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DISTURBANCE AND SUCCESSION IN SIERRAN FORESTS. disturbance event. disturbance - an event that clears away vegetation, opens up space and resources, e.g. fire, hurricane, treefall, disease.
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disturbance event disturbance- an event that clears away vegetation, opens up space and resources, e.g. fire, hurricane, treefall, disease succession- the orderly change in species composition in an area after a disturbance time since disturbance
early successional species • high growth rate (grow quickly) • shade intolerant (need lots of sun) • Sierra examples: ponderosa pine • deer brush (Ceanothus) • resprouting oaks • late successional species • low growth rate (grow slowly) • shade tolerant (grow in shade of other trees) • Sierra examples: white fir • incense cedar oaks and pines regenerating after clearcut white fir regenerating in shady forest understory
Fire in the Sierras • historically, frequent ground fires swept through CA forests, removing litter and young trees, maintaining “early successional” forests • fires were often started by lightning strikes • Native American groups also set fires in order to maintain the oaks whose acorns they used for food
Fire suppression in the Sierras • fire suppression was practiced in CA beginning approx. 1900 • in 1960’s, policy changed and controlled burns in CA began • because of fire suppression incense cedar and white fir are much more common today in CA forests than they were historically • likewise, black oaks and ponderosa and sugar pines are now less common
fire suppression in-growth of shade-tolerant trees (incense cedar, white fir) and shrubs high density forests increased fungal diseases and beetle attack increase in dead and down trees, serves as highly flammable “fuel” increased fire intensity when area burns increased death of all trees
100 years of fire suppression have lead to high-density forests and in-growth of shade-tolerant tree species frequent, natural, low-intensity fires burned out underbrush and kept pine forests open 2000 1900
low intensity fires • a natural part of most California ecosystems • historically started by lightning strikes • burn along ground, typically do not reach the tops of trees • kill only small trees or old, diseased adult trees • burn forest in patches– leave a patchwork of burned and • unburned areas • used in “controlled” or “prescribed” burns
high intensity, or “stand replacing” fires • result from fire suppression and subsequent buildup of dead wood, “fuel” • reach the crowns (tops) of trees • burn extremely hot • kill most or all trees • are extremely difficult to control • burn and destroy important, nutrient rich • soil layers and microorganisms
The Yellowstone Fire a high-intensity fire
Fire is important to CA forests: • prevents forests from becoming over-dense and unhealthy • maintains early successional species: • Ponderosa Pine, Black Oak • prevents insect disease outbreaks which occur in high density forests & can lead to high-intensity fires • many California shrubs and trees are dependent on fire for regeneration • Bishop pine, Pt. Reyes: cones won’t open unless heated in a fire
Wildlife: • patchy fires maintain a mixture of habitats for wildlife • early successional shrubs are important source of food for herbivores (deer) • tall trees killed by fires form snags which are important homes for birds (owls, woodpeckers, sapsuckers)
1995 Point Reyes Fire Bishop Pine Regeneration Bishop pine stand before the fire Bishop pine stand after the fire new, young Bishop pines growing 3 years after fire
Other disturbances in the mixed conifer forest: • Bark Beetles • Root Rot fungus • White Pine Blister Rust
bark beetles: • Beetle larvae bore through wood, killing trees or making them more prone to fungal attack • Typically attack mature trees
Bark beetles • Most are small beetles- about the size of a rice grain • Western Pine Beetle attacks Ponderosa and Coulter Pines • Ambrosia Oak beetles can attack Oaks, Buckeye and tanoak. • Woodpeckers are natural predators of bark beetles
Forest Pathogens • native diseases: • important to forest health • typically cause small forest gaps • maintain heterogeneous structure in forest, similar to low-intensity fires • introduced diseases: • can spread quickly through forests with devastating effects
Fungal diseases • Heterobasidion annosum:AnnosusRoot rot • spreads by spores in dense tree stands infecting freshly cut stumps, wounds • causes disease centers which spread out from originally infected tree, when infection moves along roots to neighboring tree roots • spreads at about 3 ft. per year • infected tree’s roots rot and tree falls from wind- causes gaps/ openings (may be healthy looking!) • major problem in Yosemite! (1960’s cut trees- left stumps– spread) • May be spread by bark beetles
White Pine Blister Rust • a rust fungus native to Eurasia- introduced North America in 1910 from Europe. • Hosts – this fungus needs 2 hosts to complete its life cycle: Ribes and a pine • pine hosts: western white pine, sugar pine, whitebark pine, bristlecone pine, foxtail pine. • alternate host: all species of the genus Ribes (gooseberrry, currant)
Distribution and damage – • One of our most serious pathogen outbreaks on conifers • In North America, it has caused more damage and costs more to control than any other conifer disease • Since the 1920's, millions of dollars spent on the eradication of the alternate host, Ribes, and thousands of pine stands have been severely damaged
Pine Symptoms 1 Needle Chlorosis • earliest symptoms = chlorotic spots • Yellowing caused by chlorophyll being damaged • Spots form on needles shortly after infection
Pine Symptoms 2 • fungus moves into the branches, swellings form and develop into cankers • the fungus girdles a branch & branch dies • within a few years (dead needles on branch turn red = blister rust "flag“)
Pine symptoms:Cankers • the fungus may continue to grow into the trunk, causing a canker that can kill that portion of the tree upward • cankers often exude large amounts of resin • tree usually dies from the infection • approx. 10% of sugar pines are genetically resistant
Current Distribution • Introduced to east coast in 1910 • Reaches Sierras in 1961