SUBALPINE FORESTS OF THE SOUTHERN
ROCKIES
NOTES ON
THE AUTECOLOGY TREE SPECIES IN THE COLORADO FRONT RANGE
Taxa mainly of the subalpine
zone (above c. 9300 ft.)
A.
Engelmann spruce (Picea engelmannii)
Habitat:
Mesic and
wet sites; generally does not occur at sites as dry as those which subalpine fir can tolerate.
Reproduction:
Moderate seed producer; highly
variable amounts of seed per year, but normally at least some seed each year.
Layers in the krummholz zone.
Understory
tolerance:
Semi-shade
tolerant. Under low light levels it has a lower photosynthetic rate than
subalpine fir.
Spruce
seedling establishment:
Best on bare
mineral soil and moist logs.
Rotten logs retain moisture better than mineral soil. Spruce seeds are much smaller than the seeds
of fir (3 times smaller) and are more easily and deeply lodged into crevices on
moist logs. The difference in seed size may explain the greater abundance of
spruce seedlings on logs compared to fir seedlings. In addition, slower root growth of spruce
seedlings make it less likely that their roots will penetrate dry litter layers
before being killed by drought.
Under low light and under high
light, spruce seedlings require higher moisture than fir. Spruce seeds germinate earlier in summer and
take advantage of moister conditions to grow roots into permanently moist
substrates. Under high light levels,
spruce can establish on drier sites than under low light levels because the
higher light levels allow spruce roots to grow rapidly early in the growing
season before the sites becomes too dry.
Impediments to establishment
include: leaf litter, snow mold, and clipping by birds and small mammals.
Longevity:
In the Front Range it often attains
ages > 500 yrs (and rarely over 800 yrs). Its mortality rate may be lower than that of subalpine fir.
Damaging
agents:
Spruce beetle (Dendroctonus
rufipennis) attack large live and dead trees.
Not windfirm.
Easily killed by fire.
Less susceptible
to fungal pathogens than subalpine fir.
B. Subalpine fir (Abies lasiocarpa)
Habitat:
Similar to that of spruce, but it
also tolerates drier sites.
Reproduction:
Generally produces less seed than
spruce and in some years seed production may be nil.
Layers in the krummholz zone and also in subalpine
forests.
Longevity:
Generally it does not attain as
great an age as does spruce. Trees older
than 300 years are scarce, although occasionally trees over 400 years occur.
Understory tolerance:
Shade tolerant.
Under low light levels, greater photosynthetic rate than
spruce. However, both species
survive under similarly low light levels.
Fir
seedling establishment:
There consistently is a larger proportion of spruce seedlings on logs than fir
seedlings. Why doesn’t fir take
advantage of moist logs for seedling establishment as much as spruce does?
Fir seedlings are much more abundant on litter than is
spruce, presumably due to its more rapid root elongation from larger
seeds. Fewer seedlings on logs than for
spruce probably because the larger seeds of fir do not lodge into crevices as
easily or as deeply. Fir seeds that
establish later in the summer can survive better because their large seeds allow
more rapid root growth. Also establishes
on bare mineral soil. Seedling
establishment:
Damaging agents:
Not fire resistant.
Ips
beetles cause a small amount of mortality.
Highly suceptible
to fungal pathogens once trees reach c. 150 yrs.
Not windfirm.
C. Lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta var. latifolia)
Habitat:
Overlaps with
spruce and fir but more abundant in the lower subalpine
zone and on drier sites.
Reproduction:
Prolific and
precocious cone production. Serotinous
cones.
Longevity:
Generally less long-lived than spruce,
but can attain ages > 400 years.
Understory
tolerance:
Not shade tolerant. Will not survive in the understory
of a spruce-fir forest but can grow through the canopy of an open aspen stand.
Seedling
establishment:
Best on bare
mineral soil.
Damaging
agents:
Mountain pine
beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae)
and other bark beetles.
May resist fire slightly better than
spruce or fir, but is easily killed by crown fires. Usually abundant
establishment after fire. Not windfirm.
D. Limber
pine (Pinus flexilis)
Habitat:
Generally at dry, rocky sites;
exposed to high winds. Some also at low elevation.
Reproduction:
Seeds are cached and dispersed by
birds.
Longevity:
Often attains ages > 1000 years.
Understory
tolerance:
Extremely shade intolerant.
Seedling
establishment:
Bare mineral soil;
especially rocky areas.
Damaging
agents:
More fire
resistant than the other subalpine trees.
Windfirm (long tap root).
Porcupine damage.
E. Aspen (Populus tremuloides)
Habitat:
Wide range: both dry ridges and
moist riparian areas.
Reproduction:
Establishment from seed is
rare. Primarily
reproduces vegetatively (root suckers).
Longevity:
Very short-lived; trees older than
200 years are rare. Most stands > 120
years old appear senescent.
Understory
tolerance:
Shade intolerant.
Damaging
agents:
Fire kills aerial portion of tree,
but root stock can survive at least lower intensity burns.
Susceptible to a
canker disease which can kill entire clones.
Browsing by large mammals can severely
damage trees.