Abstract

AbstractAn understanding of current structural conditions and disturbance history is a requisite for optimal management of forest ecosystems, especially for serotinous species such as knobcone pine (Pinus attenuataLemmon). Knobcone pine is widely distributed in California, yet little is known regarding age and forest structure patterns. In this study, we quantify forest conditions of 21 mature knobcone pine stands in the northern Mayacmas Mountains, north Coast Range, California, USA. Characterized by complex terrain, knobcone pine forests occur in small patches interspersed with chaparral and mixed evergreen forests. Stands displayed unimodal, bimodal, and diffuse age distributions with predominant stand ages ranging from 42 yr to 70 yr, although trees ranged from 17 yr to 98 yr old. Knobcone pine stands appear to have been maintained by stand replacing fires. However, stands with uneven-aged structures were produced through the persistence of residual trees and low intensity fires that created secondary cohorts. Stands varied in density, ranging from 503 stems ha−1to 2986 stems ha−1, with snags comprising 12 % to 40 % of total density. Wildfires that occurred from the 1930s to the 1960s, in addition to a large wildfire in 1981, created a heterogeneous landscape of knobcone pine forests. Older stands have lower canopy cover, high snag densities, and many trees with evidence of western gall rust (Peridermium harknessii) infections—signs that they are approaching their expected life spans. Risks and constraints associated with using stand replacing prescribed fire pose a challenge for managers of knobcone pine forests, and research may be needed to explore feasible treatment alternatives.

Highlights

  • An understanding of current structural conditions and disturbance history is a requisite for optimal management of forest ecosystems, especially for serotinous species such as knobcone pine (Pinus attenuata Lemmon)

  • We quantify forest conditions of 21 mature knobcone pine stands in the northern Mayacmas Mountains, north Coast Range, California, USA

  • There is little research on demography and management of knobcone pine forests. This is due in part to assumptions about fire regime characteristics of serotinous species (Schwilk and Ackerly 2001, Davis and Borchert 2006, Mallek 2009), as well as physiognomic characteristics, which make accessibility and study of knobcone pine forests challenging

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Summary

ReseaRch aRticle

Age And Structure of MAture Knobcone Pine foreStS in the northern cAliforniA coASt rAnge, uSA. We quantify forest conditions of 21 mature knobcone pine stands in the northern Mayacmas Mountains, north Coast Range, California, USA. Research related to fire regimes of closed cone conifer forests in California usually have to do with fire frequencies and lifecycle risks (Zedler 1995) For these species, geographic databases and age structures of stands are used to assess current forest conditions and determine recent fire intervals. The purpose of this study was to assess current forest structural and stand age distributions, and to describe the stand histories in mature knobcone pine forests in the northern Mayacmas Mountains, located in the northern Coast Range, California, USA.

Study Area
Forest Measurements
Age Structure and Fire History
Stand and Age Characteristics
Arbutus menziesii Pursh
Height SE
Fire History
Findings
Management Implications
Full Text
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