Jump to Navigation
Home
youngforest.org

Search form

What is young forest?

April 30, 2012 — cfergus

Basically, it’s young trees and shrubs growing together densely. Young forest can be an old field coming up in saplings, a wetland thick with shrubs, or trees springing back on a wooded tract after a timber harvest. For a non-technical guide to making young forest habitat, consult the Young Forest Guide published by the Wildlife Management Institute.

  • Log in to post comments
  • Home
  • The Project
    • The Challenge
    • The Solution
    • How Much is Needed?
    • Wildlife, People Benefit
    • Great Thicket Refuge
    • Who We Are
    • Partners
    • WSFR Funding
    • NRCS Habitat Programs
    • You Can Help!
  • Who Lives There
    • American Woodcock
    • Golden-Winged Warbler
    • Other Birds
    • Deep-Woods Birds
    • New England Cottontail
    • Bobcat
    • Other Mammals
    • Wood Turtle
    • North American Racer
    • Other Reptiles
  • How to Make It
    • Think 5 - 5 - 5
    • Making Habitat Wisely
    • About Invasive Shrubs
    • Best Mgmt. Practices
    • Harvesting Trees
    • Improving Old Fields
    • Cutting Older Shrubs
    • Controlled Burning
  • Habitat Projects
    • New England
    • Mid-Atlantic
    • Midwest
    • Wisconsin YFP
  • Resources
  • News
  • FAQs

You Can Help!

Learn how...

Want to Make Some Young Forest?

  • Contacts
  • Young Forest Guide

Recent News

  • Monterey Lays Out Welcome Mat for Imperiled Rabbit
  • Bees and New England Cottontails
  • Helping Rare Wildlife on a Retired Army Shooting Range

Please visit our other websites

  • timberdoodle.org
  • newenglandcottontail.org
Wildlife Management Institute Logo
Connecticut Audubon Society Logo
Western Reserve Land Conservancy
Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries Logo

More Partners