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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Larix occidentalis | Western Larch
 

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VALUE AND USE

SPECIES: Larix occidentalis | Western Larch
WOOD PRODUCTS VALUE : Western larch is primarily used for construction lumber because of its strength and hardness. It makes excellent utility poles because of its length, form, and strength. It is also used in plywood manufacture and to make fine veneer [118]. In lower montane forests of Montana, western larch is the preferred timber species because it grows larger and yields more clear timber than Douglas-fir [96]. Wood anatomy has been examined in detail [83,148]. Two other wood products obtained from western larch are arabinogalactan, a water-soluble gum used industrially, and oleoresin, used to produce turpentine and related products [118]. The wood is excellent fuel. Wood from western larch snags can be made into shakes [4]. IMPORTANCE TO LIVESTOCK AND WILDLIFE : Deer, elk, moose, black bear, grizzly bear, and many species of birds and small mammals occur in seral western larch forests. Western larch stands frequently occur in areas of heavy snowpack that are unsuitable for critical winter range for big game animals [116,118]. When western larch stands are thinned, they have good potential for livestock forage production [150]. Western larch needles are a major food source for the blue grouse and spruce grouse [4]. The red crossbill eats some western larch seed [75]. Seed-eating small rodents prefer larger Douglas-fir and pine seed but consume some western larch seed [9,132]. Squirrels cut and cache western larch cones in years when other conifers have poor crops [116,118]. Western larch is browsed sparingly by elk, deer, and moose during winter when other food is scarce [35,116,118]. Bears or porcupines may eat the inner bark of western larch saplings and poles in the spring [116,118]. PALATABILITY : Western larch appears to be unpalatable to most big game animals, but it is eaten as emergency food [116,118]. Its seeds are palatable to small birds and mammals, although larger seeds are preferred [9,132,116]. NUTRITIONAL VALUE : Western larch needles at two locations in eastern Washington contained 2.0 percent and 1.7 percent nitrogen, respectively [40]. Nutrient values for western larch needles, twigs, and other tree parts have been reported from two sites in western Montana [137]. Whole tree values have also been published [136]. Green needles from Lubrecht Experimental Forest, Montana had a mean ash content of 5.8 percent and a range of 3.47 to 8.16 percent, while green needles from Coram Experimental Forest, Montana had a mean ash content of 5.3 percent and a range of 4.9 to 8.9 percent. Nutrient values for needles are summarized below [137]: Lubrecht Forest Coram Forest - - - - - - - - micrograms per gram - - - - - - - - Mean Range Mean Range Calcium 3,031 2,000-4,800 2,213 1,980-2,390 Copper 8.3 5.0-15.2 15.5 10.7-35.2 Iron 86.8 41-173 126 109-218 Potassium 6,405 2,800-9,760 4,958 4,390-5,388 Magnesium 1,098 692-1,592 1,083 1,005-1,113 Manganese 216 81-405 181 160-239 Nitrogen 13,518 9,730-15,540 23,320 17,920-28,923 Sodium 61.4 24.4-123.0 56 45-125 Phosphorus 2,343 1,678-3,186 2,960 1,894-3,269 Zinc 15.8 6.0-35.6 24.6 21.1-27.7 COVER VALUE : Western larch snags provide nesting areas for cavity-nesting songbirds, woodpeckers, and owls [4,116,118]. Around 25 percent of the birds that nest in the northern Rocky Mountains make or use tree cavities. Western larch, with its decay-resistant sapwood, is a preferred species [77,78]. The holes are also used for protection during storms and as roosting sites [78]. Both snags and live western larch are used by cavity nesters [77]. Flying squirrels may nest in holes in western larch snags. The osprey, bald eagle, and occasionally the Canada goose build platformlike nests on top of western larch snags [4]. VALUE FOR REHABILITATION OF DISTURBED SITES : Western larch's rapid early growth, fire resistance, and the litter layer produced by its deciduous needles make it useful for rehabilitation on well-drained moist sites within its range [145]. However, it does not compete well with grasses and shrubs [112]. Seed collection, stratification treatments, germination tests, and seed handling have been described in detail [71,106,125]. Spot seeding has been discussed [118,132]. Direct seeding rates for British Columbia are given [84]. Detailed information is available on the production and handling of seedlings [15]. Container-grown seedlings have been inoculated and successfully formed mycorrhizal root systems with two fungi, Laccaria laccata and Cenococcum geophilum [86]. OTHER USES AND VALUES : Northern Rocky Mountain Native Americans enjoyed a sweet syrup made by allowing western larch sap to evaporate and concentrate. They also ate the cambium layer under the bark in spring and chewed solidified pitch for gum [51]. Tea made from the bark was used for colds, coughs, and tuberculosis. Western larch sap was used for sore throat and gum was applied to cuts and bruises [51]. In British Columbia decoctions made from western larch boughs or bark were used as a general tonic, for respiratory ailments, as a poultice or wash for wounds, as a contraceptive, to wash babies, and was both drunk and used as a wash for breast cancer [143]. Boughs were dried for winter use, and western larch pitch was used on the chest for respiratory ailments and on wounds [143]. Western larch wood was used to make bowls, as a fuel, and the rotten wood was used to smoke buckskin. Kootenai Indians used larch for the center pole during the religious Sundance [51]. Western larch is easily grown in gardens and parks, although it may become too large for home gardens. Seedlings are easy to transplant in the fall after an early rain and may be treated as bonsai [68]. MANAGEMENT CONSIDERATIONS : Management systems: The ecological requirements of western larch are best met by even-aged silviculture systems. It is particularly well adapted to seed tree cuts and clearcuts [113,116,146]. Clearcutting is most effective where the overstory trees are infected with dwarf mistletoe and root rots and may be most practical if western larch regeneration is desired in a stand with few old larch left [113]. In British Columbia, western larch is favored by short-rotations because of its rapid growth on favorable sites [65]. It is a poor option for high-elevation sites where its reliability is low, productivity is variable, and it is subject to severe stem sweep [111]. Vegetative and reproductive buds can be distinguished by early fall, allowing prediction of the following year's cone crop. Descriptions of the different types of buds and sampling procedures have been published [25,93,103]. In British Columbia, cone collection is best in mid-September [25]. In western Montana, the best time for cone collection is late August to early September. The collection period may be extended by storing the cones and extracting seeds in October [125]. Cone production may be increased by girdling the tree. Seeds produced after girdling and/or fertilizing are heavier, although there may be fewer per cone [41]. Mineral soil seedbeds may be prepared by prescribed burning or scarification. These treatments also reduce or delay competition [112,116,117,118]. Seedling growth is best on north slopes under either an open canopy or no canopy [96]. On sites with snowbrush (Ceanothus spp.), seedlings planted in the first or second year were able to grow as fast as the snowbrush, while natural regeneration was overtopped by the snowbrush before it became established [128]. Western larch seedlings survive planting better when they are dormant or close to dormancy [129]. Overstocking is common in young stands and affects both height and diameter growth [116]. Thinning allows trees to grow to a larger size earlier in young, even-aged stands of western larch [121]. Thinning from below between 10 and 15 years of age is best; thinning does not appreciably increase growth of crop trees after 50 years of age [14,105,120]. Removing competition by slashing increased 25-year-old western larch height and diameter growth [42]. Thinning western larch creates favorable conditions for shade-tolerant conifers and further cleaning will maintain a vigorous stand [112,121]. Tables showing average site indices for several habitat types and relationships between height, potential d.b.h., volume, spacings, site index, and age or habitat type are given [116]. Snow damage is normally not a problem for this deciduous tree, as young western larch are supple and able to recover rapidly if a late, heavy snow does occur [115]. Habitat for cavity-nesting species: Management recommendations for maintaining populations of cavity-nesting birds while utilizing timber include retaining a significant number of well-scattered, old-growth western larch, ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa), or black cottonwood (Populus trichocarpa) trees [77,78]. Optimum habitat for pileated woodpeckers seems to be a midsuccessional forest with large overstory western larch or ponderosa pine and snags housing carpenter ants for winter food [46]. Insects and Disease: Larch casebearer (Coleophora laricella) and western spruce budworm (Choristoneura fumiferana) are the most destructive defoliating insects that feed on western larch [21,118]. While mortality due to larch casebearer is low, repeated defoliations slow growth and may leave trees unable to maintain the dominance needed to compete in a mixed stand. Defoliation also increases susceptibility to other insects and diseases [116,118,121]. The biology of and biological controls for larch casebearer have been studied in detail [21,22]. Biological controls and adverse weather appear to be reducing larch casebearer populations [116]. Western spruce budworm damages cone-bearing twigs, cones, and seeds on western larch [12,106,126]. It also reduces height growth and damages the form of young trees by severing terminal and lateral shoots [27,118]. Because western larch is not a preferred species, it may gain a competitive edge during severe spruce budworm outbreaks [79]. A number of other insects cause lesser amounts of damage to western larch foliage and seed crops [116,118,130]. Quinine fungus (Fomitopsis officinalis) and red ring rot (Phellinus pini) frequently cause rot in western larch [4,116,118]. Annosus root disease (Heterobasidion annosum) is rare on western larch but has been observed in Idaho [151]. In British Columbia, western larch is very susceptible to laminated root rot (Phellinus weirii var. pseudotsugae) and a shoot blight disease (Encoeliopsis laricina). It is somewhat susceptible to Armillaria root rot (Armillaria ostoyae) [141]. Larch needle cast (Hypodermella laricis) and larch needle blight (Meria laricis) both infect western larch in spring but apparently are most severe in nurseries [36]. Many less common fungi infect western larch [116,118]. Mistletoe: Western larch is susceptible to larch dwarf mistletoe (Arceuthobium laricis) but immune to other dwarf mistletoes [56,56]. This mistletoe can cause serious problems, and in eastern Oregon and eastern Washington, 84 percent of trees are infested with dwarf mistletoe [10,116,118]. Dwarf mistletoe increases susceptibility to other diseases [28]. Infested trees may die following thinning [28]. The use of thinning to control dwarf mistletoe in stands with western larch has been described [28,107]. Herbicides: Use of mixtures of Esteron Brush Killer and diesel to control shrubs causes t0p-kill in western larch [81]. Western larch is susceptible to bromacil. It is resistant to 2,4-D and 2,4,5-T when applied as a foliar spray but susceptible to both herbicides when applied as a basal spray [11]. Procedures for the use of maleic hydrazide and picloram to control larch are available [49].

Related categories for Species: Larix occidentalis | Western Larch

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