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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Tsuga canadensis | Eastern Hemlock
 

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FIRE ECOLOGY

SPECIES: Tsuga canadensis | Eastern Hemlock
FIRE ECOLOGY OR ADAPTATIONS : Eastern hemlock is very susceptible to fire because of its thin bark, shallow roots, low-branching habit, and heavy litter deposits [20,51]. It is possibly the most fire-sensitive mesophytic tree species in its range [51]. Eastern hemlock usually escapes fire because it occurs in moist habitats and is often associated with hardwoods which do not readily burn. If a fire starts in a cutover area, a windfall area, or an area with dead standing timber, it may carry into a northern hardwoods forest if there is strong wind [18]. In Michigan, the average return time for severe crown fires in the hemlock-white pine-northern hardwoods type is estimated to be about 1,400 years [63]. In northeastern Maine, the average return interval for fire in spruce-fir forests in which eastern hemlock is a minor component is about 800 years [37]. Vogl [61] considers eastern hemlock a fire-initiated species rather than a fire-independent species because it benefits from fire-prepared seedbeds. However, suggestions that fire promotes regeneration of eastern hemlock are not well documented. Given the difficulties in accurate age estimates because of heart rot, Rogers [51] suggests that even-aged eastern hemlock forests that regenerated after fire may actually be uneven-aged. POSTFIRE REGENERATION STRATEGY : Tree without adventitious-bud root crown Secondary colonizer - off-site seed

Related categories for Species: Tsuga canadensis | Eastern Hemlock

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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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