I.
FOREST
I.A.8.N.b. Rounded-crowned temperate or subpolar needle-leaved
evergreen
forest
I.A.8.N.b.5. PINUS ECHINATA
FOREST ALLIANCE
Shortleaf Pine Forest Alliance
Concept:
This alliance includes forests dominated by
Pinus echinata, which on very dry sites may be virtually the only tree
species present. This is a wide-ranging alliance; it is currently known from
wide areas of the eastern United States from the central Appalachians south,
through the Southern Blue Ridge and Cumberland Plateau and Mountains, possibly
extending into the Piedmont, and in the central United States in the Ouachita
Mountains and Ozarks, extending south into the Gulf Coastal Plain. Other pine
species may be present in small amounts; these vary with geography and include
Pinus taeda, Pinus virginiana, Pinus pungens, and Pinus rigida.
Typical hardwood associates include Quercus alba, Quercus falcata, Quercus
velutina, Quercus coccinea, Quercus marilandica, Nyssa sylvatica, Liquidambar
styraciflua, Carya alba, and Carya glabra. Understory species vary
across the range of the alliance, but some common components are Vaccinium
arboreum, Vaccinium pallidum, Vaccinium stamineum, Symplocos tinctoria, Ulmus
alata, Diospyros virginiana, Acer rubrum, Cornus florida, and Oxydendrum
arboreum. One association in the West Gulf Coastal Plain of Arkansas has
Vaccinium elliottii, Aesculus pavia var. pavia, and Chasmanthium laxum.
Common herbaceous species in this Coastal Plain association include Smilax
glauca, Silphium compositum, Pteridium aquilinum var. latiusculum, Scleria
oligantha, Piptochaetium avenaceum, and Tephrosia virginiana. Some
associations can result from natural or anthropogenic disturbances such as fire
or windstorms, while others occur naturally on the landscape, are maintained by
edaphic situations, and may even be 'climax' on these sites. Soils of these
forests are acidic and are derived from sandstone, chert or granitic rock
situated on ravines, ridges, and steep, often south-facing, slopes; the surface
is often rocky. In the Coastal Plain, this alliance is particularly typical of
clay soils, on hillsides, ridges, flats, and low hills. In the Ouachita
Mountains and Ozarks, forests of this alliance typically occur on south-facing
slopes and saddles, and rocky outcrops and bluffs, but may also occur on lower,
north-facing slopes and flat uplands, especially in the Piedmont.
Comments:
Stands have suffered some damage from the
southern pine beetle (Dendroctonus frontalis).
Range:
This is a wide-ranging alliance; it is currently
known from wide areas of the eastern United States from the central Appalachians
south, through the Southern Blue Ridge and Cumberland Plateau and Mountains,
possibly extending into the Piedmont, and in the central United States in the
Ouachita Mountains and Ozarks, extending south into the Gulf Coastal Plain.
Associations in this alliance are found in southern Missouri, Alabama, Arkansas,
Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South
Carolina, Tennessee, and possibly in West Virginia.
States/Provinces:
AL AR GA KY LA MD MO MS NC OK SC TN TX
WV?
TNC Ecoregions:
38:C, 39:C, 40:C, 41:C, 42:C, 43:C, 44:C,
50:C, 51:C, 52:P, 53:C, 59:C
USFS Ecoregions:
221Db:CCC, 221Ha:CCP, 221Hc:CCC,
221He:CCC, 221Jb:CCC, 221Jc:CCP, 222A:CC, 222Ej:CPP, 222En:CP?, 222Eo:CPP,
222Hc:CCC, 231Aa:CCC, 231Ab:CCP, 231Ac:CCP, 231Ad:CC?, 231Ae:CCC, 231Ag:CCP,
231Ah:CCP, 231Ai:CCP, 231Aj:CCP, 231Ak:CCP, 231Al:CCC, 231Am:CCP, 231An:CCP,
231Ao:CCP, 231Ap:CCP, 231Bb:CPP, 231Bc:CPP, 231Bd:CPP, 231Be:CPP, 231Bg:CP?,
231Bk:CP?, 231Ca:C??, 231Da:CP?, 231Dc:CPP, 231Ea:CCC, 231Ef:CCC, 231Ej:CCC,
231Fa:CPP, 231Ga:CCC, 231Gb:CCC, 231Gc:CCC, 232Ba:CCC, 232Bb:CCP, 232Bd:CC?,
232Bj:CC?, 232Bk:CC?, 232Bm:CCC, 232Fe:CCC, 234Ab:CCC, M221A:CC, M221B:C?,
M221Ca:CC?, M221Cd:CCP, M221Ce:CCC, M221Dc:CCC, M221Dd:CCC, M222A:CC,
M231Aa:CCP, M231Ab:CCC, M231Ac:CCC
Federal Lands:
DOD (Camp Robinson); NPS (Buffalo, Cowpens, Great Smoky
Mountains?, Kings Mountain, Shiloh); TVA (Tellico); USFS (Angelina, Bienville,
Chattahoochee, Cherokee?, Daniel Boone, Davy Crockett, De Soto, Holly Springs,
Mark Twain, Nantahala, Oconee, Ouachita, Ozark, Sabine NF, St. Francis, Sam
Houston, Sumter, Talladega?, Tombigbee, Tuskegee)
Synonymy:
IA6a. Dry Shortleaf Pine - Oak - Hickory
Forest, in part (Allard 1990); IA7a. Xeric Shortleaf Pine - Oak Forest, in part
(Allard 1990); Dry Shortleaf Pine - Oak Forest, in part (Foti 1994b); Pinus
echinata forest alliance, in part (Hoagland 1998a); Pine--Oak/Heath, in part
(Nelson 1986); Shortleaf Pine CP, BR, RV (Pyne 1994); T1A9bI1a. Pinus
echinata (Foti et al. 1994); Shortleaf Pine: 75, in part (Eyre 1980);
Shortleaf Pine - Oak: 76, in part (Eyre 1980)
References:
Allard 1990, Allred and Mitchell 1955, Bruner
1931, Cain and Shelton 1994, Eyre 1980, Faber-Langendoen et al. 1996, Foti
1994b, Foti et al. 1994, Fountain and Sweeney 1987, Frothingham et al. 1926,
Hoagland 1998a, Nelson 1986, Pyne 1994, Racine 1966
Authors:
D.J. ALLARD, RW, Southeast Identifier:
A.119
PINUS ECHINATA / VACCINIUM (PALLIDUM, STAMINEUM) - KALMIA LATIFOLIA FOREST
Shortleaf Pine / (Hillside Blueberry, Deerberry) - Mountain Laurel Forest
Appalachian Shortleaf Pine Forest G4? (97-12-01)
Ecological Group (SCS;MCS): Appalachian Highlands Xeric Shortleaf Pine
Woodlands and Forests (401-30; n/a)
Concept:
This association includes forest vegetation with greater than
75% of the canopy cover of Pinus echinata, occurring over a shrub stratum
dominated by ericaceous species, typically Vaccinium pallidum, Vaccinium
stamineum, and Kalmia latifolia. Deciduous species make-up less than
25% of the canopy coverage and may include Quercus falcata, Quercus coccinea,
or, in the southern part of this association's range, Quercus stellata
and Quercus marilandica. This community often has a midstory tree stratum
with Oxydendrum arboreum, Carya pallida, Cornus florida, or Diospyros
virginiana. Other characteristic species include Smilax glauca, Silphium
compositum, Pteridium aquilinum var. latiusculum, Scleria oligantha,
Piptochaetium avenaceum, and Tephrosia virginiana. These forests
occur in the lower elevations (below 2400 feet) of the southern Appalachian
Mountains on ridges and upper slopes, typically with southern to western
exposures.
Comments: Includes successional forests with a hardwood shrub/sapling
stratum.
Range: These forests occur in the lower elevations of the southern
Appalachian Mountains.
States/Provinces: GA:S?, KY:S5, MD:S?, NC:S4,S4, SC:S?, TN:S? TNC
Ecoregions: 51:C, 52:P USFS
Ecoregions: 222Hc:CCC, M221A:CC, M221Ce:CCC, M221Dc:CCC, M221Dd:CCP
Federal Lands: NPS (Great Smoky Mountains?); USFS (Chattahoochee, Cherokee?,
Nantahala, Sumter)
Synonymy: Shortleaf Pine, BR (Pyne 1994), IA6a. Dry Shortleaf Pine - Oak -
Hickory Forest (Allard 1990) B. in part, Shortleaf pine/heath forest of dry,
acidic steep slopes (CAP pers. comm. 1998), Low Mountain Pine Forest (Shortleaf
Pine Subtype) (Schafale 1998b)
References: Allard 1990, CAP pers. comm. 1998, Evans 1991, NatureServe
Ecology - Southeastern U.S. unpubl. data, Nelson 1986, Pyne 1994, Schafale
1998b, Schafale and Weakley 1990
Authors: S. Simon, G. Kauffman, D. Danley, SCS Confidence: 2
Identifier: CEGL007078
- Maryland Vegetation
Classification Subset Report I.A. Evergreen forest
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