Forest Resources Conservation Working Group
The FRCWG is charged with ensuring that Joint Venture partners have the best, most current information available to be consistent with reforestation and forest management principles and practices that sustain populations of priority birds and other forest-dependent wildlife in concert with sustainable forestry, as outlined in the Working Group Charter.
One of the most recognizable products of the FRCWG is Desired Forest Conditions for Wildlife in Bottomland Forests document, newly revised in 2025, which is a description of habitat parameters that explicitly link wildlife needs to structural forest attributes. This document addresses important aspects of bottomland forest conservation in the interest of optimizing wildlife habitat in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley and West Gulf Coastal Plain. These important habitat parameters are considered at both the landscape and stand scales in the document.
The landscape composition objectives recommended by the LMVJV (Table 2) are intended to facilitate management decisions underpinning DFCW. At the landscape level, wildlife populations benefit most when the Desired Landscape Conditions are sustained over time. These conditions are achieved by providing portions of habitat within the desired condition, portions that have recently been disturbed and should grow into the desired condition, as well as areas that have grown out of desired condition and warrant treatment. The remaining landscape should consist of protected forest, regenerating forest, and shrub-scrub habitat.
Desired Stand Structure for wildlife (Table 3) is influenced by a multitude of variables, some of which can be addressed and improved through management actions while others are inherent to the stand. The range of recommended Desired Stand Structure factors are broad enough to accommodate various management objectives, while maintaining sufficient rigor to guide decisions beneficial to priority wildlife species. The three primary and six secondary factors reflect a combination of published reports and the collective knowledge of experienced managers, thereby representing realistic, achievable, and sustainable forest conditions.
There is no single DFCW management prescription suitable for all stands. Thus, various silvicultural treatments and multiple entries may be necessary to manage any given stand towards Desired Stand Structure.
For more information on the FRCWG, visit the Forest Resource Conservation Working Group page.