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Coast Range Conifers

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Coast Range Conifers Coast Redwoods and Closed Cone Pines Monterey Cypress Redwoods 3 Relict species left from when climate was cooler and wetter. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Coast Range Conifers


1
Coast Range Conifers
  • Coast Redwoods and
  • Closed Cone Pines

2
Redwoods
  • 3 Relict species left from when climate was
    cooler and wetter.
  • now trapped in refuges where there are remnants
    of former climate
  • Coast Redwood- Redwood lumber
  • Sequoia sempervirens
  • Sierra Big Tree, Giant Sequoia
  • Sequoiadendron giganteum
  • Dawn Redwood- (Now only in China)
  • Metasequoia glyptostroboides
  • Great web site http//www.nearctica.com

3
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4
Sierra Big Trees
5
Metasequoia
  • Once common in North America
  • Only 5000 are left in the wild in a small area
    between the Sichuan and Hubei provinces in China
  • A Deciduous conifer

6
Coast Redwood Forest
  • In narrow 14 mile belt just inland from coast,
  • from southern Oregon to Big Sur

7
Coast Redwood
  • Needs cool summer weather, with fog to stay wet.
  • Does not tolerate long freezing temperature
  • Can not tolerate salt spry (dries out leaves)
    grows one hill back from coast
  • Stump sprouts from cut trees forming circle of
    new trees Fairy Ring genetically identical to
    fallen log

8
Coast Redwood trees
  • Open Coned trees, but needs sterile (recently
    burned) soil for seeds to grow , or they succumb
    to fungal diseases.
  • Needs full sunlight, drops branches that are
    shaded.
  • Closed canopy forest dark understory that
    excludes other species, often a monoculture
  • thick needle duff layer covers soil
  • Bark resistant to fire, trunk can regrow branches
    that burn
  • Sprouts new roots at trunk base after floods
  • Roots graft together into a large network

9
Coast Redwood Forest
  • Dark damp understory
  • Ferns, Marbled Murret, Sorrel, Oxalis, Azalea,
    Huckleberry, snowberry, etc
  • Have large flat water needy leaves
  • Little wind in understory so plants there use
    animals for pollination seed dispersal
  • Most form berries for animals to disperse seeds.
  • Trillium, and Viola form oily Elaiosomes on small
    seeds. Ants eat oil while carrying seeds and
    discard, dispersing seeds.

10
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11
Old Growth RedwoodForests
  • Virgin forest never cut down.
  • Many Trees thousands of years old.
  • Only in old growth forests are all of the
    following characteristics present
  • Large living trees and a multi-layered canopy
  • Large standing snags
  • Large down trees
  • Large fallen trees in streams

12
Virgin Old Growth forests, 1620
13
Virgin Old Growth forests, 1998
14
Felling The Redwoods
15
Redwood Lumber
  • Heartwood very resistant to decay.
  • Used for earl development in California
  • Many communities started as lumber villages
    around saw mills.
  • Still used for outdoor furniture, fences,
    decks,etc.
  • New lumber mostly younger secondary growth has
    little resistant heart wood, needs to treated to
    resist decay.
  • Can be harvested every 40 years.

16
Beginnings of Redwood Conservation
  • Sempervirens Fund started in 1900 to preserve
    trees in Santa Cruz Mountains
  • They pushed for making Big Basin State Park
    (1902) with its Redwoods

Save The Redwoods League - formed in 1918 to
save some of the remaining Old Growth Forests
Both groups still very active
17
14
12
10
8
Timber cut (billions of board feet)
6
4
2
0
1930
1940
1950
1960
1970
1980
1990
2000
2010
Year
Fig. 23.14a, p. 601
18
350
300
250
200
Annual recreational visits (millions)
150
100
50
0
1930
1940
1950
1960
1970
1980
1990
2000
2010
Year
Fig. 23.14b, p. 601
19
Some Important Parks
  • Muir Woods, Marin County
  • Armstrong Redwoods State Park, Guerneville
  • Redwood National Park
  • Big Sur State Park
  • Big Basin State Park

20
Douglas Fir
  • Most common timber tree in the west
  • Found associated with many other trees

21
Sustainable Harvest
  • Using a select cut, trees may be harvest from
    same site every 10-20 years indefinitely.
  • Set up permanent, well design roads
  • Remove only a few trees each round
  • Remaining trees get more light and grow faster.
  • Many timber companies use clear cut
  • More economical
  • Size of are important, small (1-2 acre areas)
    considered safe method. Large areas have
    problems.
  • Tress stump sprout
  • If small area, fog is enough to allow for
    recovery with out drying out.

22
Selective Cutting
23
Clear-Cutting
24
40 plus yrs.
Cut
Cut
Cut
30-40 yrs
1 year ago
35 years ago
10-20 years ago
Strip Cutting small clear cut areas
25
North Coast Marine Terraces
26
Upper Terrace In Big Basin
27
Closed Cone Pines
  • Fire adapted- fire opens cones.
  • Most will open when old, if fire doesnt happen
  • Knob cone the most closed- needs fire to open
  • Most of the forest is same-age trees dating to
    last major fire
  • Point Reyes Bishop Pine Forest died in last big
    natural fire started in October 1995
  • Test plots set up to study rejuvenation
  • http//plantbio.berkeley.edu/bruns/postfire-bp.ht
    ml

28
Point Reyes 1995 Fire 3 years after
29
Smoke plume from fire
30
Relicts of earlier climate
  • 225-65 MYA (Million Years Ago) most of South
    Coast Range and Central Valley a shallow sea.
  • Followed by a temperate (cool) rain forest
  • 15 MYA climate gets colder and drier, drought
    adapted conifers move in from Idaho area
  • Ice Age, and Sierras uplift, climate continues to
    get drier
  • These trees are remnant populations trapped in
    pockets along cost with the cool, moist climate.
    Poor competitors use areas unsuitable for other
    wet area trees sandy and serpentine soils.
  • Once may all have been one species, now separated
    and adapted to local areas

31
Bishop Pine
32
Knob Cone Pine
33
Monterey Pine
34
Monterey Cypress
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