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Maple-Basswood forests <br />OF Hennepin county : <br />A Threatened habitat <br />June 1995 <br />1#^ ne-hundred fifty years ago, Big Woods forest <br />V-/ covered close to one-half of Hennepin <br />County. Today the forest persists only in isolated <br />patches. Unless actively protected, these small <br />remnants are likely to be destroyed within the next <br />few years by suburban development. <br />In 1856, when John Brunius and E. N. Darling <br />of the United States General Land Office Survey <br />divided Hennepin County into sections to sell to <br />farmers, railroad companies, and speculators, they <br />recorded that 154,000 acres of land in the county <br />were covered by Big Woods (see map). The Big <br />Woods were moist, shady forests of tall, straight <br />elm, sugar maple, basswood, and red oak trees. <br />In the cool shade beneath the trees grew such <br />distinctive herbs as ginseng, trout lilies, and spring <br />beauties. In 1995, just 140 years after Brunius <br />and Darling surveyed these primeval forests, the <br />Big Woods have all but disappeared from Hennepin <br />County. About 1,100 acres, or less than 1% of <br />the 1850 acreage of Big Woods, remain. <br />The original extent of Big Woods in Hennepin <br />County (shaded), as interpreted by Frances J. <br />Marschner using Public Land Survey records from <br />1853-55. The Minnesota County Biological Survey <br />has found that less than 1% of the Big Woods <br />remains in 1995.Much of the Big Woods, or maple-basswood forest <br />as it is now often called, was cleared for farmland <br />in the early decades of Euro-American settlement. <br />It is hard to give precise figures for how rapidly this clearing took place, although aerial photographs <br />indicate that by the late 1 930s the Big Woods had been reduced to a patchwork of mostly 40- to 80- <br />acre parcels. What is very clear, however, is that in the decades following World War II the remainder <br />of the county’s maple-basswood forest has been steadily eroded by spreading suburban development. <br />In fact, more than 10% of the maple-basswood forest remaining in the county is slated for development <br />within the next few months. <br />While much of rural Hennepin County is experiencing high development pressure, forested sites appear <br />to be especially t^geted because they make shady, secluded and scenic lots for new homes. The <br />ecological distinctiveness of a maple-basswood forest is dependent on its dense, nearly continuous tree <br />canopy. When the tree canopy is fragmented by driveways, houses, and trails, the cool and moist <br />conditions characteristic of the shady interior of the forest are altered. More sunlight reaches the forest <br />floor and the shade-tolerant specie.s typical of the forest are replaced by species more typical of open <br />habitats and forest edges. This forest fragmentation also promotes displacement of native forest shrubs <br />and herbs by aggressive exotic species such as the ornamental shrubs common buckthorn and Tatarian <br />honeysuckle. In addition, fragmentation leads to a decline in the diversity of native forest shrubs and <br />herbs because the smaller populations that remain are more likely to be destroyed by pollution and <br />physical damage. These include herbicide- and fenilizer-laden runoff from lawns and erosion or <br />compaction of soils during construction. The end result of development, even where patches of trees <br />are spared, is conversion of the maple-basswood forest into a degraded woodlot with houses in it.