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Here is a timeline of a day in the life of a hurricane researcher:
8am: wake up and head down to Shaler Hall for breakfast
8:45: meet with Audrey Barker-Plotkin (our mentor) and psych ourselves up to go out to the field
9:15: arrive at the Hurricane Plot
9:15-9:20: suit up for going into the woods: apply ample amounts of bug spray, mosquito netting and gloves
9:20-12:00pm: collect data for whatever phase of the project we’re on, i.e. do dead wood transects or map in trees
12:00-1:00pm: head back to Shaler for a delicious lunch and to recuperate our mental strength
1:00-4:00pm: continue the day’s work
So far we have learned the following tid bits:
• Tree tags almost always mysteriously vanish
• Spiders always tend to make their webs at face level
• Hurricanes are actually an important disturbance cycle for New England forests
• No amount of bug spray or mosquito netting will keep you from getting bug bites
• Trees grow back from being damaged in cooler ways than you could imagine
• Chipmunks love playing on the downed wood
• The forest structure has actually changed quite dramatically since the “hurricane”
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Where will our project go from here?
After the data we collect this summer are analyzed, we will know a lot more about how the forest has regenerated from the hurricane disturbance which occurred 20 years ago. In the future, scientists can continue to look at this site as a means of understanding the important role wind damage plays in New England forests.
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