4.7 Article

Historical structure and composition of ponderosa pine and mixed-conifer forests in south-central Oregon

期刊

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
卷 304, 期 -, 页码 492-504

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2013.04.005

关键词

Mixed conifer; Ponderosa pine; Reference conditions; Historical range of variation; Dry forest restoration

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资金

  1. NSF IGERT [DGE 0654252]
  2. Klamath Tribes
  3. University of Washington School of Environmental and Forest Sciences
  4. Foundation for the National Archives
  5. Oregon Watershed Enhancement Board
  6. Nature Conservancy
  7. Franklin Lab

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We summarized structure and composition of dry forests from a 90-year-old timber inventory collected by the Bureau of Indian Affairs on the former Klamath Indian Reservation (now part of the Fremont-Winema National Forest). This analysis includes data from 424,626 conifers >= 15 cm dbh on 3068 transects covering 6646 ha. The data represent a 10-20% sample of 38,651 ha of forest growing on sites that are classified as ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) and mixed-conifer habitat types distributed within the 117,672 ha of the study area. Large, drought- and fire-tolerant ponderosa pine dominated these forests. Large tree (>53 cm dbh) basal area (13 +/- 7 m(2)/ha) contributed 83 16% of total basal area; 81 +/- 20% of the large-tree basal area was ponderosa pine. Composition and structure of forests on mixed-conifer sites were very similar to those on ponderosa pine sites. Variability in composition and structure was recorded on all habitat types and was highest on moist mixed-conifer sites. Stand densities (trees per hectare, tph) have more than tripled over the past 90 years from 68 +/- 28 tph to a current density of 234 +/- 122 tph recorded in Current Vegetation Survey data collected by the United States Forest Service. Mean basal area, however, increased by less than 20%. Basal area of large trees (>53 cm dbh) has declined by >50%, and the abundance of large trees as a proportion of the total number of trees per hectare has decreased by more than a factor of five. This landscape-level record of historical forest conditions allows inferences about structure and composition across tens of thousands of hectares. A historical landscape emerges which supports current working hypotheses that frequent, low- to moderate-severity wildfires maintained a predominantly low-density forest dominated by large, fire- and drought-tolerant ponderosa pines across a significant moisture and productivity gradient from the driest ponderosa pine to the mixed-conifer habitat types. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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