Henri D. Grissino-Mayer Michael R. Armbrister Laboratory of Tree-Ring Science

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Changes in Fire Regimes and the Successional Status of Table Mountain Pine in the Southern Appalachians Henri D. Grissino- Mayer Michael R. Armbrister Laboratory of Tree-Ring Science Department of Geography University of Tennessee Knoxville, Tennessee 37996

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Changes in Fire Regimes and the Successional Status of Table Mountain Pine in the Southern Appalachians. Henri D. Grissino-Mayer Michael R. Armbrister Laboratory of Tree-Ring Science Department of Geography University of Tennessee Knoxville, Tennessee 37996. Problem Statement. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Henri D. Grissino-Mayer Michael R. Armbrister Laboratory of Tree-Ring Science

Page 1: Henri D. Grissino-Mayer Michael R. Armbrister Laboratory of Tree-Ring Science

Changes in Fire Regimes and the Successional Status of Table Mountain Pine in the Southern Appalachians

Henri D. Grissino-Mayer

Michael R. Armbrister

Laboratory of Tree-Ring Science

Department of Geography

University of Tennessee

Knoxville, Tennessee 37996

Page 2: Henri D. Grissino-Mayer Michael R. Armbrister Laboratory of Tree-Ring Science

• Table Mountain pine endemic to Appalachians• Fire-dependent species: cone serotiny, site prep• Considerable human alterations to native communities• Primary among these is 20th century fire exclusion = new fire regime• Effects on this species are a major concern for management agencies

• Information needed on site-specific fire history• Retrospective study provides needed reference conditions

Problem Statement

Page 3: Henri D. Grissino-Mayer Michael R. Armbrister Laboratory of Tree-Ring Science

• Evaluate current age structure of select TMP stands

• Identify and characterize historical fire regimes in these stands

• Combine this information to assess its current successional status

Objectives

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Field Methods

1. Age structure analysis

Cored minimum 75 trees at 5 sites, 2 cores per tree

Aged seedlings and saplings via bud scars, branch nodes

2. Fire-scar analysis

Located suitable fire-scarred logs and snags

Collected small wedges from selected living trees

All sections collected via hand saws

Page 6: Henri D. Grissino-Mayer Michael R. Armbrister Laboratory of Tree-Ring Science

Laboratory Methods

1. Age structure analysis

Mounted, sanded, dated all tree rings on all cores

Developed histograms that depicted the age structure of all 5 stands

2. Fire-scar analysis

Sanded, dated all tree rings on all sections

Dated all embedded fire scars to year of formation *

Developed graphs depicting fire occurrence over time

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Age Classes

Fre

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Stagnation!

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Undated samples were very useful!

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Interval

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Mean Fire Interval 8 yrsMedian Fire Interval 6Weibull Modal Interval (MOI) 5Weibull Median Interval (MEI) 7

Lower Exceedance Interval (LEI) 3Upper Exceedance Interval (UEI) 13Maximum Hazard Interval (MHI) 81

Preliminary statistics on fire history in TMP stands of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Page 15: Henri D. Grissino-Mayer Michael R. Armbrister Laboratory of Tree-Ring Science

Major Conclusions

1. Living TMP crossdate very well = great potential.

2. Older dead and downed more difficult.

3. Age structure shows peaks in 60-69 and 70-79 classes.

4. Little to no regeneration is occurring in these stands.

5. Fire history information can be obtained even on undated samples.

6. Fires occurred ca. every 6-7 years in pre-park era.

7. Maximum Hazard Interval indicates conditions in these park stands are strongly conducive to burning.

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Acknowledgements

Thank you JFSP!

GSMNP, NPS, Mike Jenkins

TVA, Charles Smart

Committee members: Ken Orvis, Sally Horn

Laboratory of Tree-Ring Science

Department of Geography, University of Tennessee

Field and lab help from:

Daniel Lewis, David Mann, Jake Cseke, Beth Atchley, Damian Kolbay, Bill Dennis, Brian Reed