Record Details

Forage production and utilization in a mixed conifer forest in the Wallowa Mountain foothills

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Title Forage production and utilization in a mixed conifer forest in the Wallowa Mountain foothills
Names Young, James A. (James Albert), 1937- (creator)
Hedrick, D. W. (advisor)
Date Issued 1964-11-10 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1965
Abstract This investigation was undertaken to characterize and evaluate
the forage production and utilization of the successional vegetation
of the mixed conifer forest.
Field studies were carried out during the summers of 1962
through 1964 at the Eastern Oregon Experiment Station Hall Ranch
which is located 12 miles southeast of Union, Oregon.
The mixed conifer forest is an assemblage of serai vegetation
within the ecologic potential of a grand fir (Abies grandis) topo-edaphic climax.
One hundred and forty-one 1/100-acre macroplots, each containing
four 4.8-square-foot microplots, were used to determine
dominance and successional trends and the relationship of herbage
and browse production to other vegetation layers in the mixed conifer
forest.
Forage utilization by cattle was estimated on each macroplot and an average utilization estimate was made for each stand in the
mixed conifer forest of the Hall Ranch.
Tree overstory cover was found to be negatively associated
with herbage production. The coefficient of determination of this
relationship was .254. Overstory cover accounted for more of the
variation in herbage yield than either basal area or stems per acre.
Mean shrub weight was estimated at 8,000 pounds per acre
plus or minus 1,750 pounds and shrub current annual growth production
was estimated at 85 pounds per acre plus or minus 10 pounds
both at the 95 percent confidence level.
Sunspots, intermediate shade and heavy shade areas contribute
about equally to the total herbage production of the mixed conifer
forest. Sunspots are about four times as productive as heavy shade
areas, but make up only 20 percent of the total forest area.
A sanitation logging in 1960 modified the over story cover, but
may have contributed to grand fir dominance of the logged mixed
conifer stands.
This logging of mixed conifer forest stands was both beneficial
and detrimental to herbage production. Herbage production
was increased where old sunspots were enlarged or new ones
created, but some areas were taken out of production by heavy soil
disturbance and slash accumulations.
The difference in herbage production of logged and unlogged mixed conifer forest stands was highly significant when selected
plots were used to reduce disturbance variability. There was no
significant difference between the crude protein yield of logged and
unlogged stands.
Through the use of facilitating physical improvements, proper
class of livestock, improved livestock distribution and proper season
of use the forage resource of the mixed conifer forest was effectively
utilized by cattle. The percent of non-use is positively related to the
amount of overstory crown cover in the mixed conifer forest.
Suitable forest and range management practices should enable
an ingenious land manager to more fully realize the potential grazing
resource of the mixed conifer forest.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Forage plants -- Oregon
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/47829

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