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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Pseudotsuga macrocarpa | Bigcone Douglas-Fir
 

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FIRE ECOLOGY

SPECIES: Pseudotsuga macrocarpa | Bigcone Douglas-Fir
FIRE ECOLOGY OR ADAPTATIONS : Bigcone Douglas-fir is one of only a few western conifers capable of sprouting following fire. Mature trees sprout vigorously from the branches and bole after burning. The trunk and main branches of bigcone Douglas-fir have many dormant adventitous buds, which are insulated from fire beneath thick bark. Fire or other damage to the tree stimulates cell division and growth in these buds. Consequently, epicormic stems grow from the axils of branches or from branch stubs along the trunk from the middle or upper one-third of the crown [10,18]. Bigcone Douglas-fir growing at low elevation often escapes fire damage because the mesic sites where it grows are not fire-prone [15]. Potential fuels at higher-elevation sites are sparse because understory vegetation is killed as trees mature and canopies close [31]. Litter layers of bigcone Douglas-fir forests are usually poorly developed due to the paucity of herbaceous understory and the sparse fall of needles from trees [14]. Survival of bigcone Douglas-fir is enhanced in rough terrain such as talus gullies and rugged canyons; such topography often impedes the momentum and intensity of spreading fires [23]. Rates of deforestation by slope class range from 84 percent for slopes of less than 10 degrees to 51 percent for slopes between 30 and 39 degrees. On slopes greater than 40 degrees, bigcone Douglas-fir survival is 75 percent [22]. POSTFIRE REGENERATION STRATEGY : Secondary colonizer - off-site seed

Related categories for Species: Pseudotsuga macrocarpa | Bigcone Douglas-Fir

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Information Courtesy: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory. Fire Effects Information System

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