A team of CT experts are perfecting new strategies to make trees more resilient. Here’s how. (Hartford Courant)

A team of CT experts are perfecting new strategies to make trees more resilient. Here's how.

A team at Great Mountain Forests (GMF) in the Litchfield Hills, which span more than 6,000 acres across Norfolk and Canaan, is testing a new forest management method called pre-commercial trimming. The method removes competing trees in dense, young forest stands (areas of dense canopy growth where young trees must compete for water, sunlight, and nutrients). The GMF team, supported by a sustainability grant from the Connecticut Land Conservation Council, have been practicing the technique in three stands, keeping the trees that are more resilient to climate change and disease as well as the most diverse trees possible. Results demonstrated an increase in not only more resilient trees but also regeneration due to more light reaching the forest floor. The team says that replicating the practice across New England can make trees more resilient to various stressors, including climate change.

Read the full article by Stephen Underwood on the Hartford Courant