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SOUTHERN
NEW ENGLAND AREA PLAN
The
Southern New England physiographic area covers parts of northern
New Jersey, southern New York including Long Island, the majority
of Connecticut, all of Rhode Island, most of eastern Massachusetts,
the southeastern corner of New Hampshire, and south-coastal Maine.
This area has experienced the greatest amount of urbanization of
any part of the Northeast, including the entire Boston-to-New York
City corridor. Urbanization and associated human activities severely
threaten remaining high-priority habitats, especially maritime marshes
and dunes, relict grasslands, and mature deciduous forests. Forest
fragmentation, which is not a major issue in most parts of the Northeast,
is a severe factor threatening forest bird populations. Currently,
urban land covers roughly one-third of the physiographic area, with
an additional 25 % of the region in agricultural production, primarily
in the Connecticut River Valley, eastern Long Island, and northern
New Jersey. Remaining forests are a mixture of oak-hickory and other
hardwoods, white pine-red pine forest, and pine-oak woodlands or
barrens.
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