Post-fire Tree Establishment Patterns at the Subalpine Forest-Alpine Tundra Ecotone: A Case Study in Mount Rainier National Park

Climatic changes have induced striking altitudinal and latitudinal vegetation shifts throughout history. These shifts will almost certainly recur in the future; threatening other flora and fauna, and influencing climate feedback loops. Changes in the spatial distribution of vegetation are most consp...

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Main Author: Stueve, Kirk M.
Other Authors: Millington, Andrew C., Klein, Andrew G., Lafon, Charles W., Popescu, Sorin C.
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-08-7099
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spelling fttexasamuniv:oai:oaktrust.library.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-08-7099 2023-07-16T04:01:10+02:00 Post-fire Tree Establishment Patterns at the Subalpine Forest-Alpine Tundra Ecotone: A Case Study in Mount Rainier National Park Stueve, Kirk M. Millington, Andrew C. Klein, Andrew G. Lafon, Charles W. Popescu, Sorin C. August 2009 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-08-7099 en_US eng https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-08-7099 alpine treeline tree establishment hierarchical partitioning hierarchical patch dynamics Book Thesis Electronic Dissertation text 2009 fttexasamuniv 2023-06-27T22:56:01Z Climatic changes have induced striking altitudinal and latitudinal vegetation shifts throughout history. These shifts will almost certainly recur in the future; threatening other flora and fauna, and influencing climate feedback loops. Changes in the spatial distribution of vegetation are most conspicuous at physiognomically distinct ecotones, particularly between the subalpine forest and alpine tundra. Traditionally, ecological research has linked abiotic variables with the position of this ecotone (e.g., cold temperatures inhibit tree survival at high elevations). Thus, the prevailing assumption states that this ecotone is in equilibrium or quasi-equilibrium with the surrounding physical environment and that any dynamic shifts express direct linkages with the physical environment. This dissertation employs a landscape ecology approach to examine the abiotic and biotic ecological mechanisms most important in controlling tree establishment at this ecotone. The study site is on the western slopes of Mount Rainier, which was severely burned by a slash fire in 1930. Therefore, a crucial underlying assumption is that the ecological mechanisms controlling tree establishment are similar at disturbed and undisturbed sites. I exploited the use of 1970 CORONA satellite imagery and 2003 aerial photography to map 33 years of changes in arboreal vegetation. I created detailed maps of abiotic variables from a LIDAR-based DEM and biotic variables from classified remotely sensed data. I linked tree establishment patterns with abiotic and biotic variables in a GIS, and analyzed the correlations with standard logistic regression and logistic regression in the hierarchical partitioning framework at multiple spatial resolutions. A biotic factor (proximity to previously existing trees) was found to exert a strong influence on tree establishment patterns; equaling and in most cases exceeding the significance of the abiotic factors. The abiotic setting was more important at restricted spatial extents near the extreme upper limits of ... Book Tundra Texas A&M University Digital Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Texas A&M University Digital Repository
op_collection_id fttexasamuniv
language English
topic alpine treeline
tree establishment
hierarchical partitioning
hierarchical patch dynamics
spellingShingle alpine treeline
tree establishment
hierarchical partitioning
hierarchical patch dynamics
Stueve, Kirk M.
Post-fire Tree Establishment Patterns at the Subalpine Forest-Alpine Tundra Ecotone: A Case Study in Mount Rainier National Park
topic_facet alpine treeline
tree establishment
hierarchical partitioning
hierarchical patch dynamics
description Climatic changes have induced striking altitudinal and latitudinal vegetation shifts throughout history. These shifts will almost certainly recur in the future; threatening other flora and fauna, and influencing climate feedback loops. Changes in the spatial distribution of vegetation are most conspicuous at physiognomically distinct ecotones, particularly between the subalpine forest and alpine tundra. Traditionally, ecological research has linked abiotic variables with the position of this ecotone (e.g., cold temperatures inhibit tree survival at high elevations). Thus, the prevailing assumption states that this ecotone is in equilibrium or quasi-equilibrium with the surrounding physical environment and that any dynamic shifts express direct linkages with the physical environment. This dissertation employs a landscape ecology approach to examine the abiotic and biotic ecological mechanisms most important in controlling tree establishment at this ecotone. The study site is on the western slopes of Mount Rainier, which was severely burned by a slash fire in 1930. Therefore, a crucial underlying assumption is that the ecological mechanisms controlling tree establishment are similar at disturbed and undisturbed sites. I exploited the use of 1970 CORONA satellite imagery and 2003 aerial photography to map 33 years of changes in arboreal vegetation. I created detailed maps of abiotic variables from a LIDAR-based DEM and biotic variables from classified remotely sensed data. I linked tree establishment patterns with abiotic and biotic variables in a GIS, and analyzed the correlations with standard logistic regression and logistic regression in the hierarchical partitioning framework at multiple spatial resolutions. A biotic factor (proximity to previously existing trees) was found to exert a strong influence on tree establishment patterns; equaling and in most cases exceeding the significance of the abiotic factors. The abiotic setting was more important at restricted spatial extents near the extreme upper limits of ...
author2 Millington, Andrew C.
Klein, Andrew G.
Lafon, Charles W.
Popescu, Sorin C.
format Book
author Stueve, Kirk M.
author_facet Stueve, Kirk M.
author_sort Stueve, Kirk M.
title Post-fire Tree Establishment Patterns at the Subalpine Forest-Alpine Tundra Ecotone: A Case Study in Mount Rainier National Park
title_short Post-fire Tree Establishment Patterns at the Subalpine Forest-Alpine Tundra Ecotone: A Case Study in Mount Rainier National Park
title_full Post-fire Tree Establishment Patterns at the Subalpine Forest-Alpine Tundra Ecotone: A Case Study in Mount Rainier National Park
title_fullStr Post-fire Tree Establishment Patterns at the Subalpine Forest-Alpine Tundra Ecotone: A Case Study in Mount Rainier National Park
title_full_unstemmed Post-fire Tree Establishment Patterns at the Subalpine Forest-Alpine Tundra Ecotone: A Case Study in Mount Rainier National Park
title_sort post-fire tree establishment patterns at the subalpine forest-alpine tundra ecotone: a case study in mount rainier national park
publishDate 2009
url https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-08-7099
genre Tundra
genre_facet Tundra
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-08-7099
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