Natural Resources
Conservation Service
Ecological site F143XY503ME
Loamy Flat
Last updated: 10/07/2024
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): 143X–Northeastern Mountains
MLRA 143, known as the Northeastern Mountains, covers approximately 23 million acres of mountains, hills, and valleys in northern Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, New York, and Massachusetts. The area is sparsely populated, with less than five percent of the land area developed for agriculture, residential, and urban development. About 90 percent of the area is forested, most of which is actively managed for timber. Elevations are mostly between 1,000 to 4,000 feet, with a few isolated peaks more than 5,000 feet above sea level. The present day mountains are but remnants of a much larger ancient range that has been eroding for approximately 500 million years. Bedrock consists of mostly very old metamorphic rock (gneiss, schist, slate, marble, quartzite, etc.) with younger intrusions of igneous rock (e.g. granite and granodiorite) from the Triassic and Cretaceous periods. MLRA 143 differs somewhat geologically from its neighboring MLRAs (142, 144A, 144B, 145, and 146), which have greater amounts of nutrient-rich sedimentary rock. Compared to MLRA 143, they are all lower in elevation, with longer growing seasons large areas that were once submerged by the ocean following glaciation.
The characteristic landforms and soils of northern New England were derived from the massive continental ice sheet that engulfed the region during North America’s most recent glaciation. Mighty glaciers, embedded with sediment and rock fragments, scoured bedrock and compacted mineral beds in a steady march south and east toward the Atlantic Ocean. The softer sedimentary rocks were pulverized into fine silts and clays under the immense weight of ice a mile thick, while the more resistant igneous and metamorphic rocks were sculpted into steep mountains and hills or plucked and dragged along the base of the glacier. With a warming climate, the ice retreated northward, depositing a thin layer of unsorted glacial till sediment atop the newly-exposed bedrock and compacted mineral beds. Deeper mounds of unsorted till formed small hills, kames, moraines and drumlins. Enormous chunks of ice detached as the glacier retreated, melting slowly in place and forming many kettle lakes and basins where water and fine sediments collect. Raging torrents of glacial meltwater dissected much of the barren landscape, entraining coarse and fine sediments, carving river valleys, and leaving well-sorted deposits of mostly sand and gravel along the watercourse. By 10,000 years ago the ice sheet had fully receded from MLRA 143. Silty floodplains developed along perennial rivers, many of which occupy the same channels that once gushed with sediment-rich glacial meltwater. Over time, wet basins accumulated fine sediment, some dried out, and still others became acidified by organic matter inputs from colonizing vegetation.
In terms of climate, MLRA 143 is distinguished from neighboring MLRAs by a shorter growing season and the occurrence of cryic soil temperature regimes at high elevations. The majority of MLRA 143 averages 32 to 44 inches of precipitation annually with a five to six month growing season and frigid winter temperatures. However, the higher elevations may receive up to double the annual precipitation of the lower elevations, and have a three to four month growing season with extremely cold winters. As the northernmost MLRA in the region with the coldest temperatures and shortest growing season, the Northeastern Mountains have less overall tree diversity, fewer pine and oak trees, and more abundant spruce and fir trees than neighboring MLRAs.
Classification relationships
This site occurs in Ecological Site Group 5 (Loamy Forests) of MLRA 143 (The Northeastern Mountains), in the Northeastern Forage and Forest Region (Land Resource Region R).
The Northeastern Forage and Forest LRR includes all of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode Island, and Connecticut, as well as large portions of Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Ohio. Its southern boundary marks the extent of the Wisconsin ice sheet, which engulfed the entire LRR as recently as 10,000 to 15,000 years ago. Erosional and depositional processes associated with glaciation created many of the topographic patterns that distinguish MLRAs within the Northeastern region. Harder granitic and metamorphic bedrock to the north were more resistant to glacial erosion, resulting in the relatively nutrient poor mountains of MLRA 143; whereas nutrient-rich sedimentary bedrock of MLRAs 139, 140, and 146 resulted in relatively flat, fertile landscapes ideal for cultivation. Other areas were depressed below sea-level by the sheer mass of the glacier, resulting in pockets of marine sediments which distinguish MLRAs 142, 144A, 144B, and 145.
Precipitation is sufficient to support productive forestland throughout the Northeastern region. Still, a latitudinal temperature gradient from mesic to frigid soil temperatures results in a general transition from central hardwoods and pine in the southern MLRAs to northern hardwoods and spruce-fir forests farther north (no true boreal forests exist in the region). Elevations are generally low throughout the Northeastern region, with the exception of MLRA 143 which has many high mountain ecosystems with cryic temperature regimes and alpine vegetation above the tree line.
Ecological site concept
This site occurs on flat till plains and ground moraines at elevations between 120 and 2,500 feet. It has a seasonally-high water table, from November through May, that is within 12 inches of the soil surface. From June through October the water table often drops below 12 inches except following large rain events. This site may exhibit pit and mound topography from a history of blowdowns that escavate pits as tree roots tip up and deposit mounds of soil next to the pit.
Soils of this site are poorly- and somewhat-poorly-drained complexes of lodgment till characterized by a densely-compacted layer 10-30 inches below the surface. This dense layer is hard to dig through and often has about 15 percent rock fragments by volume). Importantly, it perches water in the upper soil layers, resulting in redoximorphic features near the soil surface. These are mineral soils, but they may have an layer of mucky peat material on the surface, particularly in poorly-drained depressions.
This site is dominated by red spruce, often with balsam fir occurring in younger patches. Understory is typically sparse, though wild raspberries and other early seral species may occupy large areas when trees are removed by logging, blowdowns, insects or disease.
This site is often managed for spruce-fir timber products, and as such may produce more fir than spruce in a managed state. However, historically these sites were likely dominated by red spruce with a limited understory.
Associated sites
F143XY302ME |
Mucky Swamp The Loamy Till Swamp can be found downslope of the Loamy Flat site as soil wetness increases lower in the watershed. |
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F143XY304ME |
Wet Flat The Wet Flat site may be found downslope of the Loamy Flat site as the soil wetness increases lower in the watershed. |
F143XY502ME |
Loamy Till Toeslope The Loamy Till Toeslope can occur upslope from the Loamy Flat. |
Similar sites
F143XY304ME |
Wet Flat The Wet Flat site is wetter than the Loamy Flat site, with all components being poorly-drained rather than a mix of poorly- and somewhat poorly-drained soils. |
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F143XY502ME |
Loamy Till Toeslope The Loamy Till Toeslope site is found on slopes greater than 5 percent and is typically hardwood-dominated, whereas the Loamy Flat site is found on slopes less than 5 percent and is typically softwood-dominated. |
Table 1. Dominant plant species
Tree |
(1) picea rubens |
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Shrub |
Not specified |
Herbaceous |
Not specified |
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