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

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VALUE AND USE

SPECIES: Tsuga heterophylla | Western Hemlock
WOOD PRODUCTS VALUE : Western hemlock wood is recognized as an all-purpose raw material. It is one of the best pulpwoods for paper and paper board products [57,72]. It is the principal source of alpha cellulose fiber used in the manufacture of rayon, cellophane, and many plastics [10]. Other uses are lumber for general construction, railway ties, mine timbers, and marine piling. The wood is suited also for interior finish, boxes and crates, kitchen cabinets, flooring, and ceiling, gutter stock, and veneer for plywood [57,72]. IMPORTANCE TO LIVESTOCK AND WILDLIFE : Roosevelt elk and black-tailed deer browse western hemlock in coastal Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia [57]. In the Oregon Cascades deer mice consumed about 22 percent of the western hemlock seed fall. This consumption occurred just before or during the germination process [76]. Black bear girdle pole-size western hemlock and larger saplings or damage the bark at the base of the trees. Snowshoe hare and rabbit clip off the main stems of western hemlock seedlings. Mountain beaver clip the stems and lateral branches of seedlings and girdle the base of saplings [57]. Old-growth western hemlock stands provide hiding and thermal cover for many wildlife species. In the southern Selkirk Mountains of northern Idaho, northeastern Washington, and adjacent British Columbia, grizzly bear have been known to use heavily timbered western hemlock forests [48]. In the western Oregon Cascades, western hemlock provides habitat for many species of small mammals, including the northern flying squirrel and red tree vole [7,67]. In Washington and Oregon, the northern spotted owl is often found in forests dominated by Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) and western hemlock. The majority of barred owls observed in British Columbia have occurred in the Columbia Forest Biotic Area in which western hemlock and western redcedar are the major climax species [6]. Western hemlock is used for nest trees by cavity nesting bird species such as the yellow-bellied sapsucker and northern three-toed woodpecker [51]. PALATABILITY : NO-ENTRY NUTRITIONAL VALUE : NO-ENTRY COVER VALUE : NO-ENTRY VALUE FOR REHABILITATION OF DISTURBED SITES : Western hemlock is suitable for planting on moist, nutrient very poor to nutrient medium sites in pure or mixed species stands (mainly with Pacific silver fir [Abies amabilis], Sitka spruce [Picea sitchensis], alder [Alnus spp.], or western redcedar). Natural regeneration is preferred over planted stock [44]. Western hemlock is difficult to grow in outdoor nurseries. Container-grown stock appears to result in higher quality seedlings with less damage to roots and better survival than bareroot stock [57]. Methods for collecting, storing and planting western hemlock seeds and seedlings have been detailed [63]. OTHER USES AND VALUES : Alaska Indians made coarse bread from the inner bark of western hemlock [72]. Young western hemlock saplings can be sheared to make excellent hedges. In Britain western hemlock is often planted as an ornamental [46]. MANAGEMENT CONSIDERATIONS : Insects and disease: The major root and butt pathogens of western hemolock are: Armillaria mellea, Heterobasidion annosum, Phaeolus schweinitzii, Laetiporus sulphureus, Inenotus tomentosus, Poria subacida, Phellinus weiri, and Indian paint fungus (Echinodontium tinctorium) [30,57]. Western hemlock is severely damaged by Indian paint fungus in the high Cascades; cull due to this rot may run as high as 80 percent in old-growth stands [30]. Dwarf mistletoe (Arceuthobium campylopodum) is a common parasite on western hemlock which causes wide-spread growth loss and mortality in old-growth stands [62]. Important insects attacking western hemlock are a weevil (Steremnius carinatus), western larch borer (Tetropium velutinum), western blackheaded budworm (Acleris gloverana), western hemlock looper (Lambdina fiscellaria lugubrosa), green striped forest looper (Melanolophia imitata), saddleback looper (Ectropis crepuscularia), and hemlock sawfly (Neodiprion tsugae). The western hemlock looper has caused more mortality of western hemlock than any other insect pest. Outbreaks can last 2 to 3 years on any one site. Although mortality is greatest in old-growth western hemlock, vigorous 80- to 100-year-old stands can also be severely damaged by this insect. The hemlock sawfly is considered the second most destructive insect of western hemlock in Alaska [57]. Other damaging agents: Pole-sized and larger stands of western hemlock are subject to severe windthrow. Uprooting is increased in areas where a high water table or impenetrable layer in the soil causes trees to be shallow rooted [62]. Blowdown is a major problem in western hemlock forests, and the need to leave windfirm borders is always present. If only part of the stand will be removed, the leave trees need to be as windfirm as possible [64]. Western hemlock suffers frost damage in the Rocky Mountains, especially along the eastern edge of its range [57]. On droughty sites, top dieback is common; in exceptionally dry years, entire stands of western hemlock saplings die [57]. Western hemlock seedlings and saplings are susceptible to sunscald following exposure of young stems by thinning. Sunscald lesions often become infected with decay organisms [62]. Western hemlock is one of the conifers most sensitive to damage by sulfur dioxide. Spring applications of the iso-octyl esters of 2,4-D and 2,4,5-T in diesel oil can kill up to 3 years of leader growth [57]. Fertilization: The response of western hemlock to nitrogen fertilizer is extremely variable. For overstocked stands, a combination of precommercial thinning and fertilizer often gives the best response [57]. Silvicultural considerations: In terms of biomass production, western hemlock forests are among the most productive forests in the world. Natural stands of western hemlock along the Pacific Coast attain higher yields than Douglas-fir stands having the same site index [57,64]. Pure stands of western hemlock are so densely stocked that an acre of 100-year-old western hemlock forest can yield more timber (150,000 to 190,000 board feet on a good site) than a comparable stand of larger, less dense Douglas-fir [10,64]. Western hemlock can be regenerated by most standard harvest methods. In the past, clearcutting was the most common method used in western hemlock stands [64,74]. As an aesthetically viable alternative to clearcutting, shelterwood cutting has been proposed as a means of controlling brush competition and favoring western hemlock seedlings [77]. The shelterwood method has been used successfully in even-aged stands. Observations suggest that cutting of uneven-aged stands by the individual tree selection method will be successful in obtaining western hemlock regeneration [38,64]. In the grand fir (Abies grandis)-cedar-hemlock ecosystem, Graham and Smith [34] found that the individual tree selection method of harvest promotes the regeneration and growth of shade-tolerant species, such as western hemlock. The seed tree method will work, but rarely is used in harvesting of western hemlock stands because many seed trees blow down during wind storms [64]. A common problem in regeneration of western hemlock is overtopping by competing vegetation such as alder, thimbleberry (Rubus parviflorus), and salmonberry (Ribes spectabilis). When exposed to full sunlight after clearcutting, these brush species tend to form dense thickets and exclude hemlock regeneration. These species can be controlled with herbicides [64]. Western hemlock responds well to release after long periods of suppression. Advance regeneration up to 4.5 feet (1.4 m) tall appears to respond better to release than taller individuals. Poor response to release has been noted for suppressed trees over 100 years old [57].

Related categories for Species: Tsuga heterophylla | Western 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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