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Wilts iit = eee j i Hala iay ) == nest TSE erties Stace: $= Sescse SS =< = ctx ie ee = S33 — SS PE ee ; eS wee NATURAL History SURVEY Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign http://www.archive.org/details/brownfieldwoodre 1 /telf Cr i 5 i 3 2 ‘ ; i . A STATE OF ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF REGISTRATION AND EDUCATION DIVISION OF THE NA LURALEISTORY SURVEY FORESTRY CIRCULAR NO. 3 Brownfield Woods: A Remnant of the Original Illinois Forest BY C. J. TELFORD, Forester Illinois State Natural History Survey PRINTED BY AUTHORITY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS URBANA, ILLINOIS February, 1926 nt U. OF ILL. LIB. 1926 ScHNEPP & BARNES, PRINTERS SPRINGFIELD, ILL. SS 45701 ~ = se ; ’ vt hed - P é ‘ ? . , 5 : . * ’ > . BROWNFIELD WOODS: A REMNANT OF THE ORIGINAL ILLINOIS FOREST 3y CLARENCE J. TELFORD, ForRESTER ILt“tino1s STATE NATURAL History SuRvEY “Brownfield Woods” approximates 56 acres of woodland in a nearly virgin condition, situated three miles northeast of Urbana, Champaign county, Illinois. Through the generosity of the owners the public has en- joyed unregulated access to this beautiful woodland, and it is visited by thousands each year. The writer was interested to find a knowledge and appreciation of this woodland to be almost state-wide. Together with the thousands of well-intentioned and appreciative visitors, there is the inevitable minority of vandals whose depredations are changing the con- dition of this unique woodland. Added to this deterioration incident to use, is the possibility that the woodland will be logged off. The survey upon which this article is based was made at the request of the owners to determine the quantity of timber on the area. A survey of the timbered areas of fully 66 per cent of Illinois, covering in detail all but the prairie counties, has disclosed but one other piece of upland timber at all comparable to Brownfield Woods in the number of splendid old forest giants; hence it may safely be described as one of the best upland stands now growing in the state. Splendid as is this remnant, the few persons who retain accurate im- pressions of the original body declare that this remaining wood-lot is scarcely a fair sample of the splendid forest called by settlers, “The Big Woods.” Very few measurements from the original forests of Illinois have been preserved, and with the disappearance of these forests and of the generation which knew them, too frequently there passes all knowl- edge of the monarchs which once grew where, in this later day, grow lesser trees of monotonous uniformity. The upland forests of the state, both second growth and virgin, show a decided variation in composition for different regions. As a broad generalization it may be stated that the forests of the southern part of the state and of the Wabash region show the greatest variety and best de- velopment of species, and that the tendency toward fewer species is evident in progressing northward. Throughout the southern section the original forests were continuous, but in the central part of the state, and to a less extent in the northern, the prairies dominated the uplands, and the forests were belts along the streams. Champaign county is a fairly representative prairie county and the total of these original forests comprised 7 per cent of its area, or 47,659 acres. These forest belts occupied the flood-plains of the streams, and the slopes—often very gentle—between the flood-plains and the prairies. They were rarely more than two miles wide, nor did they usually con- tinue up the stream quite to its source. During the past seventy-five years the forested areas have been progressively cleared. By 1870 the original forest of 47,659 acres had been reduced to 16,780 acres. There 3 4 is a wide variation in estimates of the total area of present woodland: according to the U. S. censts, there are 9,731 acres; the Statem@cep Survey gives 2,173 acres; and the Natural History Survey reports 6,400 acres. Probably not over one per cent of the county now bears any kind of forest. This shrinkage in area of the woodlands of the county has been accompanied by very great changes in their character. The present forests are largely composed of trees which have come up since the set- tlement of the country and, under conditions quite different from those which influenced the character and composition of the virgin stands, they are even-aged and dominantly oak. “The Big Woods” was a much more extensive forest than was usually found near the headwaters of streams in this region. It was situated within ten miles of the source of the Salt Fork of the Vermilion River, at the bend of this stream where in its southern course it is turned eastward by the Champaign morainic system, and occupied, in the general form of a triangle, an area of about ten square miles. The southern side of this wooded area was at about the present Main Street, Urbana, the apex was some five miles up Salt Fork at a point opposite Leverett, and the main upland forest extended down-stream another five miles to a point north of Mayview. These woods were in places three miles across. The eastern boundary of the original forest was about half a mile east of the present woods. The existing remnant of the “Big Woods” occu- pies the S. E. % of Section 34, R.9 E. Tp. 20 N. The general topography of this 60 acres is that of a moderately rolling upland. The most pro- nounced topographic feature is a small valley or swale extending diagon- ally from the northwest to the southeast corner, through which drains an intermittent stream. The total relief between the highest and lowest part is about thirty feet, and the area is thus assured good drainage. If cleared, probably three quarters of it could be cultivated without serious erosion resulting. The soil along the swale, approximating a fifth of the total area of the woodland, has been classified by experts from the University of Illinois Agricultural Experiment Station as a brown silt loam of the prairie; that of the adjoining rolling uplands, as a yellow gray silt loam of the upland timber series. Both the swale and the ad- joining uplands were timbered when the settlers first visited the region. The largest tree on the tract, a bur oak having a diameter of sixty-five inches at a distance of 4% feet from the ground, is growing in this swale. Such a tree requires approximately 250 years to attain this size, and it was probably 150 years old when the first settlers arrived. In view of the discussion among ecologists as to the factors controlling progression of forest in encroaching upon the prairie,* it would appear that an ex- amination and study of the tree and soil relationships in this particular area might be instructive. The Brownfield Woods are of interest as a sample of the type of forest which existed on the uplands of the upper Wabash drainage basin. They are situated in the extreme northwestern margin of this area, yet show the great variety of species which characterize the forests of the Wabash region. The tree associations or types vary somewhat in response to varying moisture conditions of the soil. The uplands and moderate slopes adjoining bear a rich variety in which hard maple is the common- est tree. Along the miniature bottoms elm predominates, but the type lines are not sharply drawn and elm may be commonly found on drier sites. A complete record of the number of tree species in this woodland has never been made. The University Woods, another fragment of the * See (1) in foot-note on following page. bid “Big Woods”, located about a mile and a half southeast of the Brown- field Woods, has been found to contain 31 tree species in the 54 acres of semi-virgin forest. (McDougall (2)*.) In our survey of the Brown- field W oods all trees having a diameter of three inches or more were tabulated, but the specific headings were based upon commercial divi- sions rather than true botanical differences. Thus all ashes were listed under, ash, all white oaks under the single heading of white oak, the black oak group under red oak, etc. Listed in this manner, there were seventeen different groups of species, but a complete botanical survey would doubtless reveal nearly double this number of tree species. A unique feature of Brownfield Woods is the splendid dimensions - of occasional trees. The Lower Wabash in former years held huge trees, the largest broad-leaves on the continent. A few huge sycamores yet stand, stag-headed and isolated, too enormous for our energetic axemen to fell; but of those giants which stood as neighbors—magnificent tulips, pecans, sweet gums, ‘and oaks—we have only records. Yet in this ex- tremely outlying fragment of 56 acres of the Upper Wabash forest there are 36 trees attaining a diameter from three to five feet at a point 4% feet from the ground. There probably does not exist in [linois, or on our continent even, another upland area with such a variety of great hardwood trees. Included among these thirty-six monarchs are ashes, elms, and oaks. One of the largest trees in the woods is the bur oak already mentioned, with a diameter of 65 inches and a height of 104 feet; and another, with a diameter of 45 inches, has a height of 112 feet. These are not large trees as contrasted with those which have dis- appeared, yet we have record of but one larger living oak in the state, and no record whatever of so many large oak, elm, and ash in a single wood-lot. The actual number of trees present per acre (115) is low as com- pared with the average of the all-virgin upland stands studied in the state (146); but the average diameter for the Brownfield trees is 12.7 inches as against 10.9 inches in the virgin upland stands in general. The loss is in the low diameter classes. An examination of the last column on page 9, which shows the total of all species for each diameter, brings out the fact that there are fewer 3- and 4-inch trees than in either 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, or 10-inch classes. In a normal virgin forest by far the greater number of trees are always in the smaller-diameter classes. Brownfield Woods, in its larger-diameter class of trees, conforms to this rule, their number increasing with reasonable regularity as the diameters diminish, but from the 6-inch class down to the 3-inch the number of trees rapidly diminishes. There are two possible explanations: either (1) for the past forty years the use of the woods by man and cattle has destroyed the reproduction, and if continued will ultimately result in the complete destruction of the woods; or (2) it is possible that the forest was more open than now some forty or fifty years ago, offering light conditions which favored the establishment of seedlings, and that fires or grazing prevented the establishment of seedlings for a time, after which the somewhat open forest was not burned or grazed. Thus there would become established a great number of trees which have now grown to sapling and pole-wood size and have so thoroughly occupied the space *McDougall, W. RP. (1) Forests and Soils of Vermilion County, Illinois, with special Ref- erence to the Striplands. Ecology, Vol. VI, No. 4, p. 376. Oct. 192)5. (2) Symbiosis in a Deciduous Forest. Botanical Gazette, Vol. 73, No. 2. March, 1922. 6 Bur Oak, 65 inches in diameter and 105 feet in height. “Woods”. The monarch of the i that younger trees have not been able since then to persist in numbers. If this is the case, when the stand opens up again the normal number of smaller trees will become established and the forest is in no danger of destruction through lack of regeneration. In support of this latter as- sumption is the fact that the stand as a whole seems vigorous and the crown canopy dense, and here the condition of relatively few small trees prevails; but along a strip through the center of the stand where there was formerly a highway, seedlings and small trees have come in until the old road is now choked with them. Perhaps the most interesting fact brought out in the tabulation is the relative abundance of the species which make up the stand. There are actually almost as many hard maple trees present—49%—as all other species combined, but this preponderance of maple is only found in the smaller-diameter classes. If we use 13 inches, the diameter of the aver- age tree of the stand, as an arbitrary dividing line, maple composes 62% of the total number of trees from 3” to 13” inclusive while it makes up but 17% of the total number of trees of 14 inches and up. Thus maple is assured a heavy representation in this forest a hundred years hence merely by the great numbers of young trees now present, but its dominant place in this future stand is doubly assured because maple is the most tolerant tree growing in this region. It can grow where shade is too dense for any of its neighbors, and when a forest becomes dominantly of hard maple and is undisturbed by cyclone, grazing, fire, or heavy cutting —all accidental forces which suddenly destroy the adjustment of a forest to its environment—it remains hard maple. This woods is on the point of reaching the final state of its evolution or climax type for the region. As a forest it has been on the road to this maple type for hundreds and probably thousands of years, during which the prairie has given place to elm, hackberry, soft maple, then oaks and hickories, and now hard maple. This is but a tiny division in the great sequence of changes of the plants of this region. Ages ago palms and figs flourished in these lati- tudes; waves of magnolias, sequoia, sassafras, and gums were succeeded by spruce and balsam as the temperatures dropped preceding the ice age. When the ice sheets finally receded, these gently undulating prairies were almost immediately clothed by grasses, but the forests gained the slopes and stream bottoms, and from this vantage they were gradually extending their areas. Thus the “Big Woods” might in time have covered a great area. Our civilization has not been here a century when there remains of the “Big Woods” nothing suggestive of their sturdy trees but this 56 acres. There are oaks and maples here which in the first of their three centuries of existence have doubtless sheltered elk and bison, have stood while the bison, the elk, the Indian, and the turkey vanished before our race, and today are as unusual in Illinois as would be these vanished forms if they were to return. Brownfield Woods can be de- stroyed in about three months as a sawmill operation, but there would not be seen another such forest in Champaign county in 300 years if we started to build it today. 8 STAND TABLE OF BROWNFIELD Woops. TREES *D.B.H.—Diameter Breast High (41%’). eee c Ash Basswood Elm owe Red oaks ee Hagia es 3 .09 .02 38 SOS here evotechs .02 16 4 BY aly .61 ALSO) Sea eens 05 04 5 .36 oll iL ail 6.70 07 04 02 6 55 .70 IL By7/ 8.60 20 07 Aika 7 81 BY) 1.41 6.40 16 oli 05 8 70 39 1.30 4.80 16 16 16 9 .96 .68 1.80 5.30 .20 18 14 10 .84 57 1.16 4.20 23 39 04 ii 57 Al 15733 2.80 29 16 .05 ee .64 Dil 1.04 2.40 Bl 14 12 12 54 sll iil 1.80 Bil olla 12 14 soil 50 1.09 1.88 .64 14 04 15 .32 54 .89 1.09 5083 OF 09 16 9) 34 81 Bille 46 sili .05 17 21 aS .70 BOW, {Hil .20 05 18 45 46 82 1 61 04 .04 19 23 PAT 45 Hil 50 2 Hiall 20 2 39 50 16 46 02 09 21 29 27 eS 18 34 16 14 22 il Bll a2 .05 38 pale) 2 23 Bil .20 04 14 29 Alt 14 24 All pile 18 05 4 16 09 25 09 09 29 05 23 07 07 26 16 04 23 Jul Jal otal 09 27 ale |S 2 het, fee a 14 .09 12 04 02 28 05 04 07 07 .07 alll .02 29 05 04 SU) Sai |ekees se ce 05 09 02 30 07 02 07 04 .05 07 02 Bil 577m | poe eer seers 04 .05 04 07 02 Be LO 2a ee ee 05 05 .02 07 02 33 AO Dol anc rete eee [OAN S\y eae ee el pt mea 04. ).vhyeheeeeene SANS Ol gers, axe colle ce Pea LOT eee 1020 Niweinlc 64a. | eee 35 LOZ Uvcususeaton AD Dia = Sokler nu teen eee 02° (|. ae SORE Gleekacks cel eee eerie || Ceara Gaeilge en | Aenea 09" | nce eee (i een [lroeeste meee bt: een Oe OD. |i s.o8ahaernl| Aue oe fella Sei eee 38 £025 Slee eee eceraes 02 ee ee 02 04 >" |. Speer BOL © lee eeaes | toe 75 een AO ie all a erecceons eneg |) eee eee ae 02 "~ | aoa aero 71 Us ete om SEN ee aoe ces Gill: o Gaara aes meena anny Cyn Cem DR 04 ||. eae AS out ae, SEE esa ra (0.28 eS peel ee Ol. |... AD Se Ears een | er eee ieee BO Be teh ines eee ee cee 02. || S.aceeeee ASE AS Wl debate: Srsuchanlh een eee | ener eae co ee eas |e any ee 05 «| See AA Ree Well See Ai ee he eee = Ui | ee a teh 2 oo eee ne 05) Viste ADS sh lfiraxade C515) cl Bead ane oct Mo ec eae areal ce a | ee eS 102. -\|.2..2 eee cM eee cers eee erty eae ee rel ed PR Pk ee ee oe ATR ec tebet ce Sa eee OT WlCeewketane-scee |) cocue-cy ceehedtel [oes otek saat enone eaten ASI A) idline eben w ee tiees [esate ete ae a Baal eT ra | eee ne 02..." See UE Men Neco cies orien erent ale: ankaloa all pueden e Q2P> lid astern fecal eee DAs? lbeg epee rcieu| ipa erersho Beet ell eee ec che | ec ea oer 040 ly Re eee ee eo eed Per ee eC oom des (eee bene ee O2= 2h cee aoe Total 10.64 8.48 20.61 56.38 7.94 Bee 2.25 Per cent 9.3 7.4 17.9 49.0 6.9 3.4 1.9 PER ACRE. BASED ON 56 ACRES. 9 OcTOBER 1925 Honey | Black | Coffee- locust walnut tree Hickory | Buckeye| Butternut U2 02 05 Mulberry Total 02 4.37 02 04 02 5.72 04 07 05 8.96 09 02 12.10 0.9 02 9.60 05 8.04 14 9.65 .29 8.02 04 5.71 05 5.33 07 4.60 05 5.06 02 3.88 3.06 2.59 2.92 2.09 2.07 1.80 1.65 1.63 2 93 85 54 43 84 4 24 23 10 eae wrod a geiuaiie, Csi Hiel th. vel aiieel(ey)|)e! *) =| (el a) es cman .09 .06 09 05 10 04 04 .09 06 ts femme coum tia fe wll «Mire! fel alraet |)*le eiie) ae in) o Saiicr, CC CRC MON et Say ONCE Tir eC RC TEC | Clean nc) s)altq (a) (ov ieibelcsite hae) ee) Oe) lias) Jes a muon) a) ss \)ls, 6. eles 0: |\*, =*\e\\* (ee, 0 @ «= CCC Cs Ce ee CC 2 et see ewe eee elena sees elt tee cee ww o oh tt A 10 TABULATION OF ALL TREES 3 INCHES AND UP IN *D.\.B.H.—Diameter Breast High (41%’). D.B.H.* Ash | Bass | py Hard Red | White | Hack- | Honey | Black In. wood maple| oaks oaks | berry | locust | walnut 3 5 1 21 HORM este ks 1 9 hee 1 4 22 i 34 PoC Naat cae 3 2 1 1 5 20 17 68 373 4 2 i 2 6 31 39 88 480 11 4 Cae 3 7 45 22 79 358 9 6 3 2. Sa 8 39 22 73 267 9 9 9 1 2 9 54 38 101 294 11 10 8 1 ae 10 47 ap 65 233 13 22 2 5 if iil 32 23 69 156 16 9 3° ae 4 12 36 29 58 133 18 8 fi il i ie 30 17 62 103 17 6 a 3 ae 14 29 28 61 105 36 8 2 3 ri 15 18 30 50 61 41 4 5h. Ins 5 16 22 19 45 41 26 6 Wales. 4 17 12, 22 39 18 29 11 3 if 6 18 25 26 46 ay 34 2 2 ee 5 19 13 15 25 1 28 7 6 1 4 20 22 22 28 9 26 1 5 2) ea 21 13 15 22 10 19 9 8 3 2 22 7 17 ie 3 21 i i |e 2 23 a7 11 19 8 16 12 lee. - 24 ie 7 10 3 19 9 5 it 1 25 5 5 16 3 13 4 4 1 i 26 9 2 13 6 6 6 5 \es2 ose oT Gilles 8 5 i 2 i 1. ae 28 3 2 4 4 4 6 1 Wee 29 3 2 Mine ee 3 5 1. |o.ke ae 30 4 fl 4 3 4 1 |. ae 31 ig ae eee 2 3 2 4 1 |. 2 32 iat eee et 3 3 1 4 1 |e a 33 Tpllect se. Dols tae, ail gic aes 9 Vo celal ee ee BAY Sale eon eae wees il rere! i oe en 35 ES |e SER UAE petra Ss Sera qo oe ees DG es Salle rayascs Se | eaten ees | RA Angee Bo lls. it cnilog ee Sede tlre eal linear Boll. Sec aM haces lace ll ly See eee 38 cea Meme Hl ge agers 1 2 Sense. Glace oon ee Ce (es Salleeeay er DRC Fem all eterna te 1° |. ol... s| ee ee ae) PERE e ep eent | etare @ _ |eareeremy min ipeoe DQ Nex nas eal ee ee Ail “Cee ie ts pene e ee iL, | See eG aera ee Pre ee... AD) ihlWeabes Thales , | | Seether Rea eny | a SOs 5 Sian | Meee Sa ee ar. ae Sal” “ree Se) oeasd oe, eee EGG Ry ee er il | a eee aa a ee Me AS): SENS anise Salle cat, ces ia | eae Ne a [eel | Smee el ee ae eT BB OY ccass ccaisn Wendie be | a eae oneic lioeae dk Soars scp | eave ae eel | CR? reren et ararr i eee ene een ae eR CM Bee es ee Pe eet gees, |Past Ll coe eral S. 02 oe eee ie Pee ae Pe ee sae ee. AC Pal sete oie] Serok Rae | eae ee BAR a IS, cevatiell ag eeeude ic Bae es Alen eee D..) [paw eae eee G5 (sac. Se tio eben Hane ol eee { Fgie alos oes eee Total 596 471 1153 | 3146 | 445 220 126 27 al 11 DIAMETER ON THE 56 ACRES OF BROWNFIELD Woops Coffee- tree Hickory | Buckeye Butter- nut Judas- tree Mul- berry Cherry eee ee ee ee et twee H ee ee eee ee FA] OU] Co] FA] Co] FH! CO] |] CO] DO] OB] CO] CO] OT] OT) BB] DO! CO see eee 13 Ce ee eee wee oy wl euel mie! © |\ cele