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You are here >1Up Info > Wildlife, Animals, and Plants > Plant Species > Tree > Species: Larix laricina | Tamarack
 

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BOTANICAL AND ECOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS

SPECIES: Larix laricina | Tamarack
GENERAL BOTANICAL CHARACTERISTICS : Tamarack is a native, deciduous, coniferous, small- to medium-sized upright tree. It has a straight bole with a narrow pyramidal crown. Tamarack is a good self-pruner and by 25 to 30 years of age, trees are generally clear of branches for one-half to two-thirds of their bole [26]. Trees generally reach 50 to 75 feet (15-23 m) in height and 14 to 20 inches (46-51 cm) d.b.h. but are occasionally larger. In Alaska, trees are often stunted, reaching heights of only 10 feet (3 m) and diameters of 3 inches (8 cm), but on good sites mature trees are generally 30 to 60 feet (9-18 m) tall and 4 to 10 inches (10-25 cm) d.b.h. [26,49]. The maximum age for tamarack is about 180 years, although older trees have been found [26]. Tamarack has 1-inch-long (2.5 cm) needles that occur in clusters of 10 to 20 on dwarf twigs [22] and turn yellow in the fall before they are shed. Erect mature cones are about 0.5 to 0.75 inch (1.3-1.9 cm) long [26]. Tamarack bark is smooth when young but becomes rough and scaley on older trees. The bark is thin, only about 0.25 to 0.5 inch (0.6-1.2 cm) thick on mature trees [28]. The root system is typically shallow and wide spreading. Rooting depth rarely exceeds 1.5 feet (46 cm), but the roots commonly spread over areas greater in radius than the tree height [7]. On wet and very wet peatlands in Alberta, roots are generally restricted to the upper 8 inches (20 cm) of soil on hummocky positions [31]. RAUNKIAER LIFE FORM : Undisturbed State: Phanerophyte (mesophanerophyte) Undisturbed State: Phanerophyte (microphanerophyte) Burned or Clipped State: Therophyte REGENERATION PROCESSES : Cone and seed production: Cone production begins at about 15 years of age for open-grown trees and 35 to 40 years of age for trees in well-stocked stands [11]. Large quantities of seed are usually not produced until trees are at least 40 years old. Fifty- to 150-year-old open-grown trees produce the best cone crops, with individual trees sometimes producing as many as 20,000 cones in a good year [11]. Good seed crops are produced every 3 to 6 years, with some seed produced in intervening years. Tamarack seeds are about 0.12 inch (3 mm) long and have a wing about 0.25 inch (6 mm) long [26]. Dispersal: Seeds are dispersed in the fall over a relatively short time period. In a Minnesota study, dispersal began about September 1, and by October 31 about 98 percent of seed had fallen [11]. The remaining seed fell throughout the winter. In interior Alaska, 95 percent of tamarack seeds are shed by November [4]. Tamarack seeds are primarily wind dispersed, but red squirrels disperse some seed. Most wind-dispersed seeds fall within a distance of two tree heights, but a small percentage travels greater distances [4,11]. Seed destruction and predation: In Minnesota, small mammals, presumably mice, voles, and shrews, consume large quantities of tamarack seed off the ground and can destroy up to one-half of a tamarack seed crop [11]. Also, seeds on the ground are susceptible to infections from bacteria and fungi. Consequently, only about 4 or 5 percent of tamarack seed that reaches the ground germinates [26]. In tamarack stands in New Brunswick, insects destroyed between 25 and 88 percent of seed produced. Larvae of the spruce budworm and the cone maggot were responsible for greatest loss [53]. Viability: Tamarack seed remains viable for only about 1 year after dispersal [11]. Typically a large percentage of tamarack seed is unfilled. In Minnesota about one-third, and in northern Ontario about one-half of seed had undeveloped embryo and endosperm [11,15]. At the northern portion of the species range in the Northwest Territories, tamarack produced a limited amount of seed, but none was viable [12]. Germination and establishment: Germinative capacity ranges from about 30 to 60 percent [11]. Neither light nor pH appear to influence germination appreciably [11,15]. Tamarack seeds require a moist but unsaturated substrate for germination. The best seedbed is warm, moist mineral or organic soil free from competing vegetation [26]. Slow-growing sphagnum mosses also provide a good seedbed, as they have a tendency to remain moist. In open swampy habitats, tamarack seedlings are often found on sphagnum mosses [1,7]. Feather mosses are usually poor seedbeds because they tend to dry out, but if they remain moist, they can provide a favorable seedbed [4]. On poorly drained river terraces in interior Alaska, tamarack seedlings are more abundant on sphagnum and feather mosses than on sedge tussock tops, troughs between the tussocks, or litter-covered sites; on well-drained river terraces, seedlings are primarily restricted to mineral soil [4]. Tamarack seedlings are intolerant of shade and flooding. Seedlings may survive a few years in shade, but most will die unless released. Partial water submersion for 1 to 3 weeks kills 1st-year seedlings [11]. In full sunlight seedlings grow relatively rapidly, reaching heights of 7 to 9 inches (18-23 cm) after one growing season, and 18 to 25 inches (46-51 cm) tall after three [26]. Roots of seedlings growing in nearly full sunlight may reach depths of 2.5 to 3.5 inches (5-11 cm) after one growing season, while over the same time period roots of seedlings growing in shade reach depths of only about 1 inch (2.5 cm) [11]. Vegetative reproduction: Layering is a dominant mode of reproduction at the northern limit of the species' range. In the southern part of its range, layering is uncommon but does occur when lower branches become covered with litter or fast-growing mosses [26]. Curtis [7] reported that tamarack has the unusual ability to produce root sprouts up to 30 feet (9 m) away from a mother tree. SITE CHARACTERISTICS : Tamarack is most commonly found on cold, wet to moist, poorly drained sites such as swamps, bogs, and muskegs [22,26,44]. It is also found along streams, lakes, swamp borders, and occasionally on upland sites. It becomes more common on drier sites in the northern portion of its range where it is found on ridges and benches and other upland locations [26]. In British Columbia, it grows as an upland tree on cool, moist north slopes as well as on wet organic sites [26]. In interior Alaska, tamarack is generally restricted to wet and cold sites underlain by shallow permafrost but occasionally grows in warmer, well-drained floodplains and upland forests dominated by white spruce (Picea glauca) [4]. Soils: Tamarack can tolerate a wide range of soil conditions but most commonly grows on wet to moist organic soils, such as sphagnum or woody peat, and is especially common on nutrient-poor, acid peatlands [9,26]. In Minnesota, tamarack occurs on a wide variety of peatland types, from rich swamps to raised bogs, and is an indicator of weakly minerotrophic sites (pH 4.3-5.8, Ca 3-10 ppm, Ca + Mg 5-13 ppm) [21]. In Saskatchewan, tamarack grows on peatland sites with a wide range of fertility and moisture regimes; it is most common on those with a pH between 6.0 and 6.9 [23]. Although most commonly occurring on peatlands, tamarack actually grows best on well-drained loamy soils along streams, lakes, and seeps, and on mineral soils with a shallow surface layer of organic matter [26]. However, tamarack is uncommon on these sites in the southern portion of its range because it is easily outcompeted by other trees. It is more common on mineral soil in the north. Stand characteristics and associated trees: Because the species is intolerant of shade, tamarack stands are usually even-aged [13]. They occur on wetter sites than black spruce stands. Across tamarack's range black spruce is its most common associate. These two species often form mixed stands on peatlands. Throughout much of boreal Canada, other associates include balsam fir (Abies balsamea), white spruce, paper birch (Betula papyrifera), and quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides) [22,26]. In the Lake States and New England, common associates include northern white-cedar (Thuja occidentalis), balsam fir, eastern white pine (Pinus strobus), red pine (P. resinosa), quaking aspen, black ash (Fraxinus nigra), white spruce, and red maple (Acer rubrum) [7,44]. In Alaska, tamarack is usually found with black spruce and paper birch but almost never with aspen [26]. Understory: Tamarack stands tend to cast light shade and have a dense undergrowth of shrubs. Tall shrubs associated with tamarack include bog birch (Betula glandulosa), swamp birch (B. pumila), speckled alder (Alnus incana ssp. rugosa), willows (Salix spp.), and red-osier dogwood (Cornus stolonifera). Low shrub associates include Labrador-tea (Ledum groenlandicum), bog-rosemary (Andromeda glaucophylla), leatherleaf (Chamaedaphne calyculata), and blueberries and huckleberries (Vaccinium spp.). The ground is usually covered with sphagnum and other mosses [26]. SUCCESSIONAL STATUS : Tamarack is a pioneer or early seral species. It is often the first tree to invade open bogs and burned peatlands [26]. In open bogs and swamps, tamarack is the first tree to pioneer the sphagnum moss mat floating over water [7]. This invasion toward the center or wettest portion of a swamp is common [1,18]. It may invade bogs during sedge mat, sphagnum moss, or ericaceous shrub stages. Tamarack is extremely intolerant of shade, however, and eventually, as the peat becomes consolidated and firm, other conifers replace it. It is replaced by black spruce on poorly drained acid peatlands. In nutrient-rich swamps it is replaced first by black spruce, and later by northern white-cedar, balsam fir, and eventually swamp hardwoods [16]. SEASONAL DEVELOPMENT : Minnesota: Buds begin to swell from early to late April. Needles begin to emerge from about mid-April to mid-May. Needles are shed from mid-September to mid-October. Flowering occurs from late April to early May. Seedfall begins in early September and is nearly complete by late October [11,16,26]. Wisconsin: Tamarack begins to leaf out in the early spring before the ground has thawed. It takes 4 to 6 weeks for the needles to develop fully. The needles turn yellow in late September or early October and are shed shortly thereafter [7]. Upper Peninsula of Michigan: Needles begin to emerge in mid-April to mid-May. Needles begin to turn yellow in early September and are shed from mid-September to mid-October. Flowering occurs in early May, and cones are ripe by late August [16,26]. Alaska: Seed dispersal begins in early September and is mostly completed by late October [4]. New York: Height growth begins in late May and ends by late August [5].

Related categories for Species: Larix laricina | Tamarack

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