Title: Legacies of Management
1Legacies of Management Land use
- Homogenized stands and landscapes
- Loss of OG
- Type Conversions
- Fragmentation/ Permeation (roads etc)
- Altered disturbance regimes
2Forest cover in 56 km2 pixels Red low (lt.4)
Green high (gt.6)
Fragmentation is pervasive and extensive
where forests do occur. Locations with
intermediate amounts of forest may represent
landscapes near critical thresholds of
fragmentation. Riitters et al 2002
3Legacies of Past Landuse
- New England Still recovering from early logging
and clearing for farms. Long-lived,
late-successional tree species replaced by
shorter-lived, early successional ones. Result
homogenized landscape - SE US. Extensive conversion of longleaf pine to
loblolly slash pine plantations. gtgt
vulnerability to bark beetles and some pathogens - Lake States. a distinct and rapid trajectory of
vegetation change toward historically
unprecedented and simplified conditions. lower
species diversity, functional diversity, and
structural complexity compared to
pre-Euro-American forests. (Schulte et al in
press) - West. In PNW, 85 conversion of mesic and dry
OG to plantations. In dry forests throughout,
fuels buildup due to fire suppression, grazing,
high-grading. On both counts, gtgt landscape
vulnerability to crown fire
4Many eruptive herbivores, nearly everywhere in
the world, are linked to monocultures or
near-monoculturesCoyle et al. 2005
One Consequence of Homogenization The Lunch
Table Effect
H. annosum, A. mellea, and H. weirii are
important diseases only because of modern
forestry practice Mannion 1981
Why? Bottom up Concentration of resources
Top-down Weakening the natural enemy complex
5Schowalter in press
6Swiss needle cast. Epidemic in Oregon Coast Range
Fusiform rust. Epidemic in SE Coastal Plain
7Susceptibility to Crown Fires
Plantations
OG
8It is abundantly evident that forest structure
and fuel changes have occurred in some extensive
ecosystem types following disruption of fire
regimes, especially in forests that previously
sustained frequent, low severity surface fires
1909
Swetnam 2006
1949
1990
Biondi, F. 1999. Ecol. Appl. 9 216-227
9Land clearing fires Borneo Source NASA
Aftermath of Borneo fires
10What to Do
- Build/restore appropriate heterogeneity species
composition (protecting habitat, streams, soils) - Protect and buffer large, intact blocks
- Protect all forests (forestry instead of
developmente.g. TNC Hawaii) - Restore connectivity