Symposium: Lower Wisconsin Riverway ecology and its future in a changing climate - Part 2
Password: BeneathTheSurface Please note the password is case sensitive! Location: Lower Dells A Moderator: Mike Mossman (Wisconsin DNR, retired) Sponsored by GAI Consulting, Inc.
3:40 PM - 5:00 PMWed
Lower Dells A
*Recordings Available Oral Presentations Symposium
Presenters
Mike Mossman
Retired
Wisconsin DNR
Brad Hutnik
Forest Ecologist / Silviculturist
Wisconsin DNR Division of Forestry
Gary Casper
Director of Biodiversity Programs
Mequon Nature Preserve
Sponsors
GAI Consultants, Inc.
The Lower Wisconsin Riverway is a Ramsar Wetland of International Importance, comprising 92 continuous miles of sandy, shallow river, floodplain wetlands, terraces, and river bluffs from the Prairie du Sac Dam to the confluence with the Mississippi River. An important historical, cultural, recreational, and aesthetic resource, it is well-known for its canoe camping, hunting opportunities, sport fishery, forest resources, Native American mounds, rural life, and other features. Ecologically, its significance has been recognized in many ways at statewide to global scales for its rare species as well as the number and high quality of native and surrogate, wetland, and upland plant-animal communities, their interconnections, and their natural transitions. Overlain on its natural hydrologic and nutrient dynamics are the effects of chemical and nutrient contamination from its 12,280 square mile watershed, altered flood regimes influenced by its many dams and watershed wetland losses, invasive species, and other challenges. Yet the riverway has adapted with the help of enlightened land and water management. In recent decades, climate change has introduced long-lasting challenges, especially with increased summer flooding—the causes of which are at a global scale and often considered unsolvable. This symposium reviews the state of the riverway and the reasons for its biodiversity while identifying management challenges and discussing how to think about it under the “new order.” Facilitator: Mike Mossman (Wisconsin DNR - retired) Part 2: After the break (Part 1 is before the break) 3:40 - 4:00 Gary Casper (Director of Biodiversity Programs, Mequon Nature Preserve) Amphibians and reptiles in the Lower Wisconsin Riverway 3:40 - 4:00 Brad Hutnik (Forest Ecologist / Silviculturist, Wisconsin DNR Division of Forestry) The past, present, and future of the Lower Wisconsin State Riverway's bottomland hardwood forests 4:00 - 4:20 Mike Mossman (Wisconsin DNR - retired) Changes in breeding-bird communities of the Lower Wisconsin Riverway and the effects of climate 4:20-4:40 Mike Mossman (Wisconsin DNR - retired) Wrap-up and Q&A Sponsored by GAI Consultants, Inc.