Taylor Park Vegetation Management Project

 

For an interactive map showing the most current 3-year timber sale plan, please refer to the SBEADMR and Taylor Park Story Map. This map will be updated annually. It also serves as a comment platform during our annual 30-day public comment period (generally during late February/March).

Western Colorado University’s Center for Public Lands collaborates with the Gunnison Ranger District of the Grand Mesa, Uncompahgre, and Gunnison National Forests in the facilitation of an adaptive management group and University-affiliated Science Team to compliment the Taylor Park Vegetation Management Project

The Taylor Park Vegetation Management Project is anticipated to be a 10-year project to increase forest resilience and provide wood products for the local economy. Approximately 20,000 acres of lodgepole pine and Engelmann spruce forests in the Upper Taylor River and Spring Creek drainages will be treated.

If you want to be kept informed of future events, communication efforts, or have questions about the Taylor Park AMG and opportunities to engage, please email taylorparkamg@western.edu.

Taylor Park is located in the north-central portion of the Taylor Basin, west of the upper Taylor River and south of Trail Creek on the Gunnison Ranger District of the Grand Mesa, Uncompahgre, and Gunnison (GMUG) National Forests. This area is composed of a mosaic of mature forests, regenerating clearcuts, and regeneration from a 1980’s wildfire in the uplands. Meadows and fens occupy lower landscape settings. Forests are composed of lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta) with a very minor component of Engelmann spruce (Picea engelmanii) and subalpine fir (Abies lasiocarpa).

Summer 2024 AMG Updates

  • The most recent SBEADMR and Taylor Park Vegetation Management Annual Stakeholder Meeting occurred on Thursday, February 15, 2024. View presentations and/or watch the recording here!

  • The AMG met soon after to go through an exercise to evaluate project design criteria for work currently being implemented, which they will put to use in preparation for our next annual field trip.

  • Have questions about the Vegetation Management Project, or want to be involved? Please email taylorparkamg@western.edu! We’re specifically seeking representation from those in the recreation/outfitting and mining industries.

  • We are similarly interested in those who would like to engage with a public outreach-focused subgroup!

The AMG is an inclusive and balanced stakeholder group working to share knowledge of social, economic, and ecological condition and desired conditions within the Taylor Park Vegetation Management Project. The group brings together members of the public, private landowners, local government, businesses, ranchers, water users, conservationists, recreators, and land managers to identify concerns, questions, obstacles, and opportunities raised throughout the life of the project.

 
 
 
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The project area contains abundant populations of the mountain pine beetle, spruce beetle, and dwarf mistletoe, as well as heavy fuel loading — all of which present risks relevant to wildfire incidence and intensity, generation of forests products, and overall forest health. Forests will be treated using commercial harvest, non-commercial harvest, and prescribed fire treatments as appropriate to the site-specific situation.

This project has been designed under an adaptive implementation framework. The AMG and Science Team have worked together with the Forest Service in the Environmental Assessment project design and currently remain engaged in the implementation process.

 

Annual SBEADMR and Taylor Park AMG Meeting 2019

While monitoring will provide information on the project, it can take time for these studies to inform adaptive management strategies, depending on specific questions. As such, monitoring activities are intended to be conducted annually over the duration of the Taylor Park project. The monitoring project will also integrate with parallel efforts on the GMUG forests, such as those conducted by the Spruce Beetle Epidemic and Aspen Decline Management Response team.

Dr. Jonathan Coop’s teaching and research interests revolve around the ecology, dynamics, conservation, and restoration of plant communities and landscapes in the southern Rocky Mountains. He works with students to explore how disturbance regimes, climate, and spatially-structured abiotic gradients interact to shape diversity, community composition, and landscape dynamics, human influences on ecological systems, and management for a future of certain change but of a less than certain direction and magnitude.

Courtney coordinates the Taylor Park Adaptive Management Group, and currently acts as the Lead Field Technician for the AMG Science Team. She enjoys bringing her experience in field ecology to Taylor Park, working with students to hug trees — i.e., measure diameter at breast height. While her work mostly involves baseline sampling following protocols under the Adaptive Silviculture for Climate Change (ASCC) network, she is excited about how new technologies including sensor arrays and imagery from UAV’s can add to our understanding about forests — particularly concerning snowpack and wildlife habitat. Originally from upstate New York, Courtney originally received her M.S. in Ecology with a concentration in Fish and Wildlife Management from Western.

Amy Eaton has a B.A. in Environmental Studies from St. Mary’s College of Maryland and a Master’s in Environmental Management from Western Colorado University. Amy’s work was centered around landscape-scale natural resource management. Specific interests include exploring human-nature interactions, particularly as they relate to Wilderness management, forest health, and sustainable recreation.

Noah Hellmund received a B.A. in Environment and Sustainability and Master’s in Environmental Management degree with an emphasis on public lands management from Western Colorado University. Noah’s work was centered on forest management and adapting management practices to increase resilience to wildfire. Noah has a diverse skill set built on a foundation of Wildland Firefighting and Environmental Education. He has worked in natural resource management for federal, private, and nonprofit entities across 7 different states.

Gabriela Zaldumbide earned her Bachelor of Science degree at University of Wisconsin - Madison where she majored in Wildlife Ecology and received an Environmental Studies Certificate. She then received a Master of Environmental Management degree at Western Colorado University. In the past, she has worked for the U.S. Geological Survey, actively volunteered for the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, and interned for the Wildlife Management Institute. Gabby administered a survey to Taylor Park residents to gauge their knowledge of the Taylor Park environmental assessment and wrote a comprehensive monitoring plan for the Taylor Park forests affected by the assessment.

Additional Resources

+ Taylor Park Adaptive Management Group

During agency scoping, the local community expressed a desire to develop an adaptive management group to amplify and formalize public engagement throughout the life of the project. In early 2019, the Center for Public Lands hosted several community workshops to develop an inclusive and balanced adaptive management group.

Adaptive management is a structured, iterative process that emphasizes learning through monitoring and managing by incremental adjustments. Stakeholder processes lie close to the core of adaptive management through partnerships with managers, scientists, and communities to work together to make good decisions in the present, but also gain experience and knowledge so that future management decisions can be improved.

Click here to learn more about the group's formation and adaptive management.

+ Science Team

The Science Team collaborates with Forest Service leadership and the AMG to ensure the project is informed by the best available science. The Science Team completes on-the-ground monitoring pertinent to questions about the project as well as cultivating an in-depth understanding of the forest structure, age class, health, and wildlife patterns in Taylor Park.

Click here to learn more about the team, their previous monitoring efforts, and future plans.

+ The Process & Meeting Archive

The AMG and Science Team have worked together with the Forest Service throughout the NEPA planning process including the initial project proposal, the Alternative 2 Development, and the Final Decision.

Whether you are just joining the conversation or have been an active member of the AMG, click here to learn more about the NEPA process and access to previous meeting materials.

+ Current Status: Implementation

The Taylor Park Vegetation Management Project is in the first year of the Implementation Process. This process uses a “Plan, Do, Check, Act” cycle. There are many opportunities for public engagement.

Click here to learn more about the project status and implementation.

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