Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

38

description

Western Juniper- Steens Mountain. Alturas Juniper. Steens Juniper. Small Junipers on Steens. Bates Juniper Plots. Suppression of Understory Plants by Juniper on Steens Mountain. Cut Juniper Plot on Steens. Pre-Settlement Woodlands. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Page 1: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain
Page 2: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

0

20

40

60

80

100

1800 1825 1850 1875 1900 1925 1950 1975 2000

Year

Nu

mb

er

Western Juniper Quaking Aspen

Page 3: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Alturas Juniper

Page 4: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Steens Juniper

Page 5: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Small Junipers on Steens

Page 6: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Bates Juniper Plots

Page 7: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Suppression of Understory Plants by Juniper on Steens Mountain

Page 8: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Cut Juniper Plot on Steens

Page 9: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Pre-Settlement Woodlands

• Western Juniper confined to three major fire safe localities– Rocky ridgelines, outcrops…– Low sagebrush zones with fractured subsurface

bedrock– Central Oregon pumice zone (around Bend)

Page 10: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Big Steens Juniper

Page 11: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain
Page 12: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Initial Factorsfor Juniper Expansion

• Favorable establishment conditions, 1885-1920

• General overstocking of livestock which removed fine fuels

• Lack of prescribed fire- removal of Native Americans

Page 13: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Present Day Factors

• Fire suppression (esp. since 1940’s in rangelands)

• Lack of fuels resulting from site dominance by juniper

• Lack of prescribed burn programs

Page 14: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Fire History

• Pre-settlement fire return intervals– Mountain sagebrush zone (4700 – 6000 ft), Chewaucan

River Basin• 12 to 15 year fire return interval (range 3 – 28 years)

– Southwest Idaho• 40 to 50 year interval sufficient to inhibit juniper expansion

– Low sagebrush zones• 90 to 100 year fire return interval

• Fire years were preceded by 1 -2 years of above average precipitation

Page 15: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Extent of Western Juniper Woodlands

• 8.5 million acres in western juniper woodland– Oregon – 5.0 million acres– SW Idaho – 450,000 acres– NW California – 1 million acres– N Nevada – 2 million acres

• 95% of the woodlands are 100 years old or less

Page 16: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Plant Communities Affected

• Mountain sagebrush

• Aspen

• Riparian

• Low Sagebrush

• Majority of stands are still expanding

Page 17: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Ecological Effects of Juniper Expansion

• Significant reductions in shrub/understory production and cover– Especially true on soils with restrictive layers– On deeper soils tendency to lose shrubs but may retain cover of

the grass and herb layer (e.g. Idaho fescue sites)

• Reduced plant diversity• Increased erosion potential

– Mostly low elevation, or south and west aspects, and shallow soils with restrictive layers- based on SW research

• Loss of wildlife habitat

Page 18: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Proven Effects of Cutting or Burning in Juniper Woodlands

• Increase understory production

• Increase plant diversity

• Increase shrub cover

• Increase ground cover

• Reduce erosion

Page 19: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Soil/Ash Profile

Page 20: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Kiger Gorge

Page 21: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

McCoy Ridge Aspen

Page 22: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Impact of Western Juniper on Hillslope Hydrology: Steens Mountain, OR

USDA – Agricultural Research Service

Northwest Watershed Research Center, Boise, IDSustainable Management of Rangelands Research Unit, Burns, OR

Page 23: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Vegetation Response Following Juniper Cutting, Steens Mtn, Oregon

Page 24: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Rainfall Simulation Equipment for Studying Infiltration, Runoff, and Erosion Patterns

Page 25: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Uncut Juniper Treatment

Page 26: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Cut Juniper Treatment

Page 27: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Head Wall Style

Page 28: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Silty Water from Woodland Plot

Page 29: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

No Runoff in Cut Plot

Page 30: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Removing Juniper Decreases Runoff Volume

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60

Time (minutes)

Cu

mu

lati

ve

Ru

no

ff(i

nc

he

s)

Juniper Juniper Removed

Rainfall = 2.1 inches/hour

Page 31: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Removing Juniper Reduces Sheet Erosion

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60

Time (minutes)

Se

dim

en

t Y

ield

(to

ns

/ac

re)

Juniper Juniper Removed

Rainfall = 2.1 inches/hour

Page 32: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Woodland Succession

Phase I

Trees = subordinate

Phase II

Trees = codominant

Phase III

Trees = dominant

Miller et al. 2000 JRM

Page 33: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Steens Mountain Burn

Page 34: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Lomatium in Burn (foreground)

Page 35: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

?

?

Idaho fescue

Cheatgrass

Page 36: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Cavity Nesting Species

Avian photos by P. LaTourrette

Page 37: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

Mt Bluebirds

Mt Chickadees

Chipping sparrowsFlycatchers

Juncos

Sage thrasher

Sage sparrow

Brewers sparrow

Green tailed towhee

Vesper sparrow

Horned lark

Western Meadowlarks

Finches

10 25 50 100Years

Photo: P. LaTourrette

Page 38: Western Juniper- Steens Mountain

0

25

50

% C

over

Phase I Phase II Phase III

Threshold

Woodland Development

> 175 trees/ha

Prevention

Containment

Restoration

shrub

juniper