Search

Search icon
Pin icon

Search for a Major Land Resource Area or ecological site by name and/or ID.

Ecological site F026XY066NV

Cool Concave Mountain Slope 16+ P.Z.

Home / Esd catalog / MLRA 026X / Ecological site F026XY066NV
USC
Metric

Click on box and path labels to scroll to the respective text.

T1A - Trigger: This transition is caused by the introduction of non-native annual plants, such as Kentucky bluegrass, thistles and common dandelion. Slow variables: Over time the annual non-native species will increase within the community. Threshold: Any amount of introduced non-native species causes an immediate decrease in the resilience of the site. Annual non-native species cannot be easily removed from the system and have the potential to significantly alter disturbance regimes from their historic range of variation.
T2A - Trigger: Time and a lack of disturbance allow conifer trees to establish, grow and mature grown in understory. Slow variables: Over time the abundance and size of trees will increase. Threshold: Conifer canopy cover is greater than 60 percent of the stand and conifer height exceeds aspen height. Aspen are decadent and dying with little to no regeneration. Little understory vegetation remains due to competition with trees for site resources.
R3A - This restoration pathway is a result of prescribed fire or mechanical removal of trees, potentially coupled with root ripping to stimulate suckering.
1.1a - This pathway is when fire reduces the mature aspen and allows for the suckers, saplings and the herbaceous understory to increase.
1.1b - This pathway is a result of time and lack of disturbance which will allow for the conifer trees in the understory to mature and dominate the site.
1.2a - This pathway is a result of time and lack of disturbance which will allow for the aspen suckers to mature.
1.1a - This pathway is a result of time and lack of disturbance which will allow for the aspen trees to mature.
1.3b - This pathway is a result of fire, insects, disease or wind damage that can reduce the aspen canopy and the subsequent competition with the understory allowing the understory herbaceous community to increase. Excessive herbivory while trees are still within reach to browse may also reduce aspen growth.
1.4a - This pathway is a result of fire where a decrease in the conifer canopy allows for the aspen suckers to increase.
2.1a - This pathway is when a fire reduces the mature aspen and allows for the suckers, saplings and the herbaceous understory cover to increase. Annual non-natives are likely to increase in cover after fire.
2.1b - This pathway is a result of time and lack of disturbance which will allow for the conifers in the understory to mature and dominate the site.
2.2a - This pathway is a result of: (1) time and lack of disturbance, (2) changing of grazing season or grazing reduction or exclusion which will allow for the aspen suckers to mature.
2.3a - This pathway is a result of time and lack of disturbance, a release from browsing or both which will allow for the aspen trees to mature.
2.3b - This pathway is a result of fire, insects, disease or wind damage which can reduce the aspen canopy and the subsequent competition with the understory where the understory herbaceous community cover increases. Inappropriate grazing by sheep especially, or herbivory by large ungulates or both, while trees are within reach to browse may reduce aspen growth.
2.4a - This pathway is a result of fire, or equivalent clearcutting or harvesting of the conifers which allows for the aspen suckers to increase and the understory plant community cover of shrubs and grasses to increase.

State 3 submodel, plant communities