ESA/SER Joint Meeting (August 5 -- August 10, 2007)

COS 81-10 - A 70-year review of landscape change across the Sierra Nevada

Wednesday, August 8, 2007: 4:40 PM
Blrm Salon IV, San Jose Marriott
James H. Thorne, Department of Environmental Science and Policy, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, Solomon Dobrowski, W.A. Franke College of Forestry and Conservation, University of Montana, Missoula, MT and Hugh D. Safford, Regional Ecologist, USDA Forest Service
A rare forest inventory conducted in 1930s California has been digitized for the ~ 650 km-long Sierra Nevada Mountains. The survey mapped the dominant vegetation and surveyed some 7200 vegetation plots. We compare the historical extent of vegetation types by comparing the historical vegetation GIS with a 1996 measure of landcover. We compare the historical plot data with contemporary plots to develop a sense of how forest structure has changed over that time. Ponderosa Pine-dominated forests have been greatly reduced, and oak-dominated woodlands have expanded. These measured historical trends are consistent with predicted trends in vegetation for the region under future climate change. We examine the difference in change on lands managed in different ways.