Title: ABIOTIC AND BIOTIC DISTRUBANCES
1Do natural disturbance regimes provide realistic
guidelines for managing early-successional
habitats in New England forests?Â
2Major forest types in northern U.S.
Lull (1968)
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51880
6gt50 of forest vertebrates utilize early-successio
nal stands
1930
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8Obligate users
1.0
RELATIVE USE
0.5
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
AGE OF STAND
9Golden-winged warbler
USGS
10FOREST MATURATION
FARM ABANDONMENT
Relative abundance of early-successional habitats
FOREST CLEARING
RETURN TO PRE-COLUMBIAN CONDITIONS ?
11How much was there?
12source Harvard Forest
13Methods to Estimate Natural Disturbance Regimes
Lorimer and White (2003)
- Sedimentary pollen and charcoal
- Presettlement land surveys
- Descriptions by early naturalists
- Reconstruction of disturbance history in
old-growth stands - Modern records and aerial photos
- Computer models
14Large-scale fires infrequent in New England,
800-1,200 years 1790 survey in NY found that 1
of landscape burned or open.
15Small-scale wind storms kill one to several
trees. In eastern U. S., 0.2- 2/year of all
forests are affected by wind throw. At any time,
5-50 of a forest may be affected.
16Large-scale wind storms hurricanes or tornadoes
at irregular intervals (1635, 1788, 1815, 1938,
and 1944).
1938 hurricane affected gt240,000 ha in New
England
Boose et al. (2001)
17Approximate return interval of damaging (F2)
hurricanes in New England.
Boose et al. (2001)
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19Wilson 2005
Lumber Exports (Wilson 2005) vs Witness Trees
Projections (Lorimer 1977) very different
estimates of the prominence of white pine (gt10x),
indicating a large difference in the frequency
and scale of disturbance in these forests.
20Northern Hardwoods
seedling/sapling (1-15 yrs) 1-3 young pole
(15-30 yrs) 1-3 2-6
Pitch Pine- Scrub Oak
seedling/sapling 10-30 young pole
10-30 20-60
(Lorimer and White 2003)
21Early-successional forests in the eastern U.S.
Trani et al. (2001)
22What AboutBiotic Disturbances?
23Contemporary Herbivores
24flooded forest pond wet meadow
shrubs forest
25How large an area affected?
1940 1 of area
1986 13 of area
Open water areas created by beaver dams on the
Kabetogama Peninsula, northern MN.
Johnston and Naiman (1990)
26Northern Hardwoods
seedling/sapling 1-3 young pole 1-3
(Lorimer and White 2003)
beaver flowages 3.5 (Gotie and Jenks 1982)
5-11
27Even if we can accurately estimate HRNV, are
these values relevant in contemporary landscapes?
28POPULATION DENSITY
40/mi2
1100/mi2
29Road Density in the Northeast
Hoving (2001)
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34100
140
120
RACCOONS
80
100
60
80
COMPOSITION ()
LANDSCAPE
RACCOON/CANID TRACKS
60
40
40
CANIDS
20
AGR
20
FOR
DEV
0
0
35 Patches
? 2.5 ha
? 5 ha
Winter mortality
36CONDITION-SENSITIVE PREDATION
LARGE
PATCHES
SMALL
PATCHES
FOOD QUALITY
THRESHOLD?
OCT
NOV
DEC
JAN
FEB
MAR
APR
MAY
3712
10
3
3
8
4
6
3
5
4
5
3
6
6
UNC RATIO
2
13
13
2
12
4
11
13
5
2
8
4
8
5
9
7
5
7
4
5
0
9 JAN
6 FEB
3 APR
6 MAR
16 JAN
23 JAN
30 JAN
13 FEB
20 FEB
27 FEB
10 APR
13 MAR
20 MAR
27 MAR
38New approaches needed to provide habitat
39potential to mimic natural disturbances
modified disturbances (large and
clustered/connected)
restoration of shrublands/ modified disturbance
regime (sliding scale)
Parcelization or Fragmentation
40ME
VT
NH
NY
MA
CT
RI
MANAGING INDUCED METAPOPULATIONS may require
deviating from HRNV
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44DESCRIBING HABITAT DISTURBANCES
Size
Frequency
Intensity
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46Do natural disturbance regimes provide realistic
guidelines for managing early-successional
habitats in New England forests?Â
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48Human-generated disturbances
49Pisgah Forest in southwestern New Hampshire three
years after 1938 hurricane.