Wilderness -- A Scientific BaselineVermont Land Preserved for Scientific Study
The landowners, who own another 600 acres of forest land that will be preserved, are committed to the rigorous scientific understanding of forever-wild landscapes. Since 1998, a team of ecologists has conducted annual studies on the property of mammals, birds, insects, flora, amphibians and reptiles. The conservation of this property will preserve a baseline for scientific understanding of forever-wild landscapes and help provide linkages to the Green Mountain National Forest and other conserved areas. Ecologist Marc Lapin reported that "Typical low-elevation landscapes—those where people work and live—until recently have not been seen as priorities for conservation, nor, because of their largely disturbed nature, have they been viewed as fertile ground for studying ecosystems and their characteristsics. These low and mid elevation lands, however, are the essence of the Vermont landscape; they are the most abundanct and they are, thus, the most characteristic of the region. Few areas of similar elevation in Vermont are conserved as 'forever wild' lands." Reference: Lapin PhD, Marc, Ecological Assessment, 1998. |