
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


A dead tree is not truly dead. As trees die, they become snags, downed logs, and eventually return to the soil as organic matter. Along this journey, they host a wide range of organisms and play essential roles in forest ecosystems. How foresters think about and manage dead trees can be just as important as how they manage living ones. In this episode of SilviCast, we explore the concept of morticulture - the intentional management of deadwood in forests. Join us for a conversation with Mark Harmon, professor emeritus in the Department of Forest Ecosystems and Society at Oregon State University. Dr. Harmon has spent decades researching tree mortality, wood decomposition, and the management of coarse woody debris in our forests.
Send us Fan Mail
By Wisconsin Forestry Center and Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources4.8
4040 ratings
A dead tree is not truly dead. As trees die, they become snags, downed logs, and eventually return to the soil as organic matter. Along this journey, they host a wide range of organisms and play essential roles in forest ecosystems. How foresters think about and manage dead trees can be just as important as how they manage living ones. In this episode of SilviCast, we explore the concept of morticulture - the intentional management of deadwood in forests. Join us for a conversation with Mark Harmon, professor emeritus in the Department of Forest Ecosystems and Society at Oregon State University. Dr. Harmon has spent decades researching tree mortality, wood decomposition, and the management of coarse woody debris in our forests.
Send us Fan Mail

90,998 Listeners

21,854 Listeners

43,938 Listeners

43,536 Listeners

26,213 Listeners

12,221 Listeners

6,453 Listeners

17,616 Listeners

4,690 Listeners

1,253 Listeners

24,565 Listeners

295 Listeners

1,248 Listeners

5,755 Listeners

9,421 Listeners