St. Lawrence Plain Plan
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St. Lawrence Plain Table
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St. Lawrence Plain
(Area - 11,955,272 ha)

Executive Summary


St. Lawrence PlainDescription - This physiographic area is a vast, flat plain, with elevations rarely exceeding 200m in Canada, and 300m in Vermont and New York. This area was originally a forest-wetland complex, although very little of the forest remains today. It now represents the best farmland in eastern Canada and much of the northeastern U.S. Agriculture has been the primary land use throughout the planning unit for over 200 years, with increasing urbanization and industrialization along the St. Lawrence River. Currently, the agriculture-dominated landscape of the St. Lawrence Plain represents a vast "agricultural grassland," which supports some of the largest populations of grassland and other early successional bird species in eastern North America. Unlike in many other agricultural regions, climate and poor drainage conditions favor establishment of freshwater wetlands and promote late season harvesting, which enhance the value of the region to breeding birds. In addition, these grassland habitats, interspersed with numerous freshwater wetlands, are vital to breeding and migrating waterfowl and other wetland bird species. Forest habitats remain primarily as isolated fragments that are reduced in tree-species diversity due to repeated selected cutting of sugar maple associates such as hickory, basswood, and butternut. The vast majority of lands in this planning unit are in private ownership.

Priority Bird Populations and Habitats
Grasslands
PIF Henslow's Sparrow Important regional population in St. Lawrence Valley of New York.
PIF Upland Sandpiper Largest population in Northeast; area sensitive.
PIF Bobolink Perhaps a higher density here than anywhere else in its range; population trend is stable overall since 1966, but has shown 2-3% declines since 1980.
Objective: Roughly 775,000 ha of suitable grassland habitat is required to support the entire habitat-species suite (e.g. 680,000 pairs of Bobolinks), with 100,000 ha maintained in large enough patches to support 7,600 pairs of Upland Sandpipers, and 1,000 ha intensively managed to support 500 pairs of Henslow's Sparrows in New York.

Shrub-early succession
PIF Golden-winged Warbler Still expanding in the area in abandoned agricultural land; as abandonment halts and existing habitat becomes forest, however, populations are bound to decline.
PIF American Woodcock Shows steep population declines; requires combination of forest clearings, second-growth hardwoods, and moist soils for foraging.
Objective: Roughly 50,000 ha of shrub habitats need to be maintained to support 20,000 pairs of Golden-winged Warblers and other species in this habitat suite.

Riparian deciduous forest
PIF Cerulean Warbler
(AI=2, PT=3, TB=3)
The St. Lawrence Plain population of this Watch List Species is apparently expanding in forest fragments, but is not sufficiently detected in the Breeding Bird Survey.
Objective: Population and acreage objectives for Cerulean Warbler in this area not yet determined.

Complete Physiographic Area Priority Scores (Zipped, Dbase5 file 288K)
Key to Abbreviations: AI-Area Importance, PT-Population Trend, TB-Threats to Breeding. Priority Setting Process: General / Detailed


Conservation recommendations and needs - Because of agriculture, this is now the largest and most important area of grassland in the Northeast. As a result, grassland birds have thrived, regardless of their pre-disturbance status, and are more abundant here than anywhere else in the region. Indeed, the Bobolink population here is the highest of anywhere within its range. Several of these species, however, have been in decline in recent years. Maintenance of grassland and wetland habitats is dependent of continuation of agriculture, especially dairy farming. Consolidation into large farms resulting in more intensive agriculture, row cropping, and conversion to urban use and other development all damage bird habitat. Maintenance of Henslow’s Sparrow populations is the highest priority, and suffering no additional loss of grassland habitat important for other species is also important. Farm abandonment and some other processes have created shrub habitat of value to Golden-winged Warbler and American Woodcock. Conversion of more grassland to shrub should not be encouraged, but improving and maintaining current shrubland should be a priority. The small remaining riparian and deciduous forest habitat in the St. Lawrence Plain supports several high priority birds, most notably a large and expanding population of Cerulean Warbler. The combination of regional climatic and economic factors offers tremendous potential for conservation and management of early successional bird species within this planning unit. The late growing season and poor drainage has resulted in a temporal distribution of traditional farming practices that maximizes benefits to wetland birds and nesting grassland species in spring and early summer (June). Therefore, bird conservation measures are generally compatible with local economic objectives and receive support from private landowners and local industry. Throughout the planning unit, a balance should be maintained between agricultural grassland and shrub habitats, taking advantage of local economic forces and land-ownership patterns. In both cases, largescale reversion to forest is not desirable. Specific conservation recommendations for this physiographic area include:

• develop and implement supplemental inventory and monitoring programs to identify important sites for Henslow's Sparrow, Golden-winged Warbler, and other uncommon, patchily distributed species not well monitored by BBS;
• establishment and use of native, warm season grasses as a late-season hay crop;
• determine effects of current game and waterfowl management practices on priority nongame species -- especially the relationships between American Woodcock management and Golden-winged Warbler population expansion;
• protection and management of mature forests to maximize benefits to Cerulean Warbler; e.g., preserve tallest trees, encourage maturing of canopy species, prevent fragmentation of existing forests.

 
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Please send comments to:
Kenneth Rosenberg, PIF Northeast Regional Coordinator
kvr2@cornell.edu