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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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FIRE ECOLOGY

SPECIES: Larix occidentalis | Western Larch
FIRE ECOLOGY OR ADAPTATIONS : Adaptations to Fire: Western larch is the most fire-resistant tree species in the northern Rocky Mountains and interior Pacific Northwest. It has very thick bark containing little resin, a high and open branching habit, deep roots, and low-flammability foliage [32,33,82,139]. At ground level the bark is often 6 inches (15.2 cm) thick on mature trees [4]. The tendency of western larch to self-prune lower branches and its tolerance of defoliation add to its fire tolerance [30,19]. Fire favors the establishment of western larch because it quickly invades openings, grows rapidly, and needs full sunlight [152,113]. Western larch is very long-lived and able to survive until fire creates a suitable seedbed [5,30]. Fire Regimes: In the northern Rocky Mountains, the results of a number of studies suggest two distinct fire regimes for stands with western larch as a seral dominant [6]. On relatively dry sites, usually with Douglas-fir or Engelmann spruce as potential climax dominants, the natural fire regime was one of fairly short mean fire intervals of 20 to 75 years. These intervals were shortened by recurring low- to medium-intensity surface fires. On moist sites that included grand fir, western hemlock, and western redcedar as potential climax species, fires were severe stand-replacing burns at 120- to 350-year intervals [2,3,6,18]. The interval between stand-replacing fires was over 100 years under both of these fire regimes [6]. In lower and drier mixed conifer communities in the Blue Mountains of Oregon, the mean fire frequency of low surface fires before protection was about every 10 years [46]. In the same area in drier Douglas-fir and grand fir habitat types, the mean fire frequency of underburns was 20 to 30 years [116]. In higher elevation communities in this region, severe crown fires occurred at 100- to 300-year intervals, allowing western larch, lodgepole pine, and western white pine (Pinus monticola) to dominate large stands [121]. Fuels: In the larch-Douglas-fir type of western Montana, fuel loading ranges from 1.4 tons per acre (3.1 MT/ha) to 73.9 tons per acre (165.7 MT/ha) [29]. The following mean fuel loads were described for a study in the western larch cover type in western Montana [119]: Tons per Acre Metric Tons per Hectare Total fuels 22.5 50.4 Small fuels (0.25-3 3.6 8.1 inches [0.6-7.6 cm]) Large fuels (>3 inches 17.7 39.7 [.7.6 cm]) Duff 1.2 2.7 POSTFIRE REGENERATION STRATEGY : crown-stored residual colonizer; short-viability seed in on-site cones off-site colonizer; seed carried by wind; postfire years one and two

Related categories for Species: Larix occidentalis | Western Larch

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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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