Stephens State Forest
History
Stephen's State Forest was established in the 1930s by the Civilian Conservation Corp (CCC) through an effort to expand hardwood and conifer populations in the area. In the 1950s, the CCC sold the land to the state of Iowa and the forest was converted into a recreational property. The 7 separate parcels of land that make up Stephens State Forest are referred to as the Lucas, Whitebreast, Woodburn, Cedar Creek, Chariton, Thousand Acres, and Unionville Units.
In 1951, the state forest was named after T. C. Stephens, a professor of biology at Morningside College, ornithologist, and conservationist. Prior to this, the collective units of land were referred to as the Lucas-Monroe Forest Area.
In 2008, Stephens State Forest was designated as a Bird Conservation Area (BCA) and the Thousand Acres BCA was designated in 2014.
Ecology
Stephens State Forest consists of tallgrass prairie association, upland hardwood association, bottomland hardwood association, and their respective transition zones. Due to the CCC planting non-native trees in the 1930s. the soil is predominantly made up of forest vegetation.
Flora
- Tallgrass prairie:
- Hardwood trees:
- Quercus alba (White oak)
- Quercus rubra (Red oak)
- Quercus velutina (Black oak)
- Quercus macrocarpa (Bur oak)
- Quercus imbricaria (Shingle oak)
- Ulmus rubra (Red elm)
- Ulmus laevis (White elm)
- Populus sect. Aigeiros (Cottonwood)
- Celtis (Hackberry)
- Fraxinus (Ash)
- Acer saccharinum (Silver maple)
- Juglans nigra (Black walnut)
- Coniferous and non-native hardwoods:
References
- ^ "Stephens Forest Campground, IA". Iowa State Parks. Retrieved 2021-12-18.
- ^ "Stephens State Forest, Iowa". www.iowadnr.gov. Retrieved 2021-12-18.
- ^ "Stephens State Forest | Outdoorsy". www.outdoorsy.com. Retrieved 2021-12-18.