Geez. I didn't even finish my thought in my response below. I said "But I might 
beg to differ on that, since the trees are of many different sizes, which I 
can't really explain", and I meant to also say "but the trees up in the Dwarf 
Pine Plains are of uniform size across each pine plains area." That finishes my 
thought.
Also I wanted to say that there doesn't seem to be any visible direct evidence 
of fire where I shot that video. It's odd.
A geologist friend of mine showed me some ancient dunelands where the forest, 
or woodland, was like that. He also noted that there was no visible evidence of 
fire.

--- On Sun, 1/10/10, Barry Caselli <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Barry Caselli <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [ENTS] Beautiful stunted Pitch Pines
To: [email protected]
Date: Sunday, January 10, 2010, 9:25 AM







Ed,
What you say is what has been said of the dwarf pineplains, or "pygmie pines". 
The naturalist at Batsto was suggesting that such might be the case here as 
well, on a tiny scale. But I might beg to differ on that, since the trees are 
of many different sizes, which I can't really explain. They don't seem to be 
saplings, but older trees. I don't know.
The Pine Barrens landscape is so variable from place to place, it's hard to 
know what the underlying causes are for tree sizes in certain areas.
In my video I pointed out Pine Barrens Heather and Pine Barrens Sandwort, but 
those grow all over, especially the Heather (Hudsonia ericoides). The Heather 
especially can be found all over the entire Pine Barrens, but not in damp areas.
I'm going to post something else cool too, a little later.
Barry

--- On Sun, 1/10/10, Edward Frank <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Edward Frank <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [ENTS] Beautiful stunted Pitch Pines
To: [email protected]
Date: Sunday, January 10, 2010, 6:04 AM





Larry, Barry,
 
My last response comes across harsher than I intended.  There are likely other 
reasons besides fire contributing to the poor soils in the pine barrens.  Pitch 
Pine is able to grown in these poorer soil conditions.  What I was trying to do 
was to consider the role of fire in the barrens.  With other factors seeming 
similar and the age of the most stunted trees similar to those in the 
surrounding area, I was arguing that the intensity of fire was the cause for 
the more severe stunting.  Marion Brooks is an example of the effects of severe 
fire on a standard forest system and the results are similar to what is being 
exhibited here, both in terms of the different degrees of stunting of trees in 
different areas and the paucity of species diversity.  The Marion Brooks fires 
were the result of the aftermath of logging operations.  It could be wrong but 
I still think that given the logging that has taken place in the barrens, that 
the greater intensity
 of fire that I am postulating could also have been the result of the aftermath 
of logging.  
 
I am wondering if you know, or if anybody knows, if after repeated generations 
of growth under these conditions, if there is some genetic dwarfing taking 
place or is it purely because of growing conditions?  The idea is not 
Lamarckian selection.  It is like the loss of eyes in blind cave fish.  They 
are did not lose because the eyes are useless in the dark, they lost their eyes 
because it is more energy efficient to not grow them when they do not provide a 
benefit.  In the case of the pines, perhaps it is more efficient in some ways 
to not try to grow full sized trees, therefore those that are predisposed to 
have a small size have been selected for resulting in a degree of dwarfism?
 
Ed
 
http://nature-web-network.blogspot.com/
http://primalforests.ning.com/
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?ref=profile&id=709156957

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Edward Frank 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Sunday, January 10, 2010 12:14 AM
Subject: Re: [ENTS] Beautiful stunted Pitch Pines


Larry,
 
They are similar because in these pitch pine communities are natural fires that 
mess with the soil structure, while at Marion Brook there was a condition 
created by timbering that enabled a severe fire to take place.  Pitch Pine 
communities in general are fire dependant systems. Without the fires the pitch 
pines are displaced by other less fire tolerant species. Whether or not this 
particular small patch in the pine barrens has lousy soil because of natural 
burning or because of human caused situation, the soil is still lousy because 
of burning.  You can't deny that the area has been logged.  If one area is 
dramatically different in size in one small patch than it is in adjacent areas, 
it is not unreasonable that this area was affected by fires of greater 
intensity than the surrounding areas, or affected more recently.  There is no 
other good explanation for this particular patch to be more stunted than are 
the trees in adjacent areas given the same
 basic geology and water conditions. You can't dismiss the idea that this was 
related to human activity, just because the pine community also burns 
naturally.  Most certainly the analogy is valid and there are similarities 
between the two areas.  That is how you examine question by contrasting and 
comparing areas with similar but not identical situations.
 
Edward Frank
 
http://nature-web-network.blogspot.com/
http://primalforests.ning.com/
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?ref=profile&id=709156957

----- Original Message ----- 
From: x 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Saturday, January 09, 2010 11:46 PM
Subject: Re: [ENTS] Beautiful stunted Pitch Pines


most of that area has naturally poor sandy soils and has naturally burned for 
centuries on top of that, it had stunted growth at the time of the first new 
European settlers arrival
 
in some areas down there no trees grows above 4-5' or so and even in an average 
area they are always stunted to some extent over large portions of the region
 
it's one of the very few totally natural stunted pitch pine areas, it's nothing 
at all like Marion Brooks
 
-Larry
 
 




From: Edward Frank 
Sent: Saturday, January 09, 2010 11:13 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [ENTS] Beautiful stunted Pitch Pines


Barry,
 
Do you think the smaller stunted trees are similar in age to the larger ones 
nearby?  Sometimes stunting is because of high acidity or some exotic mineral 
formed from the weathering of the bedrock. There should not be that drastic of 
a difference geologically in this location to cause the stunting.  In this 
location, I do not think they are stunted because of lack of water.  From the 
setting it looks as if they would not need to develop very long roots to reach 
water - so that is not a likely explanation.
 
The best suggestion I can make is that this particular area had been subject to 
a severe fire, maybe from a big brush pile after logging or just brush itself 
that grew after logging.  If the fire is severe enough it will destroy the 
organic components of the soil and the soil structure leaving behind a mineral 
soil that will not support many plant species.  These are first occupied by 
some pioneering species, but it will take decades to a couple hundred years 
before the soil rebuilds enough to support "normal" vegetation.  This is what 
happened at Marion Brooks Natural Area in central Pennsylvania.  After eighty 
or ninety years there are still large section that only are growing  
blueberries and bracken fern.  What trees that are present in the worst hit 
areas are paper birch and to a lesser extent pitch pine.  
 
In your area of the pine barrens the succession is likely first some of the 
lichens and hedges, then perhaps the pitch pines.  But just because they will 
sprout there does not mean they will grow well.  The trees in these areas are 
typically stunted by the poor nutrients and nature of the soil.  I think that 
is what is happening here.  These trees are stunted because they are growing in 
an area particularly hard hit by fires that ruined the soil structure.
 
Ed
 
http://nature-web-network.blogspot.com/
http://primalforests.ning.com/
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?ref=profile&id=709156957

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