aczlan
Good Morning
- Joined
- Mar 7, 2008
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- Kubota L3830GST, B7500HST, BX2660. Formerly: Case 480F LL, David Brown 880UE
That works out here, but the problem (as I understand it) is that its too dry out there for the trees to rot and decompose, so you end up with a lot of dead dry trees.I picture a truly old-growth forest as one with lots of standing live trees that have seen better days, but still kicking, and some fallen trees that are rotting. There will be new growth colonizing the area exposed by the hole in the canopy from fallen trees. There will be disturbance areas from wind and fire, but that is natural. An old-growth forest is not just a pile of wood waiting to burn, it falls, it rots, etc.
Rotting wood doesn't burn very well, and the full canopy of a mature forest will contribute to higher moisture levels at ground level by reducing evaporation, ground exposure due to the mulching effect of rotting materials, and air movement.
If what you picture were the case, forests would naturally extinguish themselves on a large scale and become grasslands. It doesn't happen in a normal process. What is abnormal is the damage (fuel) caused by the bark beetles combined with generally drier and warmer conditions.
Huge, abnormal outbreaks of insects can indicate that an ecosystem is not in balance. Climate shifts are contributing to invasive insect problems here in Maine too.
In this article, natural predators are being studied:
New control strategies for 'bipolar' bark beetles
"The pine beetles produce pheromones, chemical signals, that attract enough competitors and predators to prevent outbreaks," says Sharon Martinson, a member of the research team and first author on the new paper. "Leaving more dead trees in forests can provide habitat for competitor beetles that rarely kill tree, and for predators that eat both beetle species."
The cycle out there used to be that the trees would burn down every so often and you would re-start the cycle again. There are even some species of tree where the seeds only germinate after a fire.
Aaron Z