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Riparian forest buffers on agricultural lands in the Oregon coast range : Beaver Creek riparian project as a case study

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Title Riparian forest buffers on agricultural lands in the Oregon coast range : Beaver Creek riparian project as a case study
Names Bishaw, Badege (creator)
Emmingham, William H. (creator)
Rogers, William Reinhold (creator)
Oregon State University. Forest Research Laboratory (creator)
Date Issued 2002 (iso8601)
Internet Media Type application/pdf
Note Riparian areas in the Pacific Northwest have traditionally been
a source of natural resources, such as timber and grazing, and have
been used as transportation corridors and homestead sites. A primary
impact of use has been the removal of riparian trees, the
crowns and roots of which provide shade and stream bank protection.
Increases in water temperature can be lethal to salmonid fish,
and decreasing salmon populations over the past few decades have
resulted in an urgent need for improving the management of watersheds,
fish habitat, and water quality. Leaving stream-side buffers
is now required by state forest practices regulations on forest
lands, but no regulations are in place on agricultural lands, where
riparian trees have frequently been removed.
In 1995, the Beaver Creek Riparian Buffer Project was established
to develop better information about how to establish riparian
buffers on coastal pastureland near Newport, Oregon. No riparian
trees were present when the trial was begun. A replicated
tree filter belt trial was established along the south bank of the creek
to compare unplanted pasture (controls) with commercially valued
red alder (Alnus rubra) planted at 6-ft spacing in belts 1 row, 3
rows, and 6 rows wide. Tree survival and height and diameter
growth were compared, as well as the amount of shade produced
by the three treatments and control. We used a LI-COR LAI-2000
Plant Canopy Analyzer to quantify shade. We found that intensive
site preparation, continued vegetation management, and both fencing
and tubing of tree seedlings were necessary to gain survival and protect seedlings from small rodents, beaver, and cattle. Fencing
out cattle provided stream bank protection within 1 yr. Significant
shading of the stream occurred 2–6 yr after planting, as trees grew
tall enough to intercept a significant amount of light. Single row
plantings that take a minimal amount of pasture offer significant
shading only after 4–7 yr. A wider 6-row filter belt occupies a greater
amount of pasture, but provides stream shading sooner than the
other treatments.
Genre Technical Report
Topic Streambank planting -- Oregon -- Beaver Creek (Lincoln County)
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/7875

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