Clermont Tract, Northcentral Pennsylvania

New Addition to State Forest System Features Young Forest

A significant young forest restoration project continues to expand on the 25,000-acre Clermont Tract in northern Pennsylvania’s McKean County. With guidance from the Wildlife Management Institute and funding from the Wildlife For Everyone Endowment Foundation, conservationists planted 12,400 seedlings in 2015, the project's sixth year. The planting is part of an ongoing effort to improve wildlife habitat and to monitor wildlife populations, including the American woodcock and other young forest species.

Ready to plant seedlings

Conservationists ready to plant seedlings of native shrubs and trees at Clermont Tract.

Pennsylvania’s Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR) recently acquired the 27-square-mile property, which will be added to the adjacent Elk State Forest. The Clermont Tract represents the largest addition to the state forest system in 65 years.

Wildlife habitat in the area was dramatically altered by logging and agricultural practices across northern Pennsylvania in the mid-1800s and again early in the 20th century. Cutover uplands eventually came back as northern hardwood forests dominated by black cherry. However, several thousand acres of wet meadow sites never fully regenerated.

Natural resources professionals have concentrated habitat-creation efforts on those grass-bound meadow sites. Seedlings planted in the past five years, especially 2013 and 2014, are now showing enough growth to reach maturity. Juneberry, mountain ash, arrowwood, elderberry, and viburnum are also beginning to grow. Seedling planting and fencing along with adequate deer harvests in the area will help restore much of the tract as excellent, diverse habitat.

Planting seedlings from tractor

Replanting an old meadow with native shrubs to create thick habitat for wildlife.

In the past year, four new locations, known locally as Hoffman Farm, Jacobson Farms, Hagman Farms, and Larson Farms, were added to the planting areas. The old farms had been abandoned in the 1930s or earlier, and, due to deer browsing, many openings remained devoid of woody growth. In recent years, with a reduced deer population, some cherry, birch and maples along with native Juneberry had started to reclaim the old fields. This year, conservationists planted a variety of seedlings and shrubs to complement the natural regeneration cycle.

Snowshoe Hares, Appalachians Cottontails

Work on the Clermont Tract in 2015 included applying lime to seedlings from prior years’ plantings; laying out sites for five fenced enclosures to protect planted and natural native seedlings from deer browsing; obtaining fencing from the Pennsylvania Game Commission; preparing fenced sites and scarifying soils for planting shrubs; documenting local snowshoe hare populations; and collecting hare and rabbit pellets to investigate the possible existence in the area of the rare Appalachian cottontail, a type of rabbit that used to be abundant in the region.

snowshoe hare

Snowshoe hares live on the Clermont Tract.

Funding for this year’s work came from a grant from the Ruffed Grouse Society and a local donor. RGS volunteers also helped with tree and shrub plantings.

To purchase the land, the state invested $7.2 million, which came from mitigation payments for rights-of-way and other transactions. The Western Pennsylvania Conservancy, a non-profit organization that focuses on enhancing the region’s quality of life by protecting and restoring exceptional places, facilitated the purchase with additional funds from the Richard King Mellon Foundation.

The seller, Forest Investment Associates, will retain timber rights for 35 years and will continue harvesting trees, supporting local forest management companies and sawmills, under an agreement that requires sustainable forest management practices. Timber rights will revert to Pennsylvania DCNR in the future, ensuring that the Clermont Tract will be carefully managed for the health of the forest, to help wildlife, and to support jobs in northern Pennsylvania’s forest products industry.