
These efforts to restore more oak to the scene occur thanks to a large part of ED, Patty Neueller and Wissonsin in the Climate Response Box. Since the death of Patti, Ed has continued to support this work.
“When I met Batti in the early 1970s, we immediately started going to camp, then we entered into monitoring birds and getting to know meadows,” Ed remembers. With the passage of years, note that things change. “Many of the birds that we used to see, we no longer see anymore. For example, we used to see red -headed wood cows everywhere, and now they are only in more specific habitats. The effect of climate change on promoters and forests is gradually, but when A specific bird or type disappears, note that.
It agrees that focusing on Ox is a good step. “I have always loved oak. It is only great, and many species depend on it. The Devil Lake was important to me since my youth. It is unique, especially in the southern part of the state, to have something exciting. I remember taking my son there when he was young and boiled Rocks.
The desire to protect the most special places in Wisconsin from climate change is a great incentive for ED. “The people who were born today will be in the seventies at the end of next century – what will be? It is difficult to imagine.”