Current River Natural Area Celebrating 50 Years in April
by Dan Dees, Susan Flader, and Greg Iffrig
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Some call them primordial oaks, they are certainly old. Dr. Richard Guyette, a dendrochronologist from the University of Missouri-Columbia, has aged white oak trees here at 300-400 years old. Among the many oak species at home in Missouri, white oak is the longest lived. Originally small, only 10 acres, now a much larger 255-acres surrounding the original site will be added to the natural area by the current day Missouri Natural Areas Committee. Here, too, are rare groves of these ancient oaks, many of which are larger, taller, and perhaps older than the monarchs in the original natural area. Most Missouri Natural Areas are islands of natural integrity within an ocean of intense landscape fragmentation. Current River Natural Area is nestled within the largest single piece of land in the state; no other unit of land under public or private ownership is larger. This important natural area, with its long history, is found in an area of more than 90 square miles. Most of this sizeable area is recognized as the Roger Pryor Pioneer Backcountry, part of the L-A-D Foundation’s Pioneer Forest.
Perhaps most telling is what is not here. This may be Missouri’s least threatened natural area. There are no signs of invasive exotic species, no utility corridors, paved roads, flight paths, or any of the effects of urbanization. Even the forests of Pioneer are the most conservatively managed of any in Missouri, the result of more than half-a-century of single-tree selection management. Here, there is high natural integrity amidst a large and primitive, forested landscape.
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Come join us. Come celebrate. Come to walk through a very old forest in the
heart of the Ozarks. For more information you may contact the Foundation’s
office at 721 Olive, Room 1016, St. Louis, Missouri, or call (314) 621-0230.