For NWTF members, National Forest Products Week is a reminder of two essential truths:
Forests are more than trees — they are living, working systems that provide wood, fiber, clean water, wildlife habitat, recreation, climate resilience and more.
Healthy forests mean healthy wildlife. For wild turkeys, quality habitat depends on proactive forest stewardship.
Forest restoration isn’t just about trees — it’s about ensuring the long-term health of ecosystems on which wild turkeys and countless other species depend. Through active forest management projects under the National Master Stewardship Agreement, the NWTF and its partners are putting boots on the ground to improve wild places for both people and wildlife.
To keep wild turkey populations strong, we must also manage the forests they inhabit. Responsible forest management practices, such as timber harvests and forest thinning, not only provide wild turkeys the habitat they rely upon, but they play a critical role in reducing the risk of catastrophic wildfires, improving forest health and maintaining resilient landscapes.
“These practices don’t just create better wildlife habitat; they also produce renewable wood products that are part of the climate solution,” said Tim Phelps, NWTF wood utilization specialist. “The carbon stored in those products stays locked away for the life of the material — whether it’s lumber, cardboard, furniture or even a whiskey barrel. Compared to concrete, plastic or steel, wood is a far more sustainable, low-carbon choice.”
The wood products industry also fuels rural economies, providing jobs and supporting the same communities that enjoy and care for these forests. It’s a full-circle relationship — one where healthy markets for forest products drive healthy forests, and healthy forests sustain wildlife and recreation.
As forests are thinned or harvested responsibly, new growth, open understories and diverse plant communities emerge, exactly the conditions wild turkeys and other wildlife need for foraging, nesting and brood rearing. And with healthy wildlife populations come rich opportunities for hunting, hiking and recreation, ensuring that the benefits of stewardship extend to all who enjoy the outdoors.
Since the signing of the National Master Stewardship Agreement in 2022, NWTF’s Active Forest Management team has completed numerous projects across the country — many of which contribute to both habitat improvement and the local wood products economy. Here are a few highlights from Fiscal Year 2025:
From lumber and clean water to wildlife habitat and recreation, the benefits of America’s forests are woven into every part of our lives. This National Forest Products Week, the NWTF celebrates the interconnectedness of wildlife, working forests and communities. Through active forest management and the sustainable use of forest products, we ensure that our forests — and the wild turkeys that depend on them — remain strong for generations to come.