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Book Synthesis of Research Into the Long term Outlook for Sierra Nevada Forests Following the Current Bark Beetle Epidemic

Download or read book Synthesis of Research Into the Long term Outlook for Sierra Nevada Forests Following the Current Bark Beetle Epidemic written by and published by . This book was released on 2019 with total page 27 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This paper summarizes the 2012-2017 bark beetle epidemic in the Sierra Nevada and its implications for long-term changes in tree species composition and forest structure. Preliminary plot and landscape-scale data are reviewed, showing higher levels of mortality for pine species and greater impacts in the southern Sierra Nevada compared to the northern portions of the range. The federal government owns approximately three quarters of the forested area impacted by high levels of tree morality, with the remainder of the land controlled by nonindustrial (18%) and industrial (6%) ownerships. The accumulation of dead and downed fuel and standing dead trees is expected to increase fire intensity and severity, and pose significant hazards for fire control efforts. Potential long-term changes in Sierra Nevada forest composition were explored with a GIS analysis conducted for the Sierra National Forest, located in the southern Sierra. GIS layers included very high fire threat, aspect, high tree mortality, topographic position classification, and climatic exposure. A factor of one was assigned to each parameter (i.e., no weighting for any of the variables). The modeling showed that 4% of the Sierra National Forest is at very high risk for type conversion from mixed conifer to shrublands, and 12% is at high risk. This information can inform landowners regarding the general locations where successful reforestation will be most challenging, as well as illustrate the scale of concern for one national forest in the southern Sierra Nevada. Changes to disturbance regimes, continuing land use changes, and climate change with associated species shifts pose significant challenges for maintaining healthy and resilient forests in the Sierra Nevada. Significant unknowns exist regarding the future species composition for vast portions of this region, but type conversions from mixed conifer to shrublands or oak/grass/woodland appear likely for some areas. Recommended best management practices focus on reducing tree densities, achieving successful reforestation, and using adaptive management in the face of currently unknown future changes in growing conditions. With the exception of the bark beetle epidemic in southern California in the early 2000s, lessons learned from other locations in western North America that have had sustained bark beetle epidemics in the past decade are not directly applicable to Sierra Nevada, with its Mediterranean climate, complex topography, and mixed-conifer forests. For these reasons, ongoing research efforts to characterize and understand tree mortality drivers and changes in forest structure and composition in the Sierra Nevada are extremely important.

Book Mechanisms and Spatial Patterns of Bark Beetle associated Mortality Following Variable Density Thinning Treatments in a Sierra Mixed conifer Forest

Download or read book Mechanisms and Spatial Patterns of Bark Beetle associated Mortality Following Variable Density Thinning Treatments in a Sierra Mixed conifer Forest written by Alexis Bernal and published by . This book was released on 2019 with total page 96 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Long-term trends of tree mortality have increased over the last several decades, coinciding with above-average temperatures, high climatic water deficits, and bark beetle outbreaks. With the anticipation that drought and bark beetles may increase with climate change, uncertainty exists over the appropriate treatments that could ensure the future sustainability of forest resources and the ecosystem services that forests provide. Conventional thinning treatments are used to reduce stand density, with the assumption that reductions in competition can alleviate drought stress and enable trees to resist bark beetle attack. Alternative thinning treatments may also reduce stand density, but have a greater focus on increasing spatial heterogeneity. Variable density thinning is a management method intended to mimic the spatial heterogeneity that was present in mixed-conifer forests prior to logging and fire exclusion. Although the added benefits of increasing spatial heterogeneity include biodiversity, wildlife, recreation, and restoration, information is lacking on the effects that these treatments have on tree resistance to disturbances. Since 2012, the Sierra Nevada experienced widespread tree mortality coinciding with severe drought conditions and bark beetle outbreak. This provided a unique opportunity to explore the mechanisms driving bark beetle-associated mortality following variable density thinning treatments in the central Sierra Nevada. Using dendrochronological methods, we modeled the relationship between drought resistance and bark beetle-associated mortality to evaluate if reductions in competition enhance tree resistance to bark beetles. We also determined if structural elements within variable density thinning treatments influenced the level and spatial pattern of bark beetle-associated mortality. By exploring these relationships, our findings could provide a greater understanding on the underlying mechanisms that drive mortality to disturbances and also provide information to help develop prescriptions for enhancing resistance to drought and bark beetles.

Book Grazing in Future Multi scapes  From Thoughtscapes to Landscapes  Creating Health from the Ground Up

Download or read book Grazing in Future Multi scapes From Thoughtscapes to Landscapes Creating Health from the Ground Up written by Pablo Gregorini and published by Frontiers Media SA. This book was released on 2022-09-27 with total page 649 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This Research Topic is hosted in partnership with the "Grazing in Future Multi-Scapes" international workshop. The workshop will be held online, 30th May - 5th June 2021. Throughout different landscapes of the world, “grazing” herbivores fulfill essential roles in ecology, agriculture, economies and cultures including: families, farms, and communities. Not only do livestock provide food and wealth, they also deliver ecosystem services through the roles they play in environmental composition, structure and dynamics. Grazing, as a descriptive adjective, locates herbivores within a spatial and temporal pastoral context where they naturally graze or are grazed by farmers, ranchers, shepherds etc. In many cases, however, pastoralism with the single objective of maximizing animal production and/or profit has transformed landscapes, diminishing biodiversity, reducing water and air quality, accelerating loss of soil and plant biomass, and displacing indigenous animals and people. These degenerative landscape transformations have jeopardized present and future ecosystem and societal services, breaking the natural integration of land, water, air, health, society and culture. Land-users, policy makers and societies are calling for alternative approaches to pastoral systems; a call for diversified-adaptive and integrative agro-ecological and food-pastoral-systems designs that operate across multiple scales and ‘scapes’ (e.g. thought-, social-, land-, food-, health-, wild-scapes), simultaneously. There needs to be a paradigm shift in pastoral production systems and how grazing herbivores are managed –grazed- within them, derived initially from a change in perception of how they provide wealth. The thoughtscapes will include paradigm shifts where grazers move away from the actual archetype of pastoralism, future landscapes are re-imagined, and regenerative and sustainable management paradigms are put in place to achieve these visions. From this will come a change in collective thinking of how communities and cultures (socialscapes) perceive their relationships with pastoral lands. The landscapes are the biotic and abiotic four-dimensional domains or environments in need of nurture. Landscapes are the tables where humans and herbivores gain their nourishment, i.e. foodscapes. Foodscapes and dietary perceptions, dictate actions and reactions that are changing as developed countries grapple with diseases related to obesity, and people starve in developing countries. Societies are demanding healthscapes and nutraceutical foodscapes, and paradoxically, some are moving away from animal products. While indigenous species of animals, including humans (wildscapes), have been displaced from many of their lands by monotonic pastoralism, multifunctional pastoral systems can be designed in view of dynamic multi-scapes of the future. The purpose of this Research Topic is to influence future mental and practical models of pastoralism in continually evolving multi-scapes. We seek a collection of papers that will cultivate such a shift in thinking towards future models of sustainable multipurpose pastoralism. The contributions will be synthesized to establish how multifunctional pastoral systems can be re-imagined and then designed in view of the integrative dynamics of sustainable future multi-scapes.

Book Assessment and Response to Bark Beetle Outbreaks in the Rocky Mountain Area

Download or read book Assessment and Response to Bark Beetle Outbreaks in the Rocky Mountain Area written by United States. Forest Health Protection and published by . This book was released on 1998 with total page 60 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Medicine Bow Routt National Forests  N F    Bark Beetle Analysis

Download or read book Medicine Bow Routt National Forests N F Bark Beetle Analysis written by and published by . This book was released on 2002 with total page 318 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Western Bark Beetle Strategy

    Book Details:
  • Author : U.s. Forest Service
  • Publisher : Createspace Independent Pub
  • Release : 2012-08-15
  • ISBN : 9781479314997
  • Pages : 24 pages

Download or read book Western Bark Beetle Strategy written by U.s. Forest Service and published by Createspace Independent Pub. This book was released on 2012-08-15 with total page 24 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The Western Bark Beetle Strategy identifies how the Forest Service is responding to and will respond to the western bark beetle epidemic over the next five years. The extent of the epidemic requires prioritization of treatments, first providing for human safety in areas threatened by standing dead hazard trees, and second, addressing dead and down trees that create hazardous fuels conditions adjacent to high value areas. After the priority of safety, forested areas with severe mortality will be reforested with the appropriate species (Recovery). Forests will also be thinned to reduce the number of trees per acre and create more diverse stand structures to minimize extensive epidemic bark beetle areas (resiliency). This is a modest strategy that reflects current budget realities, but focuses our resources in the most important places that we can make a big difference to the safety of the American public. This strategy covers Fiscal Year (FY) 2011 through 2016. The western United States is experiencing the largest bark beetle outbreak in recorded history. Although western forests have experienced regular infestations throughout their history, the current epidemic is notable for its intensity, extensive geographic range, and simultaneous occurrence in multiple ecosystems. Since 1997, infestations of bark beetle species have escalated resulting in more than 41.7 million acres across all ownerships sustaining some level of conifer tree mortality. The past decade's epidemic is unprecedented in its environmental and social impacts. Various parts of the west experienced bark beetle population peaks at different times over the past 14 years. The Forest Service and the Natural Resources Conservation Service undertook a focused safety and recovery effort that was supported by approximately $138 million in agency and supplemental appropriations. From 2000 through 2009, the intermountain west experienced bark beetle caused mortality over an estimated 21.7 million acres across all ownerships, 17.7 million acres on national forests. The situation is further complicated by the fact that more and more people live and recreate in areas affected by the epidemic. This strategy incorporates our current understanding of available scientific research and presents a science-based path forward. The strategy will be achieved through well-defined goals, objectives, and action items, to address each of the three prongs of the bark beetle problem: human safety, forest recovery, and long-term forest resiliency. A successful approach to mitigating the impact of bark beetle must address actions for all three goals. While safety of human communities and infrastructure protection is paramount, there is also a critical need to restore the function and structure of our forests. Bark beetle is a natural part of our forests and as such will regularly impact our forests and the adjacent communities. Conducting resiliency treatments now and in the future will help minimize the potential for new outbreaks of bark beetles or make future outbreaks less intense. Although there has been much work accomplished to date for bark beetle management, this report focuses on the future. Honing our continuing response will seek to integrate various vegetation management activities across all jurisdictions to address bark beetle concerns in prioritized areas. Now is the time to act. Forest Service resources are in a position in which they can effectively respond and address this issue with increased effort. Public safety and economic impacts and costs will only increase if we delay.

Book Salvage Harvest Effects on Advance Tree Regeneration  Soil Nitrogen  and Fuels Following Mountain Pine Beetle Outbreak in Lodgepole Pine

Download or read book Salvage Harvest Effects on Advance Tree Regeneration Soil Nitrogen and Fuels Following Mountain Pine Beetle Outbreak in Lodgepole Pine written by Jacob M. Griffin and published by . This book was released on 2013 with total page 12 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The extent and severity of recent native bark beetle (Dendroctonae) outbreaks in western North America have created a pressing need for forest managers to understand potential consequences of post-disturbance management. For example, post-outbreak timber harvest (i.e., salvage harvest) could alter future forest development, productivity and susceptibility to subsequent disturbance. To assess the potential for such consequences, we measured first-year effects of post-outbreak timber harvest on tree regeneration, soil nitrogen (N) availability and fuels by using a paired and replicated before?after-control-impact (BACI) experimental design with eight pairs of 0.25-ha plots in beetle-killed lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta var. latifolia) in Greater Yellowstone (Wyoming, USA). Post-outbreak timber harvest reduced total (live + dead) lodgepole pine basal area by 90%. Total sapling density (advance regeneration) declined by about 50% following harvest, with tall (30?140 cm) saplings declining most, but mean post-harvest sapling density still exceeded 1600 stems ha^?1. Relative species density was unaffected and remained dominated by lodgepole pine. Soil temperature at the litter?soil interface was warmer during summer in harvested stands, and soil View the MathML source concentration increased with harvest relative to untreated plots. Soil View the MathML source concentration and resin bag N accumulation increased through time in all beetle-killed plots and were not affected by harvest. Following harvest, dead woody surface fuels in all size categories doubled, and canopy fuel load and canopy bulk density both were reduced; dead fuel depth, duff depth, and canopy base height did not differ between untreated and harvested plots. Harvest did reduce canopy fuels, but the natural progression of needle shedding after beetle-kill accounted for 25?40% of this total canopy fuel reduction. Salvage harvest seems unlikely to alter post-outbreak successional trajectories in these lodgepole pine forests. However, the altered fuel complex (immediate increase in dead woody surface fuels and expected long-term reduction in large-diameter fuels) in harvested plots could cause subsequent fire behavior and effects to differ between harvested and untreated stands.

Book Distribution of Bark Beetle Attacks on Ponderosa Pine Trees in Montana

Download or read book Distribution of Bark Beetle Attacks on Ponderosa Pine Trees in Montana written by Philip Cornwell Johnson and published by . This book was released on 1967 with total page 8 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The boles of 71 mature ponderosa pine trees killed by Dendroctonus brevicomis LeConte (Coleoptera: Scolytidae) were analyzed to determine the distribution of the attacks by endemic populations of this bark beetle and those of several phloem -feeding associates. The longitudinal -circumferential distribution of the attacks fitted dia- grammatically into four distinguishable bole infestation patterns. The characteristics of the patterns and similarities with comparable ‍?attacks of D. brevicomis in northeastern California are discussed.

Book Influence of Past Management on Landscape scale Dynamics of Indigenous Pathogens and Their Conifer Hosts in Sierra Nevada Forests

Download or read book Influence of Past Management on Landscape scale Dynamics of Indigenous Pathogens and Their Conifer Hosts in Sierra Nevada Forests written by Heather Kathryn Mehl and published by . This book was released on 2012 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The effects of forest management on pathogen dynamics in Sierra Nevada forests are examined in two distinct systems in this thesis. The first chapter focuses on the causes of forest canopy gaps in Yosemite Valley, where the frequency of disease centers initiated by two native root disease fungi (Heterobasidion irregulare and Armillaria mellea) have increased as an unintended consequence of land management practices implemented decades to over a century ago. Ground surveys were conducted in 1999 and 2011, and photographs from 1972 were used to examine long-term changes in gap causes, frequencies, and sizes. Native root diseases, in conjunction with pine bark beetles, were the most frequent agents of gap initiation. Other gap initiating agents included additional species of bark beetles and heart and butt rotting fungi. Specific mortality agents did not affect the forest in the same way; organisms differed in their influences on gap size, selectivity of tree species removed from the forest, and their response to altered stand conditions. Over the past thirty-nine years, the number and sizes of canopy gaps in the Valley have continually increased, resulting in the loss of roughly one-third of the forest canopy in the west end of Yosemite Valley by 2011, largely as a consequence of the persistence and expansion of root disease-associated gaps over time. This study demonstrates how previous land management (e.g., tree removal, fire suppression) can impact vegetation dynamics over extended time scales, and highlights the importance of considering land-use legacies when interpreting current landscape patterns and processes, and planning future conservation and management objectives. The study presented in the second chapter examines forests dominated by true fir (Abies spp.) infected with dwarf mistletoes (Arceuthobium spp.) throughout the Sierra Nevada. Often, when fir stands are managed for timber, understory trees are left on site following harvest for stand re-stocking. With this type of management, dwarf mistletoe infection on residual firs is a frequent concern. This study examined the effects of dwarf mistletoe infection on developing red (A. magnifica) and white (A. concolor) fir and the efficacy of pre-commercial thinning for reducing losses associated with dwarf mistletoe infection. Radial growth and dwarf mistletoe infection severity were monitored for 20 years, and mortality for 25 years. Fir survival and radial growth decreased with increasing dwarf mistletoe infection severity, and thinning increased survival times and radial growth rates. However, the intensification of dwarf mistletoe on individual trees and spread to previously uninfected trees was greater in thinned than unthinned stands. The results of this study suggest that pre-commercial thinning may help compensate for growth and mortality losses; however, the impact of dwarf mistletoe infection on true firs has been minimal over the course of this study, and so the benefits of thinning may not justify the expense of applying treatments for dwarf mistletoe control in these stands.

Book The Battle Against Bark Beetles in Crater Lake National Park  1925 34

Download or read book The Battle Against Bark Beetles in Crater Lake National Park 1925 34 written by Boyd E. Wickman and published by . This book was released on 1990 with total page 44 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Plant Community Response to Thinning and Repeated Fire in a Sierra Nevada Mixed conifer Forest Understory

Download or read book Plant Community Response to Thinning and Repeated Fire in a Sierra Nevada Mixed conifer Forest Understory written by Maxwell Odland and published by . This book was released on 2020 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Fire suppression in the western United States has significantly altered forest composition and structure, resulting in higher risk from fire and large-scale drought and bark beetle events. Mechanical thinning and prescribed fire are common treatments designed to reduce high-severity fire risk, but few studies have tracked long-term understory plant community response with repeated fire application that emulates historic fire regimes. We evaluate changes in understory plant community diversity and composition and environmental characteristics over two decades following a factorial field experiment that crosses thinning and two applications of prescribed fire at the Teakettle Experimental Forest (TEF) in the southern Sierra Nevada. We compare experimental fuels treatments against nearby old-growth, mixed-conifer forests with frequent, low severity fire regimes in Yosemite and Kings Canyon National Parks. This study points to key differences in how thinning and prescribed fire treatments affect plant understory diversity. Although local understory plant richness initially increased most following thinning combined with prescribed fire, this treatment did not generate understory communities similar to those in reference forests; Intense shrub growth resulted in low understory evenness and beta diversity over time, which a secondary burn treatment did not alter. Burning without thinning retained a more heterogeneous understory over time and, at least in the two years following the second burn treatment, with high understory richness and evenness similar to reference forest understories. Our results suggest management treatments may need to focus on creating heterogeneity in burn effects and environmental conditions to foster diverse forest understories and limit post-treatment shrub cover.

Book Bark Beetle Risk in Mature Ponderosa Pine Forests in Western Montana

Download or read book Bark Beetle Risk in Mature Ponderosa Pine Forests in Western Montana written by Philip Cornwell Johnson and published by . This book was released on 1972 with total page 44 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book The Effect of Forest Structure on Yellow Pine mixed conifer Resilience to Wildfire and Bark Beetle Disturbance in the Sierra Nevada  California

Download or read book The Effect of Forest Structure on Yellow Pine mixed conifer Resilience to Wildfire and Bark Beetle Disturbance in the Sierra Nevada California written by Michael J. Koontz and published by . This book was released on 2019 with total page 134 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Disturbances like wildfire and bark beetle activity can alter forest structure, which influences the outcomes of future disturbances. The long-term persistence of forest ecosystems hinges on these feedbacks, which promotes resilience. These feedbacks are explored by measuring disturbance severity as well as local-scale forest structure at broad spatial extents in the yellow pine/mixed-conifer forest system of the Sierra Nevada, California. Tools such as massively parallel cloud-based GIS and drone remote sensing were used to collect data about how forest structure affects wildfire and bark beetle disturbance. Overall, this work demonstrates how an understanding of the complexities of local forest structure, including the size, species, and spatial distribution of trees, can generate insight into how broader-scale patterns of tree mortality arise during wildfire and bark beetle disturbance.--adapted from abstract.

Book Mountain Pine Beetle Attack in Ponderosa Pine  Comparing Methods for Rating Susceptibility

Download or read book Mountain Pine Beetle Attack in Ponderosa Pine Comparing Methods for Rating Susceptibility written by David C. Chojnacky and published by . This book was released on 2000 with total page 16 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Two empirical methods for rating susceptibility of mountain pine beetle attack in ponderosa pine were evaluated. The methods were compared to stand data modeled to objectively rate each sampled stand for susceptibly to bark-beetle attack. Data on bark-beetle attacks, from a survey of 45 sites throughout the Colorado Plateau, were modeled using logistic regression to estimate the probability of attack on individual trees from tree and stand variables. The logistic model allowed flexibility to easily scale results up to a stand level for comparison to the empirical methods. The empirical method, developed by Munson and Anhold, most closely correlated to the logistic regression results. However, the Munson/Anhold method rated all 45 study sites as either moderately or highly susceptible to bark-beetle attack, which raises concern about its lack of sensitivity. Future work on evaluating risk of bark-beetle impact should consider more than stand characteristics.

Book Natural Regeneration in Partial Cuts and Mature Forests After Mountain Pine Beetle Infestation in the West Chilcotin

Download or read book Natural Regeneration in Partial Cuts and Mature Forests After Mountain Pine Beetle Infestation in the West Chilcotin written by Nola Marie Daintith and published by . This book was released on 2015 with total page 32 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The Itcha-Ilgachuz Research Project was initiated in the west Chilcotin region of central British Columbia to test variants of group selection and irregular group shelterwood silvicultural systems for managing lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta var. latifolia) forests for timber and northern caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou Gmelin, northern ecotype) winter habitat. The results presented in this report are from three assessments that have been completed since the start of the mountain pine beetle outbreak, and are provided in context with the results from the earlier natural regeneration study. The results provide insight into how successfully the study sites and surrounding forests, which have sustained variable levels of mortality, regenerate naturally.--Includes text from document.

Book Variable Tree Growth After Fire Protects Forests from Future Bark Beetle Outbreaks

Download or read book Variable Tree Growth After Fire Protects Forests from Future Bark Beetle Outbreaks written by Kelly April Tyrrell and published by . This book was released on 2016 with total page 4 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Do severe wildfires make forests in the western United States more susceptible to future bark beetle outbreaks? The answer, in a study published Monday (Nov. 7, 2016) in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is no. By leading to variability in the density and size of trees that grow during recovery, large fires reduce the future vulnerability of forests to synchronous bark beetle attacks and broad-scale outbreaks. -- Summary.