Dead Wood
The Afterlife of Trees
Ellen Wohl . PSUlib SD387.C63 W64 2022
p010 OSU old-growth H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest taught us value of dead wood in forests around 1980
p011 Mark Harmon orst.edu emeritus 2001 "Moving towards a new paradigm for woody detritus management" morticulture NSF 2015
- p024 Spruce seedling 8 inches tall in 10 years
p025 matures 300 years, 3 foot trunk, can live 600 years https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monoecy
p025 meristematic stem cells
p025 xylem water transport tissue
p025 phloem nutrient transport tissue
- p026 Youngest wood carries water and nutrients,
p026 inner bark and sapwood remains alive, dead still useful, heartwood structural, retards infections
p033 Brown Creeper resembles tree bark
p034 nuthatch resin globules on nest entrance deter predators
p043 flammulated owls
p046 frazil ice irregular submillimeter crystals
p048 brook trout with half-swallowed vole ( 8 to 23 cm long )
p048 hyporheic zone sediment and porous space around steam, "river's liver
- p050 wood in stream looks untidy, habitat for many organisms
p052 Collembolans hexapods; not "insects" because mouthparts internal
p052 David George Haskell The Song of Trees .p95 rot is a detonation of possibility
p052 red backed voles within fallen trees
p053 shrews are Eulipotyphla not rodents
- p053 (some!) shrews are venomous
p056 Western Redcedar
p056 Queets River https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olympic_Peninsula
p057 Douglas-fir is pine family not true fir (hyphen is clue)
- p057 "That's why scientists prefer Latin names.
p058 Underplating hydrated ocean crust melt under continental crust
p061 olive-sided flycatcher aggressively defend 100 acre territories, chase away squirrels
- p063 western redcedar vegling clones, no genetic diversity
- p065 one example 17% of forest tree volume, 82% of root length
p067 cones at 10 years, male and female cones on different branches monoecious
- p067 In spring, black bears girdle trees to feed on phloem, one bear can girdle up to 70 trees per day
p067 mountain beavers and porcupines also girdle trees
- p069 downed wood stores half the nitrogen and 60% of phosphorus in forest
p070 Cyanobacteria in epiphytic bryophytes capture more nitrogen then forest floor
- p070 support tall PNW trees, greatest density of carbon
- p072 Queets river forest canopy can accumulate 100K cu.yards of canopy organisms per acre, 62 feet thick
- p072 upper canopy uses bird waste
- p073 large trees can support 1100 pounds of bryophytes and 1000 pounds of ferns
p074 marbled murrelets nest in canopy lichens and moss
p075 ~20 inch pileated woodpeckers nest in western redcedar rot cavities
p076 patagium membrane between limbs of Northern Flying Squirrels
p077 salamandersregenerate lost body parts, researchers hope to copy in humanshttps://www.visitlongmont.org/listing/button-rock-preserve/19207/
- p077 western redcedars can live 1000 years, floods topple them sooner (300y in example)
- p083 fallen redcedars buried, eroded, float downstream
- p084 river teeth: flattened, oblong hand-sized fragments of dead tree
p085 mayfly larva resembles miniature scorpion
p085 macroinvertebrates as much as half of stream biomass
p086 ouzels
p086 labile carbon in easily broken-down compounds
p087 graywacke stones hard sandstone
p089 sandhoppers sand-fleas xylophage eat wood
p093 gibbles bore into wood
p093 Balsam poplar farthest north deciduous tree in North America
p093 ice free corridor between eastern Laurentide and western Cordilleran ice sheets
- p096 poplar seeding leaves expand in 24 hours, a dozen leaves by end of summer, 2 inches tall
- p098 browsing moose can break 2 inch stems
- p099 alder/bacteria symbiotes fix nitrogen, "eat bedrock" for calcium and phosphorus
- p102 across river meanders, tree ages vary by 50 years
p102 Engelmann spruce or white/mountain/silver spruce
p105 bank swallows 89% decline since 1970
p105 Yellow-bellied sapsuckers prefer Black poplar nesting cavities
- "crimson-crowned" better description of bird
p109 Fort Liard trading post
p110 Mackenzie river massive wood flood every 20 to 30 years
- p111 Beavers slap tails on water near lodge to sound alarm
- p115 Indigenes used driftwood and celebrated its appearance
p120 Fort Good Hope
p122 pingo ice-cored hill 3-70 meters high
- p125 eroding arctic permafrost releasesn much CO2
p126 The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost
p126 Beaufort Gyre
- p127 losing thick opaque ice
- p127 few species of all marine fungi cataloged by scientists
- p128 driftwood can raft and drop stones into deep sea sediments along with driftood organisms that survive in the depths
p129 Porcelain crabs in deep sea eat wood and biofilm
- p129 not yet studied in Arctic
p130 sunken -wood communities studied by Challenger expedition 1872–1876
p131 Lignin difficult to degrade, sunken logs persist
p131 peanut worms
p132 hagfish carbon from land
- p132 woodfalls on seafloor rarely discovered
p132 Taiwan Typhoon Morakot washed millions of tons of trees into sea
p133 Oregon driftwood logs reach Marshall Islands
p133 driftwood removed from Ralph Price Reservoir in Colorado
- p133 58,000 dams severe reduction in wood supply to oceans
p134 sediment cascade
- p134 no one measures wood transport in rivers