Natural Resources
Conservation Service
Ecological site F006XA804OR
Mesic Xeric Maritime Foothills 30-50 PZ
Last updated: 9/11/2023
Accessed: 11/21/2024
General information
Provisional. A provisional ecological site description has undergone quality control and quality assurance review. It contains a working state and transition model and enough information to identify the ecological site.
MLRA notes
Major Land Resource Area (MLRA): 006X–Cascade Mountains, Eastern Slope
Stretching from northern Washington to southern Oregon, MLRA6 encompasses the mountain slopes, foothills, elevated plateaus and valleys on the eastern slopes of the Cascade mountains. This MLRA is a transitional area between the Cascade Mountains to the west and the lower lying Columbia Basalt Plateau to the east.
Situated in the rain shadow of the Cascade Crest, this MLRA receives less precipitation than portions of the cascades further west and greater precipitation than the basalt plateaus to the east. Geologically, the majority of the MLRA is dominated by Miocene volcanic rocks, while the northern portion is dominated by Pre-Cretaceous metamorphic rocks and the southern portion is blanketed with a thick mantle of ash and pumice from Mount Mazama. The soils in the MLRA dominantly have a mesic, frigid, or cryic soil temperature regime, a xeric soil moisture regime, and mixed or glassy mineralogy. They generally are moderately deep to very deep, well drained, and loamy or ashy. Biologically, the MLRA is dominated by coniferous forest, large expanses of which are dominated by ponderosa pine, Douglas fir or lodgepole pine. Areas experiencing cooler and moister conditions include grand fir, white fir, and western larch while the highest elevations include pacific silver fir, subalpine fir and whitebark pine.
Economically, timber harvest and recreation are important land uses in these forests. Historically, many of these forests would have experienced relatively frequent, low and mixed severity fire favoring the development of mature forests dominated by ponderosa pine or Douglas-fir. In the southern pumice plateau forests, less frequent, higher severity fire was common and promoted the growth of large expanses of lodgepole pine forests.
LRU notes
Located at the eastern edge of the Columbia river gorge, this unit is restricted to areas influenced by the modified maritime climate of this unique passageway through the Cascades. This setting allows for the persistence of Oregon White Oak woodlands east of the Cascade crest.
These woodlands often include ponderosa pine, and on sites with greater soil moisture, Douglas-fir. Botanical diversity is high, with a mixture of West Cascade and East Cascade plant species commonly co-occurring. Physiographically, this unit is characterized by dissected foothills, valleys and ridges draining Mount Hood in Oregon and Mount Adams in Washington. Geologically, the unit is characterized by late tertiary pyroclastic and volcanoclastic deposits and basalt flows.
The climate of this unit is generally warm and dry with a predominately xeric soil moisture regime and mesic soil temperature regime. Historically, the drier extent of these forests have been influenced by a fire regime whereby frequent low and mixed severity fires would have favored the development of open canopied forests. Higher elevations and more westerly locations receiving more moisture within this unit would have been influenced by moderately frequent, low and mixed severity fires favoring a mosaic of forest stages with closed canopy conditions common.
Classification relationships
Forested Plant Associations of the Oregon East Cascades (Simpson 2007)
Plant association group – Douglas-fir, moist
Landfire Biophysical Setting (Landfire 2007)
0710180 East Cascades Mesic Montane Mixed-Conifer Forest and Woodland.
Ecological site concept
This site represents a broad group of warm, moist Douglas-fir Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) forest communities at the foothills surrounding Mount Hood. Occupying areas adjacent to and near to the Columbia river valley, the climate of this site is influenced by a modified maritime climate as well as the rain shadow effect of Mount Hood, which alter plant community composition and productivity. The near sea level conduit of the Columbia river brings increased precipitation and low elevation cloud cover in winter that increases winter temperatures, relative to nearby areas outside of this influence.
The visual aspect of this site is a forest canopy dominated by Douglas fir and ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa). Within the range of this site, lower, warmer elevations with longer growing seasons may host bigleaf maple (Acer macrophyllum) in the sub-canopy while higher elevations with greater effective moisture may host some grand fir (Abies grandis). Nearby sites with even greater precipitation, and on moist north aspects, will host a more diverse canopy with grand fir common.
The plant community includes shrubs such as snowberry (Symphoricarpos spp.), golden chinkapin (Chrysolepis chrysophylla), oceanspray (Holodiscus discolor), and pacific dogwood (Cornus canadensis); and herbaceous species such as Columbia brome (Bromus vulgaris), elk sedge (Carex geyeri) and woods strawberry (Fragaria vesca). Nearby sites receiving less precipitation, or experiencing higher temperatures, are subject to decreased moisture availability in summer and therefore may support a reference community dominated by the more drought tolerant ponderosa pine and Oregon white oak (Quercus garryana). These drier forests facilitate a more frequent fire regime than this site, which in contrast is subject to a moderately frequent fire return interval characterized by mixed and low severity fire (Landfire fire regime group 3). Experiencing a very favorable growing climate, much of this site has been converted to orchards or developed for housing.
This is a provisional ecological site that groups characteristics at a broad scale with little to no field verification and is subject to extensive review and revision before final approval. All data herein was developed using existing information and literature and should be considered provisional and contingent upon field validation prior to use in conservation planning.
Associated sites
F006XA803OR |
Frigid Xeric Maritime North Slopes 35-55 PZ Frigid soil temperature regime, occupying adjacent North aspects |
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R006XA300OR |
Loamy 14-20 PZ non-forested components within shared map units |
R006XA304OR |
Loamy 20-40 PZ low cover forested components within shared map units, less than 15% forest cover |
Similar sites
R006XA304OR |
Loamy 20-40 PZ Lower precipitation and production, more common East of Hood river valley |
---|---|
R006XA302OR |
Steep South Slopes 20-40 PZ Occurs on steep south slopes, white oak dominated |
R006XA200OR |
South Slopes 14-20 PZ Lower precipitation, more common East of Hood river valley |
F006XA803OR |
Frigid Xeric Maritime North Slopes 35-55 PZ Frigid soil temperature regime, occupying North aspects |
R006XA204OR |
South Slopes 20-40 PZ Shallow soils, occurs on south slopes, grass dominated, more common East of Hood river valley |
Table 1. Dominant plant species
Tree |
(1) Pseudotsuga menziesii |
---|---|
Shrub |
Not specified |
Herbaceous |
Not specified |
Click on box and path labels to scroll to the respective text.
T1A | - | Extensive timber harvest |
---|---|---|
T1B | - | Site conversion to agricultural use |
R2A | - | Forest restoration, stand replacing fire |
R3A | - | Extensive forest restoration |
State 1 submodel, plant communities
1.1A | - | Lack of fire for ~20 years |
---|---|---|
1.2B | - | High severity, stand replacing fire occurs |
1.2A | - | Lack of fire for ~65 years |
1.3A | - | High severity, stand replacing fire occurs |