What Is An Early Successional Habitat?

Early-successional habitat is a young forest made up of small, dense tree and shrub stems with an open canopy. Each phase of succession is categorized by the specific vegetation and wildlife found at a given place. Very few forests manage to evolve into mature forests because of disturbances. A distrubance can be something as simple as mowing your lawn, where you are essentialy preventing that land from reverting back to its natural state by continuously cutting it. Other disturbances may be: ice storms, wind damage, flooding, or drought, to name just a few. Here at the Audubon Center, small sections of land are cut (disturbed) every 7-9 years to ensure the continual availability of early-successional habitat.

Why Early-Successional Habitat Important?

Two hundred years ago, Vermont was full of fields ideal for ground nesting and foraging birds. But after many farms were abandoned around the turn of the last century, these fields grewback into a wooded landscape. Although the abundance of mature forested areas is good for many wildlife species, for the birds that depend on early-successional habitat, development of young forests into more mature forests means they're getting squeezed into fewer and fewer places. At the Audubon Center, maintaining enough early-successional habitat to support breeding populations of species such as chestnut-sided warblers is an important management goal.

Birds in the Early Sucessional

When we returned to the Early Successional this spring, we found evidence of many different birds.
Some of these included:
Yellow warbler
Common yellow-throat
Black-throated green warbler
American robin
Ovenbird 
Black-capped chickadee
Red-eyed vireo
Wood thrush