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Current Conditions of Camp Sacajawea

Current Conditions of Camp Sacajawea. Group 2 Matthew Dicks Daniel Kaminski Clarissa Spicer Antoinette Spitz. Introduction. Camp Sacajawea is owned and operated by the Moingona Girl Scout Council of Iowa Located on over 400 acres of land bordering the Des Moines River to the west

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Current Conditions of Camp Sacajawea

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  1. Current Conditions ofCamp Sacajawea Group 2 Matthew Dicks Daniel Kaminski Clarissa Spicer Antoinette Spitz

  2. Introduction • Camp Sacajawea is owned and operated by the Moingona Girl Scout Council of Iowa • Located on over 400 acres of land bordering the Des Moines River to the west • Trails/facilities used by 20,000 people per year girlscouts-lonestar.org

  3. Data on recreation, oak regeneration, and wildlife was collected from 56 plots across 148 acres of woodland • Each team collected sets of data from 8 plots • Interpretation of combined results give us an idea of possible management actions Camp Sacajawea TravelByGPS.com

  4. Recreation castlegarrvpark.com birdphotography.com geocities.com glacierguides.com

  5. Recreation Carrying Capacity • High use by Girl Scouts • Evaluated for four activities • General hiking • Primitive camping • Birdwatching and wildlife observation • Horseback riding • Determine optimum carrying capacity for each activity

  6. Distribution of Recreation Values Across 56 Plots

  7. Distribution of Recreation Values Across 56 Plots

  8. Possible Management Actions • Current conditions indicate that Camp Sacajawea is most suitable for general hiking • Maintain and develop hiking trails to encourage use • Increase suitability for other activities by using value criteria as guidelines geocities.com

  9. Oak and Other Desirable Tree Regeneration • 56 systematic 1/20th acre plots • 7 rows with 8 plots per row • 1st plot in each row was placed 2 chains north of southern forest boundary • Each plot was 5 chains north of the previous plot corbis.com

  10. Adequacy of Regeneration • Adequacy of regeneration for both oak and other desirable species is poor • Average of 570 oak seedlings per acre • Average of 3300 other desirable species per acre • Need 5000 seedlings per acre for both corbis.com

  11. Oak Stump Sprouting • A plot percent of 59 requires no stump sprouts for adequate regeneration • Camp Sacajawea’s plot percent is 8.3 & will require more than 250 stump sprouts per acre • Camp Sacajawea is very inadequate for oak regeneration corbis.com

  12. Undesirable Management Methods • Clearcut – seedlings will not be competitive enough in their small numbers • Group selection – openings will not be large enough to reduce shade effects and will result in less oak regeneration than clearcuts corbis.com

  13. Possible Management Actions • Shelterwood – most desirable • Maintain forest appearance for Girl Scout use • Remove understory with some soil disturbance • Good acorn producing year • Remove some large trees • May need nursery plantings corbis.com

  14. Wildlife pictures.fws.gov pictures.fws.gov pictures.fws.gov

  15. Wildlife Habitat Unit Values • Tells you how good the habitat is for a specific species • Range from 1.33-10 points • Many things taken into consideration • Tree size • Canopy closure • Food plant diversity • Cover • Water

  16. Class Avg. & Std. Error of HUV

  17. Possible Management Actions • Maintain a variety of cavity producing trees • Maintain several mast producing trees per acre • Build brush pile to create brood raising habitat for turkey • Keep water quality at healthy levels • Manage for dense cover types as well as opened areas for optimal deer habitat

  18. Conclusion • Current management plan is to take no action • Camp Sacajawea needs hands-on management approach • Highest priority is maintaining appearance and suitability for visitors • Increasing suitability of recreation and wildlife habitat, and adequacy of oak regeneration, are possible long-term goals

  19. Further Considerations • Our purpose in this presentation was to highlight the current conditions of Camp Sacajawea • We will present our recommendations for the camp on Thursday, December 11, 2003 • Our priority will be to combine feasible management actions that will optimize benefits for both human and ecological communities

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