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Wildlife, Animals, and Plants
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FIRE EFFECTS
SPECIES: Tsuga canadensis | Eastern Hemlock
IMMEDIATE FIRE EFFECT ON PLANT :
Low-severity fire readily kills seedlings and saplings of eastern
hemlock, and may also kill larger trees. A low-severity ground fire in
a northern hardwoods community in south-central New York killed 93
percent of the eastern hemlock saplings. Sixty percent of the mature
eastern hemlock died or were badly injured as a result of the fire [58].
The presence of fire scars indicates that larger trees have thick enough
bark to survive low-severity surface fires [18,36].
DISCUSSION AND QUALIFICATION OF FIRE EFFECT :
NO-ENTRY
PLANT RESPONSE TO FIRE :
Eastern hemlock appears to invade burned sites over time. In the Pisgah
Forest in southwestern New Hampshire, 80 percent of old-growth hemlock
germinated within the first 37 years after a major fire in 1665 [23].
DISCUSSION AND QUALIFICATION OF PLANT RESPONSE :
NO-ENTRY
FIRE MANAGEMENT CONSIDERATIONS :
NO-ENTRY
Related categories for Species: Tsuga canadensis
| Eastern Hemlock
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