Lessons for Riparian Buffers: How Old Growth Forests Affect Streams webinar

When:
February 10, 2026 @ 12:00 pm – 1:15 pm
2026-02-10T12:00:00-05:00
2026-02-10T13:15:00-05:00
Where:
online
Cost:
Free
Contact:
Vermont Land Trust

Riparian forests, the forests that line streams and rivers, are critical for preserving water quality and aquatic habitat in Vermont’s streams, providing wildlife habitat, and slowing floodwaters.

Vermont Land Trust will hold a Lessons for Riparian Buffers: How Old Growth Forests Affect Streams webinar on Tuesday, February 10th from Noon to 1:15 pm.

Most of our understanding of riparian forest ecology is based on second growth forests that have regrown following 19th century clearing for agriculture. Old-growth riparian forests provide in-stream habitat features that have not been widely recognized in the eastern U.S.

Join Allaire Diamond, VLT’s Ecology and Restoration Program Director, to learn about VLT’s approach to conserving and restoring riparian forest and Bill Keeton, Forest Ecologist and UVM Professor in the Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources, who will share 20+ years of research across northern New England on old-growth riparian forests.

They will discuss how enhancing late-successional forest characteristics in stream corridors can store carbon and improve instream habitat structure and complexity, particularly along headwater streams. This may also contribute to downstream nutrient pollution reduction, although this remains the topic of ongoing research.

To take part in this webinar, register at Lessons for Riparian Buffers: How Old-Growth Forests Affect Streams Tickets, Tue, Feb 10, 2026 at 12:00 PM | Eventbrite