Abstract

We used pollen and charcoal records from small hollows plus a network of surface samples to reconstruct stand-level vegetation and fire history at three sites on the Mount Constitution plateau of Orcas Island, Washington, USA. One record (beginning ca. 7100 calibrated years BP) is from a xeric site on the northern plateau, and two (beginning 3800 and 7650 years BP, respectively) are from mesic sites on the central and south-central plateau. Before 5300 years BP, vegetation and fire regimes at both the northern and south-central sites resembled those of current Mount Constitution forests. Around 5300 years BP, Alnus increased and Pinus decreased at the mesic south-central site, suggesting a change to moister and (or) cooler conditions, but Pinus remained dominant at or near the more xeric northern site. At both sites, charcoal deposition decreased, suggesting a decrease in fire frequency and (or) severity consistent with wetter conditions. After 2000 years BP, charcoal deposition increased at all three sites, and Pinus increased in the central and south-central sites, suggesting a return to drier conditions. Thus, stands on different sites in close proximity responded individually to the same climate change, depending on local site conditions and the ecology of the dominant trees.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call