Kf. Kipfmueller et Wl. Baker, A COMPARISON OF 3 TECHNIQUES TO DATE STAND-REPLACING FIRES IN LODGEPOLE PINE FORESTS, Forest ecology and management, 104(1-3), 1998, pp. 171-177
We examined the effectiveness of three sampling techniques and five sa
mple sizes to date stand-replacing fires in lodgepole pine forests in
the southern Rocky Mountains, USA. Transects (5 m X 250 m) were establ
ished in a relatively young (120 yrs old), nearly pure lodgepole pine
forest ('road' transect) and an uneven-aged, older, mixed-species suba
lpine forest ('forest' transect). The forest transect was divided into
an upper and lower forest transect at a fire boundary. All trees were
mapped, and age, species, and dbh were recorded for trees > 5 cm dbh.
Fire scars were collected to verify stand-origin dates. Random sampli
ng, dbh-based, and spatial systematic sampling were performed using sa
mple sizes of 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 trees. Random sampling resulted in
a higher estimate of mean maximum age, but always lower than the actu
al maximum, as sample size increased. Sampling based on dbh located th
e oldest tree for sample sizes of 10, 15, 20, and 25 trees for the roa
d transect, 15, 20, and 25 for the upper forest, and all sample sizes
for the lower forest. The spatial systematic technique obtained the ol
dest tree in the road transect for sample sizes of 15, 20, and 25. Spa
tial systematic sampling did not find the oldest tree for the lower fo
rest. Our results indicate the most effective method to find the oldes
t tree in a stand to estimate fire dates is to use sample sizes of at
least 10 trees in young forests and 15 trees in older forests, based o
n the largest trees in a stand. The identification of possible survivo
rs of fire is also important to determine fire history. Fire scars alo
ne are insufficient to understand lodgepole pine landscape history. (C
) 1998 Elsevier Science B.V.