I.
FOREST
I.B.2.N.a.38. QUERCUS PRINUS - QUERCUS RUBRA FOREST ALLIANCE
Rock Chestnut Oak - Northern Red Oak Forest Alliance
Concept: This alliance includes dry-mesic oak forests,
codominated by Quercus prinus and Quercus rubra, at moderate elevations in the
Blue Ridge, Ridge and Valley, and High Alleghenies of Virginia, western North
Carolina, eastern Tennessee, South Carolina, and Georgia. It also includes
transitional oak - hickory forests of Lower New England and the Northern
Piedmont. This alliance may possibly range into the upper Piedmont and into the
eastern fringes of the Cumberland Mountains and Appalachian Plateau of Kentucky,
but no associations have been defined for these regions. The majority of the
forests in this alliance occur in areas previously dominated by Castanea dentata,
and chestnut sprouts are common in the understory. The canopy of forests in this
alliance tend to be dominated by Quercus rubra and/or Quercus prinus, although
other mesic hardwood species can codominate or be present in the canopy and
subcanopy. Typical tree associates include Liriodendron tulipifera, Acer rubrum,
Hamamelis virginiana, Acer pensylvanicum, and Oxydendrum arboreum. In the
Appalachian Mountains, shrub layers are often dense and dominated by ericaceous
species, Rhododendron maximum (especially on northerly aspects), Rhododendron
minus, Kalmia latifolia, Gaylussacia spp., and Vaccinium spp. Herbaceous
coverage tends to be inversely proportional to the shrub coverage. Galax urceolata and
Gaultheria procumbens are components in sparse herb strata. Other
herbs typical of these forests include Solidago curtisii, Lysimachia quadrifolia,
Thelypteris noveboracensis, Gentiana decora, Sanicula trifoliata, Prenanthes
altissima, Dichanthelium
spp. (Dichanthelium boscii, Dichanthelium commutatum,
Dichanthelium dichotomum), Carex pensylvanica, Polystichum acrostichoides,
Chimaphila maculata, Desmodium nudiflorum, Galium latifolium, Houstonia purpurea,
and Maianthemum racemosum ssp. racemosum. In montane landscapes, these forest
occur on intermediate positions of elevation and aspect, on protected, often
rocky slopes. Forests in this alliance are also found on sandstone boulderfields
and outcrops in Virginia's Ridge and Valley. Range: This alliance ranges from the southern Blue Ridge, north
through the Ridge and Valley, and High Alleghenies of Virginia, and into some
areas of Lower New England and the Northern Piedmont. This alliance may possibly
range into the upper Piedmont and into the eastern fringes of the Cumberland
Mountains and Appalachian Plateau of Kentucky, but no associations have been
defined for these regions. States/Provinces: GA MD? NC NJ? PA SC TN VA WV TNC Ecoregions: 49:?, 50:P, 51:C, 52:C, 59:C, 61:C USFS Ecoregions: 212G:P?, 221Am:CCP, 221Da:CCP, 221Db:CCP,
221Eb:C??, 221F:C?, 221H:C?, 221J:C?, 231Aa:PPP, 231Ag:PP?, M221Aa:CCC,
M221Ab:CCC, M221Ac:CCC, M221Ad:CCC, M221Ba:CCC, M221Bb:CCC, M221Bc:CCC,
M221Bd:CCC, M221Bf:CCC, M221Ca:C??, M221Cb:C??, M221Cc:C??, M221Cd:C??,
M221Ce:C??, M221Da:CCC, M221Db:CCC, M221Dc:CCC, M221Dd:CCC Federal Lands: NPS (Carl Sandburg Home, Great Smoky Mountains,
Harpers Ferry, Kings Mountain); USFS (Chattahoochee, Cherokee, George
Washington, Jefferson, Nantahala, Pisgah, Sumter) Synonymy: Appalachian sub-xeric forest, in part (Evans 1991);
Chestnut Oak Forest, in part (Schafale and Weakley 1990); Dry-Mesic Oak--Hickory
Forest, in part (Schafale and Weakley 1990); Oak - Chestnut - Hickory Forest
(Ambrose 1990a); Oak--Hickory Forest, in part (Nelson 1986); Quercus prinus -
Quercus rubra / Acer pensylvanicum Association (Fleming and Moorhead 1996);
Chestnut Oak: 44, in part (Eyre 1980) References: Ambrose 1990a, Evans 1991, Eyre 1980, Fleming and
Moorhead 1996, Golden 1981, Livingston and Mitchell 1976, McLeod 1988, Mowbray
1966, Nelson 1986, Nowacki and Abrams 1992, Rheinhardt 1981, Schafale and
Weakley 1990 Authors: D.J. ALLARD 6-94, MOD. S., RW, Southeast
Identifier: A.250
QUERCUS PRINUS - QUERCUS RUBRA - CARYA (GLABRA, ALBA) / GAYLUSSACIA BACCATA
FOREST
Rock Chestnut Oak - Northern Red Oak -
(Pignut Hickory, Mockernut Hickory) / Black Huckleberry Forest
Central Appalachian Rocky Dry-Mesic Oak Forest G5 (01-10-01)
Ecological Group (SCS;MCS):
Appalachian Montane
Oak-Hickory Forests (410-40; n/a)
Concept: This
closed-canopy, dry-mesic oak forest of the central Appalachian Mountains is a
montane forest of protected, rocky slopes. The canopy is codominated by
Quercus prinus and
Quercus rubra. Associated canopy
species include Liriodendron
tulipifera, Acer rubrum, Carya glabra, and
Carya alba. The tall-shrub layer, when
present, is characterized by
Hamamelis virginiana and Acer
pensylvanicum. The lower shrub layer is dense and ericaceous, characterized
by Rhododendron maximum, Kalmia
latifolia, Gaylussacia spp., and
Vaccinium spp. The herbaceous layer is usually sparse but may include
Gaultheria procumbens, Lysimachia
quadrifolia, Thelypteris noveboracensis, Sanicula trifoliata, Prenanthes
altissima, Dichanthelium boscii, Dichanthelium commutatum, Dichanthelium
dichotomum, Carex pensylvanica, Polystichum acrostichoides, Chimaphila maculata,
Desmodium nudiflorum, Galium latifolium, Houstonia purpurea, and
Maianthemum racemosum. This association
is intermediate in elevation and aspect in relation to
Quercus prinus - Quercus coccinea
forests and Quercus rubra
forests.
Comments: The
Ecological Group placement of this vegetation type is somewhat arbitrary, since
it has atypically fertile soils and a sparse ericaceous shrub component compared
to other members of the Mixed Oak / Heath and Chestnut Oak Forests group.
Although it has some affinities to the Montane Oak - Hickory Forests and the
Low-Elevation Boulderfield Forests, placement in either of these groups would be
just as imperfect. Therefore, we have followed the results of cluster analysis,
which placed the cluster of plots forming this type in a larger group with other
oak / heath forests.
Wind and ice damage to tree crowns, damage to
Cornus florida from dogwood anthracnose
(Discula destructiva), and a few
small fire scars were disturbances noted in plots. Although
Castanea dentata logs and wood were not
abundant in plots, frequent sprouts indicate that
Castanea dentata was at least an
associate tree in this unit prior to the arrival of chestnut blight. The
northwest slopes of Peters Mountain in Alleghany County contains old-growth
examples of the type with large, widely spaced canopy trees in the 43-72 cm
(17-28 in.) dbh range. Representative old-age trees include a 59 cm (23 in.) dbh
Quercus prinus >220 years old; a
63 cm (25 in.) dbh Quercus prinus
ca. 179 years old; a 67 cm (26 in.) dbh
Quercus prinus 265 years old; and a 71
cm (28 in.) dbh Quercus rubra >247 years old (Fleming and Moorhead 2000).
Range: This
association occurs throughout the Central Appalachian region of Virginia, West
Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and possibly further north. In Virginia, it is
a large-patch to matrix community type in both the Northern Blue Ridge and Ridge
and Valley provinces.
States/Provinces:
MD?, NJ?, PA:S?, VA:S?, WV:S?
TNC Ecoregions: 59:C, 61:?
USFS Ecoregions: 212G:P?, 221Am:CCP, 221Da:CCP, 221Db:CCP, 221E:C?, 221F:C?, 231A:??, M221Aa:CCC,
M221Ab:CCC, M221Ac:CCC, M221Ad:CCC, M221Ba:CCC, M221Bb:CCC, M221Bc:CCC,
M221Bf:CCC, M221C:C?, M221Da:CCC
Federal Lands: NPS
(Harpers Ferry); USFS (George Washington, Jefferson)
Synonymy: Chestnut
oak-red oak/ericad forest: (matrix) N slopes (CAP pers. comm. 1998), Quercus montana - Quercus rubra / Acer
pensylvanicum - Hamamelis virginiana Forest (Fleming and Moorhead 2000), Quercus rubra - Magnolia acuminata
Association (Fleming and Moorhead 1996), Quercus prinus - Quercus rubra / Hamamelis
virginiana Forest (Fleming and Coulling 2001), Magnolia acuminata - Betula lenta - Tilia
americana / Parthenocissus quinquefolia Association (Rawinski et al. 1994), Quercus montana - Robinia
pseudoacacia / Ribes rotundifolium Association (Rawinski et al. 1994), Quercus rubra - Quercus prinus -
Liriodendron tulipifera / Parthenocissus quinquefolia - Dryopteris marginalis
Association (Rawinski et al. 1996), Red Oak - Chestnut Oak Community Type
(Stephenson and Adams 1991), Chestnut Oak: 44 (Eyre 1980) B. chestnut oak -
northern red oak variant
References: Breden
et al. 2001, CAP pers. comm. 1998, Eyre 1980, Fike 1999, Fleming and Coulling
2001, Fleming and Moorhead 1996, Fleming and Moorhead 2000, Fleming et al. 2001,
Rawinski et al. 1994, Rawinski et al. 1996, Stephenson and Adams 1991,
Vanderhorst 2000b
Authors: G. Fleming
and P. Coulling, ECS Confidence: 3 Identifier: CEGL006057
- Maryland Vegetation Classification Subset Report I.B. Deciduous forest
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