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Watershed-scale vegetation patterns in a late-successional forest landscape in the Oregon Coast Range

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Watershed-scale vegetation patterns in a late-successional forest landscape in the Oregon Coast Range
Names Wimberly, Michael C. (creator)
Spies, Thomas A. (advisor)
Date Issued 1999-05-14 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 2000
Abstract Knowledge about vegetation patterns and ecological processes in unmanaged, late-successional
watersheds is needed to provide a foundation for forest management strategies
aimed at conserving native biodiversity. I examined influences of environmental variability
and disturbance history on forest structure and composition in the Cummins Creek
Wilderness, located on the central Oregon coast. Climatic and topographic variables explained
the majority of hillslope community composition, while fire history explained most of the
variability in hillslope forest structure. Forest structure and composition in riparian areas was
related to a climatic gradient as well as position in the stream network. The abundance of two
fire-sensitive species, Tsuga heterophylla (western hemlock) and Picea sitchensis (Sitka
spruce), decreased with distance from old-growth patches, possibly reflecting a seed dispersal
gradient that occurred following fires 80 to 140 years ago.
I developed predictive maps of understory conifer patterns using remote sensing,
aerial photographs, digital elevation models and stream maps. I predicted P. sitchensis
regeneration based on distance from the coast and topography, and T. heterophylla
regeneration based on crown size, percent hardwood composition, topography, and distance
from old-growth patches. Although I found statistically significant relationships between
understory patterns and GIS predictor variables, the models explained only low to moderate
amounts of the overall variability.
Landscape-scale simulations of T. heterophylla showed that population expansion
through gap-phase recruitment was limited by short seed dispersal distances in closed-canopy
forests, the requirement for canopy gap disturbances to facilitate overstory recruitment, and
the lag between recruitment and reproduction. Although fine-scale habitat features can
influence the amount of regeneration in a gap when seed sources are present, the fire regime
may ultimately control the abundance of T. heterophylla at the landscape scale through
dispersal limitations. Brief increases in fire frequency can cause a sustained decrease in the
amount of T. heterophylla on the landscape once fire frequency is reduced below a threshold
value.
Our results emphasize the complexity and diversity of forest vegetation at the
watershed scale. Environmental variability, disturbance history, and dispersal limitations have
all played a role in creating the current landscape patterns in the Cummins Creek Wilderness.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Forest ecology -- Oregon -- Cummins Creek Wilderness
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/13740

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