Ecological site group R004BJ200CA
Riparian
Last updated: 03/07/2025
Accessed: 03/15/2025
Ecological site group description
Key Characteristics
- Heavy coastal fog dominates the landscapes below 1500 ft.
- Soil moisture is ustic – LRU J
- Hydrologically-influenced, flood-dominated riverine
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.
Physiography
Riparian forests are a complex interaction of many various physical and biologic factors, including function of valley morphology, physical processes, vegetative legacies, and life history strategies. The watershed geomorphology and physical processes form the basis for understanding the spatial extent of the riparian forests, which includes the valley shape, hillslope processes, fluvial processes, soil processes, and hydrologic processes.
Climate
The average annual precipitation in this MLRA is 23 to 98 inches (585 to 2,490 millimeters), increasing with elevation inland. Most of the rainfall occurs as low-intensity, Pacific frontal storms. Precipitation is evenly distributed throughout fall, winter, and spring, but summers are dry. Snowfall is rare along the coast, but snow accumulates at the higher elevations directly inland. Fog is a significant variable that defines this MLRA from other similar MLRAs. Summer fog frequency values of greater than 35% are strongly correlated to the extent of coast redwood distribution, which is a primary indicator species in this MLRA. Nighttime fog is approximately twice as common as daytime fog and seasonally, it reaches its peak frequency in early August, with the greatest occurrence of fog from June through September (Johnstone and Dawson 2010). The average annual temperature is 49 to 59 degrees F (10 to 15 degrees C). The freeze-free period averages 300 days and ranges from 230 to 365 days, decreasing inland as elevation increases.
Although this is one of the wettest spots in California, precipitation-wise--the hot, dry, offshore summer winds in LRU J keep out the fog and make the King Range and surrounding hills too dry to support a dominant overstory of redwoods in most areas, unlike LRU I to the north and the coastal portion of LRU K to the south.
Soil features
Soil development within alluvial environments is highly variable. Frequent erosional and depositional disturbances from flooding create a complex mosaic of soil conditions in the active floodplain that fundamentally influences vegetation colonization and establishment. Well-drained soil or recently deposited mineral alluvium may be found adjacent to very poorly drained organic soils in abandoned high-flow channels. This variability in soil conditions is a major factor in maintaining the high plant diversity typical of riparian ecological sites.
Vegetation dynamics
Riparian areas represent the low-gradient areas within this LRU that are heavily influenced by fluvial processes. This provisional ecological site concept is composed of a variety of different riverine expressions/ecological sites and will require more detailed field investigations in order to refine the site concepts and likely develop several new sites that are correlated to similar geologic structure and processes, hydrologic regimes, and vegetation characteristics. This ecological site concept captures variety of typical riparian vegetation expressions and ranges from mostly herbs and shrubs to shrubs and trees that are found in riverine systems that are primarily smaller streams at the bottom of mountain slopes and terraces in LRU J. The band of riparian vegetation may be broader or narrower depending on where in the LRU it is found and the valley shape and slope shape surrounding the riverine system. These riparian sites differ from the riparian sites in LRU I due to more limited number of days with fog during the hotter summer months. This allows for higher evapotranspiration rates and heavier water demands by plants upslope, reducing water availability and altering composition from that observed in the heart of the fog zone. As a result, redwoods in LRU J are relatively less common, but the key difference between the redwood dominated slopes of this LRU and those of LRU I, is a greater abundance of hardwoods such as tanoak, madrone and California bay laurel due to the drier summer climate. Many riparian areas in LRU J are occupied by riparian forests that lack redwood and are instead made up of a mix of hardwoods and Douglas-fir. Some riparian areas are surrounded by open grasslands and oak woodlands. Streams in this ESG are generally smaller, higher velocity stream orders, such as Rosgen A or B channels with larger bedding sediments.
Abiotic Factors/Primary Disturbance
Coastal fog and yearly precipitation amounts are also a major factor that defines this ecological site from other riparian ecological sites in other MLRAs and LRUs. Windthrow and wind-breakage are less common during winter storms in this LRU but still can occur and open the canopy creating more diversity in the understory.
The disturbances that drive this ecological site concept are dependent on the type, frequency, predictability, extent, magnitude, and timing of the disturbance. The fluvial processes that are dominant in this riparian ecological site concept include stream power, basal shear stress, channel migration, and sediment deposition. The characteristic vegetation pattern of these higher-gradient valleys is maintained by fluvial disturbances and geomorphology. The amount of force exerted on the channel bed and vegetation growing in the active channel and floodplain during a flood is a product of fluid density, gravitational acceleration, flow depth, and water surface slope.
Due to the drier climate of this LRU, fire is likely to play a significant role in this ESG and other riparian areas throughout LRU J. Fires from lightning, historic cultural burning by Native American tribes, and fires set by ranchers in the post-settlement period are likely to have regularly burned into and through riparian areas, especially during periods of drought or extreme wind and fire weather events.
Major Land Resource Area
MLRA 004B
Coastal Redwood Belt
Stage
Provisional
Contributors
Kendra Moseley
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