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Mixed-conifer forests of central Oregon: effects of logging and fire exclusion vary with environment

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Title Mixed-conifer forests of central Oregon: effects of logging and fire exclusion vary with environment
Names Merschel, Andrew G. (creator)
Spies, Thomas A. (creator)
Heyerdahl, Emily K. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-10 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the Ecological Society of America and can be found at: http://www.esajournals.org/loi/ecap. Appendix A and B can be found at: http://www.esapubs.org/archive/appl/A024/199/
Abstract Twentieth-century land management has altered the structure and composition
of mixed-conifer forests and decreased their resilience to fire, drought, and insects in many
parts of the Interior West. These forests occur across a wide range of environmental settings
and historical disturbance regimes, so their response to land management is likely to vary
across landscapes and among ecoregions. However, this variation has not been well
characterized and hampers the development of appropriate management and restoration
plans. We identified mixed-conifer types in central Oregon based on historical structure and
composition, and successional trajectories following recent changes in land use, and evaluated
how these types were distributed across environmental gradients. We used field data from 171
sites sampled across a range of environmental settings in two subregions: the eastern Cascades
and the Ochoco Mountains.
We identified four forest types in the eastern Cascades and four analogous types with lower
densities in the Ochoco Mountains. All types historically contained ponderosa pine, but
differed in the historical and modern proportions of shade-tolerant vs. shade-intolerant tree
species. The Persistent Ponderosa Pine and Recent Douglas-fir types occupied relatively hot–dry environments compared to Recent Grand Fir and Persistent Shade Tolerant sites, which
occupied warm–moist and cold–wet environments, respectively. Twentieth-century selective
harvesting halved the density of large trees, with some variation among forest types. In
contrast, the density of small trees doubled or tripled early in the 20th century, probably due
to land-use change and a relatively cool, wet climate. Contrary to the common perception that
dry ponderosa pine forests are the most highly departed from historical conditions, we found a
greater departure in the modern composition of small trees in warm–moist environments than
in either hot–dry or cold–wet environments. Furthermore, shade-tolerant trees began infilling
earlier in cold–wet than in hot–dry environments and also in topographically shaded sites in
the Ochoco Mountains. Our new classification could be used to prioritize management that
seeks to restore structure and composition or create resilience in mixed-conifer forests of the
region.
Genre Article
Topic Central Oregon, USA
Identifier Merschel, A. G., Spies, T. A., & Heyerdahl, E. K. (2014). Mixed-conifer forests of central Oregon: Effects of logging and fire exclusion vary with environment. Ecological Applications, 24(7), 1670-1688. doi:10.1890/13-1585.1

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