EFETAC Fact Sheet - December 2007
At a Glance…
EFETAC provides the latest research and expertise concerning threats to healthy forests – insects and disease, wildland loss, invasive species, uncharacteristic fire, and climate change – to assist forest landowners, managers and scientists throughout the East. Established in 2005, EFETAC is a joint effort of the Forest Service’s Research and Development, the National Forest System, and State and Private Forestry. The Center is actively developing new technology and tools to anticipate and respond to emerging forest threats.
What We Do
EFETAC generates knowledge and tools needed to anticipate and respond to environmental threats, which often involve complex factors interacting at multiple scales. The Center strives to maintain a holistic and integrated research program to tackle these complex issues. Knowledge and tools are delivered to internal and external stakeholders in a timely, useful, and user-friendly manner.
Who We Are
EFETAC, headquartered in Asheville, NC, is comprised of three teams, each with regional, national, and international responsibilities – Threat Assessment, the Southern Global Change Program (SGCP), and Forest Health Monitoring.
The Threat Assessment team, located in Asheville, emphasizes integrated approaches to detecting, predicting, and assessing threats to forest health. Projects include—
- Collaborating with NASA’s John C. Stennis Space Center to identify promising remote sensing and geospatial technologies for early detection of forest stress.
- Partnering with the Southern Group of State Foresters to understand the consequences of urbanization, fragmentation, and parcellation of southern forests.
- Working with the National Environmental Modeling and Analysis Center (NEMAC) to develop high speed access to models and databases useful in threat assessments.
- Developing a prototype Forest Incidence Recognition and State Tracking (FIRST) System, an automated system to process satellite imagery for detecting disturbances in forested areas.
- Providing land managers and policy makers with new tools and data for comparative risk assessments, allowing for strategic planning at the regional, national, and international levels.
The Southern Global Change Program (SGCP) team, located in Raleigh, NC, examines the ecological and hydrologic consequences of global change. Projects include—
- Collaborating with scientists nation-wide to integrate hydrology, soil erosion, and climate and population change models to predict potential land management impacts on local and regional water quantity and quality.
- Evaluating landscape-scale carbon, energy, and water exchange dynamics in North Carolina coastal plain pine plantations.
- Estimating critical acid loads for forest soils across the coterminous United States.
- Collaborating with land managers to measure and monitor the impacts of climate change and forest management practices on plant communities and wildfire fuels.
- Understanding the effects of land use change on wildfire, predicting the long-term water availability issues associated with population growth in and around major urban areas across the South, and linking forest land cover and land use change.
- Investigating the impacts of air quality stressors on forest growth by using computer models to examine effects of climate change, increased atmospheric carbon dioxide, and rising ground level ozone levels on the growth and carbon sequestration rates of southeastern forests.
The Forest Health Monitoring team, located in Research Triangle Park, NC, develops monitoring protocols and analytical tools for tracking the health and sustainability of the Nation’s forests. Projects include—
- Developing key elements needed to improve existing monitoring systems and develop new sampling and survey designs, measurement techniques, and estimation procedures.
- Developing protocols to integrate data, models, interpretation techniques, and analytical tools to assess forest health and conduct risk analyses at multiple scales.
- Improving forest health and sustainability reports for national and international assessments.
- Creating protocols to utilize data from the long-term comprehensive monitoring of key ecosystem processes and components in forest health assessments.
- Developing protocols to utilize spatial analyses and the principles of landscape ecology in forest health monitoring and assessment.
Contact Us
For additional information concerning EFETAC programs and partnerships, please contact Danny C. Lee, Center Director, at (828) 257-4854, by email at dclee@fs.fed.us or Perdita Spriggs, Communications Director, at (828) 259-0542 or by email at pspriggs@fs.fed.us. Please visit our interactive Web site at www.forestthreats.org.


