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Title: Simulation of forest change in the New Jersey Pine Barrens under current and pre-colonial conditions.
Authors: Scheller, Robert M.
Van Tuyl, Steve
Clark, Kenneth
Hayden, Nicholas G.
Hom, John
Mladenoff, David J.
USDA, FS
Source: Forest ecology and management. 2008 Apr. 5, v. 255, no. 5-6 [Amsterdam]: Elsevier Science, p. 1489-1500.
NALT Subjects: pine barrens
land use change
history
forest trees
species diversity
forest ecosystems
botanical composition
forest communities
forest management
silvicultural practices
forest habitats
habitat fragmentation
prescribed burning
fire regime
wildland fire management
urbanization
wildland-urban interface
landscape ecology
vegetation structure
simulation models
New Jersey
Other Subjects: LANDIS-II model
Issue Date: 5-Apr-2008
Abstract: Changes in land use patterns in and around forests, including rural development and road building, have occurred throughout the United States and are accelerating in many areas. As a result, there have been significant departures from 'natural' or pre-settlement disturbance regimes. Altered disturbance regimes can shift composition and dominance in tree species communities, potentially affecting ecosystem functioning. We examined the potential consequences of various forest management practices and forest fragmentation on tree community composition. Both forest management and fragmentation are changing as land use changes within the New Jersey Pine Barrens (NJPB). The NJPB has and is continuing to experience rapid rural development and urbanization that are altering the types, frequency, and intensity of forest management, and are increasing forest fragmentation. In the NJPB, the size and frequency of wildfires have declined and the use of prescribed fires is limited to a small portion of the landscape. In addition, the expansion of roads and decline in total forested area - two common measures of fragmentation - may impede the ability of tree species to colonize available habitat. To assess the consequences of fire management and fragmentation on fire regimes and forest communities, we simulated forest landscape change using LANDIS-II, a stochastic, spatially dynamic forest succession model that simulates the growth of tree species cohorts (defined by species and age), dispersal and colonization, and mortality. Simulated fires are sensitive to fuel loads and fuel load continuity. We constructed scenarios to mimic the pre-colonial contiguous landscape with an estimated pre-colonial fire regime; scenarios of the current day landscape with current and potential fire management; and scenarios designed to highlight the effects of fragmentation. Our simulations indicate that relative to the pre-colonial landscape and fire regime, the landscape is changing from a pine-dominated to an oak-dominated state. However, within areas where prescribed burning remains a viable management option, a doubling of the mean annual area that is managed with prescribed burns may substantially push the system back towards pre-colonial conditions, although oaks will continue to retain a higher than pre-colonial dominance. Our results also indicate that aside from a reduction in the potential fire sizes, fragmentation does not appear to substantially alter forest successional dynamics. In summary, our simulations estimate the departure from pre-colonial conditions and indicate the potential for a limited restoration of these conditions.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10113/22295
Appears in Collections:USDA Research and Information

Files in This Item:

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IND44032274.pdf2185KbAdobe PDFView/Open

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