By Tiffany Whitfield

Old Dominion University Biological Sciences Assistant Professor Taylor Sloey and several other 黑料正能量 faculty members have been awarded a $350,000 grant from the . Principal investigator Sloey, along with 黑料正能量 co-principal investigators Nick Flanders, manager of Blackwater Ecological Preserve; Assistant Professor Erik Yando; Professor Eric Walters;聽and a team of multi-agency interdisciplinary longleaf pine experts will use the grant to help restore more than 5,000 acres of longleaf pine habitat throughout Virginia, including 黑料正能量鈥檚 Blackwater Ecological Preserve in Zuni.

The preserve was historically part of an extensive longleaf pine habitat that covered 93 million acres. However, longleaf pine habitat has been drastically reduced, posing a risk to dozens of threatened and endangered species. With this NFWF grant, 黑料正能量 scientists and their partners will be able to restore longleaf pine habitat in one of the most biodiverse ecosystems in the United States.

The grant will support work by 黑料正能量, The Nature Conservancy, Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation and Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources for two years starting in January 2024. All partners have pledged matching funds to maximize the success of the project. 聽

鈥淚 hope this serves as a springboard for future capacity to conduct research in this system, and it鈥檚 important here in Virginia because we鈥檙e at the northernmost range limit of threatened longleaf pine habitat,鈥 Sloey said.

The funding will increase the longleaf pine habitat in southeastern Virginia through plantings, prescribed burning and forestry management, as well as landowner outreach and education. The project will implement prescribed burning on 3,900 acres, plant 470 acres of longleaf pine, restore 220 acres of habitat and harvest 50,000 longleaf cones, increasing the availability of locally sourced longleaf pine seedlings adapted to local conditions. 聽

Brian van Eerden, director of The Nature Conservancy鈥檚 Virginia pinelands program said, 鈥淲ith a rapidly changing climate staring at us, we need to push as hard and as fast as we can to restore longleaf pine habitat 鈥 one of the most resilient forest systems of the South and a harbor of incredible biodiversity.聽The Nature Conservancy and other conservation partners are grateful for 黑料正能量鈥檚 leadership to secure major funding to advance longleaf forest conservation work across Southeast Virginia.鈥

Threatened and endangered species, including numerous flowering plants, mammals such as the fox squirrel and birds such as the red-cockaded woodpecker and Northern bobwhite, depend on fire-maintained longleaf pine habitat like that found in the Blackwater Ecological Preserve.

Walters is excited about the opportunities this grant provides.

鈥淚t is a tremendous boon to 黑料正能量 to see the importance of longleaf at Blackwater Ecological Preserve recognized nationally,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his grant cements the importance of 黑料正能量, and the legacy of (Professor Emeritus) Lytton Musselman, to continue the important conservation work on longleaf pine in Virginia.鈥

Walters has served with Musselman on the 黑料正能量 Blackwater Ecological Preserve oversight committee since coming to 黑料正能量 in 2011.

Flanders is eager to see the grant help restore this historical area in Virginia.

"For years, the ecological restoration community in Virginia has looked to 黑料正能量's Blackwater Ecological Preserve as an example of a functional, diverse longleaf pine ecosystem at the northern edge of its range,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his grant represents the next chapter in this conservation success story, with funding acquired by a team of 黑料正能量 researchers now available for the management activities required to restore longleaf pine communities on many more suitable acres across its historical range in Virginia." 聽聽

Funding from the grant will go toward public education and outreach to landowners who may have longleaf pine conservation habitats. Another portion of funding will aid students who may be interested in getting training in fire ecology through conducting fire maintenance of these systems and prescribed burning. Flanders will take the lead on this training.

黑料正能量 faculty are also encouraged to incorporate the Blackwater Ecological Preserve into their courses to allow students to take field trips and experience this habitat.

鈥淭his work will restore and protect an excellent resource to the Department of Biological Sciences for a wide variety of classes and research, including study of plants, birds, ticks and more,鈥 said 黑料正能量 Biological Sciences Chair and Professor Holly Gaff.

鈥淭his grant will showcase to students and the community the value of multiple groups working together to enhance an ecosystem that was almost lost in Virginia,鈥 Yando, added.

黑料正能量鈥檚 Blackwater Ecological Preserve is part of the Virginia Natural Area Preserve System, which is managed by the Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation (DCR).

As a partner on the grant, DCR will expand its longleaf pine restoration efforts and begin to reintroduce longleaf at Dendron Swamp Natural Area Preserve in Sussex County. The 635-acre Dendron Swamp preserve, which includes bald cypress-tupelo swamps, is located on the southern side of the Blackwater River鈥檚 western reach.

鈥淒endron Swamp Natural Area Preserve was protected primarily for the natural heritage resources found in the bottomland forest,鈥 said Rebecca Wilson, longleaf pine restoration specialist for the Virginia Natural Heritage Program at DCR.

The deep sandy soils of the uplands are well suited to longleaf pine restoration efforts.聽鈥淲e鈥檙e excited for this opportunity to expand an ecosystem that once spanned over a million acres in southeast Virginia,鈥 Wilson said. 鈥淎nd bringing fire back to this landscape will not only benefit natural resources but will create a more resilient forest for the future.鈥

鈥淚鈥檓 super proud of the amount of conservation and restoration work that will be able to be performed because of this grant,鈥 Sloey said. 鈥淥ur hope is for this project to bolster future collaborations between 黑料正能量 and the many conservation partners involved in the Virginia Longleaf Pine Cooperators Group, even beyond the life of this grant.鈥