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T. M. Rice, J. E. Stewart, M.-S. Kim, and G. I. McDonald
Habitat typing of forest stands provides a functional basis for development of tools to assess landscape-level potential threats to forest health. Habitat types (associations of plant species) are well-accepted indicators of general site conditions such as temperature and moisture; however, traditional assignment of habitat types at the landscape level lacks the resolution to discover important process-level parameters requisite to effectively assess diverse environmental threats posed by disease, insect attack, invasive weeds, fire and global climate change. While these threats tend to function across a wide range of plant communities, their behaviors differ within narrower ranges of site conditions influenced by interactions of topography, soil, temperature and precipitation patterns, as well as past disturbance and management practices. Environmental variations occurring within sites must be recognized and used along with broader-scale characteristics to create appropriate management strategies specific to the threat being addressed. For example, data from numerous sites throughout the western
Geographic Information System (GIS) tools provided the ability to design an unbiased plant community classification system from terrain and climate analyses of a forested area in
corresponding author:
T.M. Rice
USDA Forest Service
Rocky Mountain Research Station
1221 S. Main Street
Moscow, ID 83843
208-883-2308
trice@fs.fed.us
Encyclopedia ID: p34