R. Tilberg wrote an op-ed for the Portland Press Herald discussing the importance of conservation in Maine’s forests to climate resilience. Here is what she had to say.

Our thoughts are with the millions of people suffering from the force and fury of recent hurricanes, especially those who have lost loved ones. Because the intensity of the storms is determined largely by the temperature of the ocean waters, a warmer climate causes the storms to be stronger and to travel farther north, in our case along the Atlantic coast. Actions we take in Maine can contribute in a small way to limiting the rate of global warming and the resulting intensity of storms including hurricanes. How is this so, and can we do more?

Maine’s North Woods, extending for nearly 12 million acres, are the largest intact forests east of the Mississippi River. Maine’s forests cover more than 90% of the state, and they take in a massive amount of carbon – a process known as sequestration. Scientists at the University of Maine estimate that Maine’s forests sequester nearly 70% of the carbon dioxide emitted in Maine every year.

In its 2022 report, the Maine Climate Council listed the many efforts underway to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions. If emissions are reduced sufficiently, Maine’s forests could sequester the equivalent of all the greenhouse-gas emissions generated in Maine. This is true only if we ensure that the forests in our state remain intact, healthy and productive. For this reason, the Climate Council endorsed a goal of conserving 30% of Maine lands by 2030 in its Maine Won’t Wait climate plan.

In fact, the plan earned the 2022 Resilience and Sustainability Award from the American Planning Association as the premier state climate plan in the country. The council’s report points to forest conservation easements as one of the most effective tools to reach this goal. The easements are important to our state, because a large proportion of them maintain the land as working forest, with the specific goal of sustaining our long-standing forest-based and recreational industries and jobs.

In the last few months, several significant forest conservation achievements have been celebrated: Nearly 30,000 acres were conserved through the efforts of the Forest Society of Maine and partner organizations, and 27,000 acres were acquired by the Appalachian Mountain Club. Numerous other projects across the state have added acreage to this year’s tally. This pace of about 60,000 acres per year of conservation, while stunning, must grow in the next eight years to reach the goal of 30% of Maine in conservation by 2030. This is achievable, and conservation efforts in Maine can help to mitigate the effects of climate change.

The link between forest conservation and forest productivity here in Maine with the intensity of storms and hurricanes in places like the Gulf Coast may be indirect and appear small on a global scale. Nevertheless, this is yet another case in which Maine’s motto, “Dirigo,” symbolizes our leadership. We are connected across the globe by what we do by deed and by example here in Maine. Forest landowners, the state, and conservation partners who welcome and pursue conservation easements can help to make a difference.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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Moose Crossings & Salamander Migrations

May 1, 2025

Mark your calendars! FSM is partnering with the Bangor Public Library to host the second in a series of … [Read More...]

Blog Posts

  • Drinking Water Week May 9, 2025
  • Moose Crossings & Salamander Migrations May 1, 2025
  • Magalloway Lands & Waters March 18, 2025

Conserved Lands

  • Alder Stream
  • Amazon – Musquash
  • Amherst Mountains Community Forest (AMCF)
  • Attean Pond
  • Bald Ledge, Bickford Hill, and Bickford Pond
  • Big Spencer Mountain
  • Boundary Headwaters
  • Branch Lake
  • Caribou Bog
  • Chandler Hill
  • Coburn Gore
  • Corner Pond
  • Debsconeag Lakes
  • Eagle Lake
  • Fish River Chain of Lakes
  • Fourth Machias Lake
  • Grafton Forest
  • Greenwood Ponds
  • Gulf Hagas – Whitecap
  • Haynes Brook
  • Hopkins Pond
  • Kennebago Forest
  • Little Big Wood Pond
  • Mattawamkeag River
  • Monson Pond
  • Moosehead Lake Shoreline
  • Moosehead Region
  • Moose River
  • Nicatous Lake
  • Nickerson Tree Farm
  • No. 5 and No. 6 Mountains
  • Reed Forest
  • Scammon Ridge Headwaters
  • Silver Lake – Pleasant River
  • Skitacook Lake
  • Sysladobsis Forest
  • Tearmunn Hardwoods
  • Timberdoodle Hill
  • Violette Brook Reservoir
  • West Branch of the Penobscot River
  • York Hill

Forest Society of Maine

209 State St, 2nd Floor
Bangor, Maine 04401
(207) 945-9200
info@fsmaine.org

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