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Patterns of chronic wind mortality in a small, old-growth Pseudotsuga menziesii forest in the western Cascades, Oregon

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Patterns of chronic wind mortality in a small, old-growth Pseudotsuga menziesii forest in the western Cascades, Oregon
Names Littlefield, Sam, 1980- (creator)
Jones, Julia A. (advisor)
Date Issued 2005-06-03 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 2006
Abstract Windthrow has been studied extensively as a cause of mortality and as a landscape
disturbance agent in temperate forests throughout the United States. The effects of
windthrow mortality on stand species composition and structure, forest regeneration and
seral development have been well described at the site (e.g. single gap) and landscape
(e.g. thousands of hectares) scales, predominantly by using field and remote sensing
techniques, respectively. Few studies of windthrow have been conducted in small (e.g.
hundreds of hectares), topographically confined and ecologically similar forests. This
study addresses the spatial and temporal patterns of windthrow mortality in an old-growth
Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) forest of this understudied spatial extent (ca. 150
ha). Coarse woody debris (CWD) data were collected as proxy for mortality along
transects in the field and were spatially distributed in a GIS. The causes of mortality and
the spatial and temporal distributions of CWD were assessed. Density and volumetric
distributions of CWD were compared to those of the live tree population in the study
area. Correlations between landscape attributes known to affect mortality susceptibility at
the landscape scale, such as topographic exposure and slope steepness, were tested by
comparing CWD data to field-collected and GIS-derived landscape attributes. Wind was found to be the dominant cause of mortality of sampled CWD. The spatial distribution of
CWD, and thus mortality susceptibility, was found to be uniform across classes of
landscape attributes, and subtle distributional variations that did exist were not related to
landscape attributes in a statistically significant manner. These findings suggest that
chronic wind disturbance is the dominant cause of mortality in the study area, and that
episodic wind mortality is not an active process affecting the study area forest. These
findings differ from those of studies conducted at the landscape scale, which have shown
a predictable relationship between landscape pattern and chronic and episodic windderived
tree mortality. The chronic wind disturbance affecting the study area
predominantly generates small, single tree gaps that contribute to seral progression rather
than alter it.
Genre Thesis
Topic Windfall (Forestry) -- Oregon -- H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/9852

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