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Vegetation Communities of Mount Rainier National Park. Lou Whiteaker, Plant Ecologist. Overview of Topics. Distribution of Vegetation Types Factors Influencing Vegetation Overview of Long-term Monitoring Projects Management Issues. Vascular Plant Diversity. Source: NP Species 2008.
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Vegetation Communities of Mount Rainier National Park Lou Whiteaker, Plant Ecologist
Overview of Topics • Distribution of Vegetation Types • Factors Influencing Vegetation • Overview of Long-term Monitoring Projects • Management Issues
Vascular Plant Diversity Source: NP Species 2008
Factors Influencing Vegetation • Climate – temperature, precipitation • Topography – aspect, slope, elevation • Soils- type, age • Natural disturbance regimes • Human use
Forests • Park boundary (1880’) to ~ 5400 to 6400’ elevation • Forest stand ages – 100 to > 1,000 years • Most stand> 350 years old • 350 yr. and 100 yr are the most numerous Hemstrom, M.A. and J.F. Franklin. 1982. Fire and Other Disturbances of the Forests in Mount Rainier National Park. Quarternary Research 18:32-51
Forest Types Low-elevation – Western hemlock/Douglas Fir Tsuga heterophylla/Pseudotsuga menziesii • Western red cedar (Thuja plicata) is a common component • Sitka Spruce (Picea sitchensis) is found in Carbon River drainage • understory species skunk cabbage, Devil’s club, salal, Oregon grape • nonvascular spp are an important component
Forest Types Mid-elevation Forests • Pacific Silver Fir (Abies amablis) • Noble fir (Abies procera) • Alaska yellow cedar (Chamaecyparis nootkatensis) • Western white pine (Pinus monticola)
Forest Types High-elevation Forests • Subalpine fir (Abies lasiocarpa) • Mountain hemlock (Tsuga mertensiana) • Whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis) • Engelmann spruce (Picea engelmannii) • Lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta)
Stages of Forest Development Stand Initiation Stem Exclusion Old-growth Understory Reinitiation
Forest Disturbances • Fire** 90% • Snow avalanches 7% • Lahars 2% • Insects • wind • Natural fire rotation – 434 yr. • All but 2 major fires since 1300 A.D. correspond with major droughts • 1230 – 47% of the park forests burned
Forests Insects & Diseases • Introduced pests: balsam woolly adelgid, white pine blister rust • Native pests: Mountain pine beetle, Western balsam bark beetle, Douglas-fir beetle, fir engraver • Frequency and severity may change with climate change
Subalpine Parkland • Extends from forest line to treeline • Mosaic of tree clumps & subalpine meadows
Subalpine Parklands • Snowpack determines location & plant communities • Fire is important at forest line
Alpine Zone • Lower limit is treeline – upright trees • Upper limit – permanent snow and ice Krummholz on Ptarmigan Ridge
High-elevation Vegetation Factors Influencing Vegetation Type & Distribution • Annual temperature mean annual growing season 5-7o C • Snow pack – duration & depth = veg type & height • Length of growing season Growth Form • Type of growth – perennial • Growth forms • Rapid development in short growing season
Subalpine Vegetation • Topography – influences snowmelt patterns (black body effect) • Vegetative growth – tree layering, height above snowpack • Phenology, pollination • Early season – very sensitive to trampling
Alpine Vegetation Abies lasiocarpa seed • Topography & micropotography • Soil development & movement (solifluction, sorted stripes, patterned ground, soil accretion) • Seed availability • Snow cover • Needle ice
Subalpine Communities • Lush Herbaceous • Green Fescue – lupine • Heath-shrub • Low herbaceous • Wet sedge
Alpine Communities • Heather • Fellfield • Talus • Snowbed
Alpine Communities fellfield snowbed talus
Heather Communities • Development • Heather - up to 7,000 years old • Stem ages • High genotypic diversity
Steps in Restoration: Seed Collection Cutting and Seed Collection Volunteer Groups
Invasive Plant Control Program Components Research/Surveys/Demographic Studies Priority Setting Prevention Control/Treatment Effectiveness Monitoring/Evaluation Collaboration
Orange hawkweed (Hieracium aurantiacum)
Scotch Broom (Cytisus scoparius)
St. John’s Wort (Hypericum perforatum)
Spotted Knapweed (Centaurea maculosa)
Pinus albicaulis, whitebark pine • five-needle white pine • member of Pinus subsection Cembrae or Stone pines • long-lived tree – up to 700 years, cones produced after 100 years • large, wingless seeds, indehiscent cones
Distribution & Habitat • high-elevation species • Rocky Mountains west to Cascades and northern Sierra Nevada • dry, often wind-swept sites • early successional species
Seed Dispersal of Whitebark Pine • Clark’s Nutcracker removes seeds with beak from cone • carries up to 150 seeds in sublingual pouch • caches seeds up to 10-12 km and 500m in elevation from tree • can retrieve seeds 9 months later
Status of Whitebark Pine • widespread mortality • Eurasian fungus, Blister Rust (Cronartium ribicola) • fire exclusion • Mountain Pine beetles
Blister Rust, Cronartium ribicola • introduced to west ~ 1910 • Ribes sp. alternate host • low levels of resistance in Pinus albicaulis populations • widespread control programs 1920s to 1960s
Blister Rust, Cronartium ribicola Wind blown, up to 500 km Ribes sp. aeciospore Fall teliospores urediniospores basidiospores
Signs of Blister Rust, Dead top of whitebark pine Chlorotic needles, flagging