Natural Resources
Conservation Service
Ecological site F231XY162AK
Boreal Woodland Gravelly Slopes Cold
Last updated: 2/13/2024
Accessed: 11/23/2024
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): 231X–Interior Alaska Highlands
The Interior Alaska Uplands (MLRA 231X) is in the Interior Region of Alaska and includes the extensive hills, mountains, and valleys between the Tanana River to the south and the Brooks Range to the north. These hills and mountains surround the Yukon Flats Lowlands (MLRA 232X). MLRA 231X makes up about 69,175 square miles. The hills and mountains of the area tend to be moderately steep to steep resulting in high-relief slopes. The mountains are generally rounded at lower elevations and sharp-ridged at higher elevations. Elevation ranges from about 400 feet in the west, along the boundary with the Interior Alaska Lowlands (MLRA 229X), to 6,583 feet at the summit of Mt. Harper, in the southeast. Major tributaries include large sections of the Yukon, Koyukuk, Kanuti, Charley, Coleen, and Chatanika Rivers. This area is traversed by several major roads, including the Taylor Highway in the east and the Steese, Elliott, and Dalton Highways north of Fairbanks. The area is mostly undeveloped wild land that is sparsely populated. The largest community along the road system is Fairbanks with smaller communities like Alatna, Allakaket, Chicken, Eagle, Eagle Village, Hughes, and Rampart occurring along the previously mentioned rivers and highways.
The vast majority of this MLRA was unglaciated during the Pleistocene epoch with the exceptions being the highest mountains and where glaciers extended into the area from the Brooks Range. For the most part, glacial moraines and drift are limited to the upper elevations of the highest mountains. Most of the landscape is mantled with bedrock colluvium originating from the underlying bedrock. Valley bottoms are filled with Holocene fluvial deposits and colluvium from the adjacent mountain slopes. Silty loess, which originated from unvegetated flood plains in and adjacent to this area, covers much of the surface. On hill and mountain slopes proximal to major river valleys (e.g., Tanana and Yukon Rivers), the loess is many feet thick. As elevation and distance from major river valleys increases, loess thickness decreases significantly. Bedrock is commonly exposed on the highest ridges.
This area is in the zone of discontinuous permafrost. Permafrost commonly is close to the surface in areas of the finer textured sediments throughout the MLRA. Isolated masses of ground ice occur in thick deposits of loess on terraces and the lower side slopes of hills. Solifluction lobes, frost boils, and circles and stripes are periglacial features common on mountain slopes in this area. Pingos, thermokarst pits and mounds, ice-wedge polygons, and earth hummocks are periglacial features common on terraces, lower slopes of hills and mountains, and in upland valleys in the area.
The dominant soil orders in this area are Gelisols, Inceptisols, Spodosols, and Entisols. The soils in the area have a subgelic or cryic soil temperature regime, an aquic or udic soil moisture regime, and mixed mineralogy. Gelisols are common on north facing slopes, south facing footslopes, valley bottoms, and stream terraces. Gelisols are typically shallow or moderately deep to permafrost (10 to 40 inches) and are poorly or very poorly drained. Wildfires can disturb the insulating organic material at the surface, lowering the permafrost layer, eliminating perched water tables from Gelisols, and thus changing the soil classification. Inceptisols and Spodosols commonly form on south facing hill and mountain slopes. Entisols are common on flood plains and high elevation mountain slopes. Miscellaneous (non-soil) areas make up about 2 percent of this MLRA. The most common miscellaneous areas are rock outcrop and rubble land. In many valleys placer mine tailings are common.
Short, warm summers and long, cold winters characterize the subarctic continental climate of the area. The mean annual temperature of the area ranges from 22 to 27 degrees F. The mean annual temperature of the southern half of the area is approximately 3 degrees warmer compared to the northern half (PRISM 2018). The warmest months span June through August with mean monthly temperatures ranging from 50 to 56 degrees F. The coldest months span November through February with mean monthly temperatures ranging from -5 to 3 degrees F. When compared to the high-elevation alpine and subalpine life zones, the lower elevation boreal life zone tends to be 2-3 degrees F colder during the coldest months and 1-2 degrees F warmer during the warmest months (PRISM 2018). The freeze-free period at the lower elevations averages about 60 to 100 days, and the temperature usually remains above freezing from June through mid-September.
Precipitation is limited across this area, with the average annual precipitation ranging from 12 to 19 inches. The southern half of the areas receives approximately 2.5 inches more annual precipitation then the northern half (PRISM 2018). The lower elevation boreal life zone receives approximately 2.5 inches less annual precipitation than the high-elevation alpine and subalpine life zones (PRISM 2018). Approximately 3/5th of the annual precipitation occurs during the months of June through September with thunderstorms being common. The average annual snowfall ranges from about 45 to 100 inches. The ground is consistently covered with snow from November through March.
Most of this area is forested below an elevation of about 2500 feet. Dominant tree species on slopes are white spruce and black spruce. Black spruce stands are most common on north-facing slopes, stream terraces, and other sites with poor drainage and permafrost. White spruce stands are most common on warm slopes with dry soils. At lower elevations, lightning-caused wildfires are common, often burning many thousands of acres during a single fire. Following wildfires, forbs, grasses, willow, ericaceous shrubs, paper birch, and quacking aspen communities are common until they are eventually replaced by stands of spruce. Tall willow and alder scrub is extensive on low flood plains. White spruce and balsam poplar are common on high flood plains.
With increasing elevation, the forests and woodlands give way to subalpine communities dominated by krummholz spruce, shrub birch, willow, and ericaceous shrubs. At even higher elevations, alpine communities prevail which are characterized by diverse forbs, dwarf ericaceous shrubs, and eightpetal mountain-avens. Many of these high elevation communities have a considerable amount of lichen cover and bare ground.
LRU notes
This area supports three life zones defined by the physiological limits of plant communities along an elevational gradient: boreal, subalpine, and alpine. The boreal life zone is the elevational band where forest communities dominate. Not all areas in the boreal life zone are forest communities, however, particularly in places with too wet or dry soil to support tree growth (e.g., bogs or river bluffs). Above the boreal band of elevation, subalpine and alpine vegetation dominate. The subalpine zone is typically a narrow transitional band between the boreal and the alpine life zones, and is characterized by sparse, stunted trees. In the subalpine, certain types of birch and willow shrub species grow at ≥ 1 m in height (commonly Betula glandulosa and Salix pulchra). In the alpine, trees no longer occur, and all shrubs are dwarf or lay prostrate on the ground. In this area, the boreal life zone occurs below 2500 feet elevation on average. The transition between boreal and alpine vegetation can occur within a range of elevations, and is highly dependent on slope, aspect, and shading from adjacent mountains.
Within each life zone, there are plant assemblages that are typically associated with cold slopes and warms slopes. Cold slopes and warm slopes are created by the combination of the steepness of the slope, the aspect, and shading from surrounding ridges and mountains. Warm slope positions typically occur on southeast to west facing slopes that are moderate to very steep (>10% slope) and are not shaded by the surrounding landscape. Cold slopes typically occur on northwest to east facing slopes, occur in shaded slope positions, or occur in low-lying areas that are cold air sinks. Examples of shaded positions include head slopes, low relief backslopes of hills, and the base of hills and mountains shaded by adjacent mountain peaks. Warm boreal slope soils have a cryic soil temperature regime and lack permafrost. In this area, white spruce forests are an indicator of warm boreal slopes. Cold boreal slope soils typically have a gelic soil temperature regime and commonly have permafrost. In this area, black spruce forests and woodlands are an indicator of cold boreal slopes. The boreal life zone can occur at higher elevations on warm slopes, and lower elevations on cold slopes.
Classification relationships
Landfire BPS – 7416041 – Western North American Boreal Mesic Black Spruce Forest - Boreal (Landfire 2009)
Ecological site concept
This boreal site occurs on cold slopes with moist to dry gravelly soils that do not have permafrost. The most common hillslope positions are summits and backslopes of hills and low-elevation mountains that are north to east facing. Soils do not pond or flood. This site is associated with dry and well drained soils and moist and somewhat poorly drained soils. The moist soils commonly have a high-water table at shallow depths. Soils formed in a thin layer of windblown silts over gravelly residuum and/or colluvium. While these soils support stands of black spruce, soils with greater amounts of windblown silt are much more productive. Soils are typically very deep without restrictions.
Multiple plant communities occur within the reference state and the vegetation in each community differs in large part due to fire. When the reference state vegetation burns, the post-fire plant community is dominantly grasses, forbs, and weedy mosses. Field data indicate most of the soil organic matter is consumed during these fire events which could increase site erosion. With time and lack of another fire event, the post-fire vegetation goes through multiple stages of succession. For this site, the reference plant community is the most stable with the longest time since the vegetation was burned. This community is typically characterized as needleleaf woodland (Viereck et al. 1992) with black spruce as the dominant tree. For this ecological site to progress from the earliest stages of post-fire succession to the oldest stages of succession, data suggest that 70-100 years or more must elapse without another fire event (Johnstone et al. 2010a).
The reference plant community understory commonly has bog blueberry, lingonberry, bog Labrador tea, crowberry, false toadflax, various reindeer lichen, curled snow lichen, crinkled snow lichen, tomentose snow lichen, various cup lichen, splendid feathermoss, and Schreber's big red stem moss. Black spruce tree cover is split between the stunted tree (greater than 50 years of age and less than 15 feet) and medium tree strata (between 15 and 40 feet). Live deciduous trees, primarily resin birch and quaking aspen, occasionally occur in the tree canopy but with limited cover. The understory vegetative strata that characterize this community are low shrubs (between 8 and 36 inches), dwarf shrubs (less than 8 inches), mosses, and foliose and fruticose lichens.
Associated sites
F231XY118AK |
Boreal Woodland Organic Frozen Slopes Occurs downslope on wet, frozen toeslopes and footslopes supporting stands of stunted black spruce. |
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F231XY160AK |
Boreal Forest Loamy Frozen Slopes Occurs on the same cold slopes but on wet, gravelly, frozen soils supporting stands of black spruce. |
F231XY166AK |
Boreal Woodland Gravelly Frozen Slopes Occurs on the same hill slopes but on steeper slopes with permafrost. Soils support stands of stunted black spruce. |
F231XY180AK |
Boreal Woodland Gravelly Slopes Dry Occurs on the same hills and low-elevation mountains but on warm slopes with stands of white spruce. |
F231XY182AK |
Boreal Forest Gravelly Slopes Occurs on the same hills and low-elevation mountains but on warm slopes with stands of white spruce. |
Similar sites
F231XY180AK |
Boreal Woodland Gravelly Slopes Dry Both sites are associated with dry and gravelly soils and occur on the same boreal hills. White spruce is the dominant overstory species associated with site 180. |
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F231XY182AK |
Boreal Forest Gravelly Slopes Both sites are associated with dry and gravelly soils and occur on the same boreal hills. White spruce is the dominant overstory species associated with site 180. |
F231XY190AK |
Boreal Forest Silty Slopes Cold Both sites occur on the same cold boreal slopes. Due to having a thicker layer of silty loess, site 190 has more productive black spruce stands. |
Table 1. Dominant plant species
Tree |
(1) Picea mariana |
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Shrub |
(1) Vaccinium uliginosum |
Herbaceous |
(1) Cladina |
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Ecosystem states
State 1 submodel, plant communities
1.1a | - | A high-severity fire sweeps through and incinerates much of the above ground vegetation. |
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1.2b | - | Time without fire. |
1.2a | - | A high-severity fire sweeps through and incinerates much of the above ground vegetation. |
1.3a | - | Time without fire. |
1.3b | - | A high-severity fire sweeps through and incinerates much of the above ground vegetation. |
1.4a | - | Time without fire. |