Abstract

-On 6 December 1994 a severe ice storm hit several midwestern states. We inventoried damage and woody debris input from the storm in 30 0.1-ha permanent plots in an old-growth oak-hickory forest in northern Missouri. Twenty-seven percent of 1386 live trees 22 cm dbh were damaged but only 7% were severely damaged. Basswood (Tilia americana) and American elm (Ulmus americana) were the most susceptible species; white oak (Quercus alba), eastern hophornbeam (Ostrya virginiana) and shagbark hickory (Carya ovata) were among the least susceptible. Damage levels increased with stem diameter, and trees occupying dominant crown positions were more heavily damaged than suppressed trees. Damage severity was highly variable across the landscape, but trees on lower slopes and mesic aspects tended to have more damage, even for a given species. Coarse woody debris input from the storm averaged 5.1 m3/ha, 27% of the prestorm volume, with northern red oak (Q. rubra) and white oak contributing 79% of the total. This single event will probably have minimal impact on stand composition and structure, but repeated ice storms at 20-yr intervals likely influence forest dynamics in midwest oak-hickory forests.

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