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Wildlands and Woodlands: ReportsThe Vision Statement
Massachusetts offers an unusual and urgent opportunity for forest conservation. Following widespread agricultural decline in the 19th century, the landscape has reforested naturally and currently supports a wide expanse of maturing forest. Despite its large population, the state has more natural vegetation today than at any time in the last three centuries. With its extensive forests supporting ecosystem processes, thriving wildlife populations and critical environmental services for society, there is a great need to protect this landscape for the future. However, this historic window of opportunity is closing as forests face relentless development pressure. Despite decades of forest protection by state agencies and private organizations, patterns of land conservation and forest management are inadequate to meet future societal and environmental needs. Large areas of protected forestland are uncommon, conserved forests are largely disconnected, important natural and cultural resources (including many plant and animal species) are vulnerable to loss, logging is often poorly planned and managed, and old-growth forests and reserves which are isolated from human impact are rare. We urge the people and Commonwealth of Massachusetts to launch a bold, comprehensive initiative to conserve these precious Wildlands and Woodlands and the ecological and social values they possess. Download the ReportDownloads are available in PDF format. 2006 Update for Wildand and WoodlandsThe Wildlands and Woodlands Update highlights recent efforts to achieve the vision first set down by Wildland and Woodlands and to expand its focus beyond Massachusetts.
Report on the Woodlands and Wildlands Conservation Finance RoundtableIn April 2006, the Program on Conservation Innovation at the Harvard Forest convened more than three dozen experts in conservation finance from around the nation to consider innovative mechanisms for financing the Wildlands and Woodlands vision - a vision first articulated by David Foster and his colleagues in 2005. The two-day working session, held at the Harvard University Center for the Environment in Cambridge, MA, yielded several highly inventive approaches to the challenge. The Report on the W+W Conservation Finance Roundtable is available for download. If you would like a hard copy mailed to you, please contact info@wildlandsandwoodlands.org. |