The objectives of this study include: (1) analysis of Chamaecyparis
lawsoniana, C. taiwanensis, and C. formosensis forests including
the structure, composition, and dynamics of plant communities and
their environmental relationships; and (2) comparison of the temperate
Chamaecyparis forests of Taiwan and the Pacific Northwest with emphasis
on structural and successional...
Comparisons were made of the tissue water relations, stomatal conductance and growth of grand fir (Abies grandis), white fir (Abies concolor) and their hybrids growing in a western Oregon plantation. The grand fir were naturally-regenerated trees native to the study site. White fir and hybrids were the progeny of controlled...
I studied the water relations traits, twig conductivity, C'3 isotopic composition,
and wood density of three conifer and five angiosperm species in western Oregon. This
study took place from spring 2002 to fall 2003 on four sites. Species were selected to
represent the diversity of drought tolerance of woody plants...
Corydalis aquae-gelidae is a large herbaceous perennial
in the Fumariaceae that has high habitat specificity. It is
endemic to the western Cascade Range of Oregon and
Washington, almost entirely on the Mt. Hood and Gifford
Pinchot National Forests. It is a federal C2 candidate
under the Endangered Species Act and...
The dynamics of stands in the mid-elevation old-growth
Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) forests of the central western
Oregon Cascade Range were investigated using stand structure
analysis. Trees with different growth rates were commonly present
in the same stand, which resulted often in a weak correlation
between tree diameter and age. Thus,...
A study of the McKenzie River floodplains, terraces and glacial
outwash plains was undertaken to classify and describe the vegetation
and soils of a previously little studied synecological unit.
During the summer of 1971, 54 analytic vegetation and soil
plots (stands) were studied. Cover and frequency of all trees, shrubs,...
Larix laricina in Alaska occurs on sites ranging from productive
slopes and riverbottoms to wet bogs underlain by permafrost. It is
largest on sites without permafrost, where it is associated with
Picea glauca, but is much more common in bogs, where it occurs with
Picea mariana. In this study, I...
This study examines several aspects of nitrogen fixation by
Purshia tridentata (Pursh) D. C., a rosaceous shrub widespread in the
central Oregon pumice region, especially as an understory species in
Pinus ponderosa and Pinus contorta forests. Anatomical studies of
root nodules under the light microscope revealed strong similarities
to other...