Greenbrier,
GSMNP |
Jess
Riddle |
Feb
05, 2007 18:50 PST |
Ents,
In trip reports and rankings of sites, the Smokies are often
referred
to as a single distinct entity. However, that view reflects
political
realities more than ecological realities, provides an uneven
basis for
comparisons between sites, and overlooks the great variety of
different regions of the park. At 520,000 acres, the Smokies are
far
lager than most areas ENTS refer to as "sites", and
consequently has a
more heterogeneous disturbance history and geology than other
sites.
In an attempt to alleviate some of those issues and provide a
fuller
context for trip descriptions from the Smokies, I am planning to
write
a serious of descriptions on distinct regions of the park, of
which
this is the first. Of course, even within restricted regions,
conditions are not uniform, and the national park does include
most of
a discrete mountain range with some consistent patterns of
climate and
other factors. Still, to people familiar with the park, simply
knowing what section a stream is in can provide a great deal of
information about forest conditions within the watershed.
These descriptions derive from my observations on repeated hikes
through the areas rather than any systematic or formal samples
of the
vegetation. Consequently, they may be biased by selective
attention,
distortions of imperfect memory, or the sites I happen to have
visited
being atypical. They also differ from the actual forests by
focusing
on only the most common woody species from mixtures that are
frequently diverse, and by lumping varied communities in broad,
discrete categories. I encourage any other ents familiar with
the
areas to correct or add to these descriptions.
Greenbrier:
Once a small farming community, Greenbrier now refers to the
portion
of Great Smoky Mountains National Park drained by the Middle
Prong
Little Pigeon River, which lies between Gatlinburg, TN and
Cosby, TN.
Although a few streams flow out of the park before merging with
the
Middle Prong, most of the watershed lies within a broadly forked
valley surrounded by steep, spruce-topped ridges. Those
surrounding
ridges include not only the main divide of the Great Smoky
mountain
range but also the prominent spurs of Greenbrier Pinnacle and
The
Boulevard. Along the boarder with Greenbrier, the divide, which
also
serves as the TN/NC state line, dips only as low as 5233'
elevation,
and rises as high as 6621' on top of Mount Guyot, the second
highest
peak in the Smokies. Three miles from the divide and at The
Boulevard's terminus, the Smokies third highest peak, Mount Le
Conte
(6593'), overlooks the western side of Greenbrier. On the other
side
of the valley, Greenbrier Pinnacle juts out five miles from the
divide
before dropping below 4500' and reaching an abrupt end, the
former
site of a fire tower.
Steep slopes descend from all of those major ridges into the
valley,
especially along The Boulevard and the western end of the
divide.
Anakeesta slate supports that stretch, and typically weathers
into a
dramatic landscape of narrow ridges and precipitous slopes. That
topography combines with the thin soils and wet climate to make
the
area prone to landslides, which have produced the large scars on
the
landscape seen at Charlies Bunion and Eagle Rocks. The
Thunderhead
Sandstone that underlies the mid-elevations and eastern parts of
the
valley produces more rounded peaks and more stable, but still
steep,
slopes.
Those slopes channeled most historical human activity in the
watershed
to the lower elevations. Extensive farming occurred on the
gentle
terrain watered by many small streams at the foot of Greenbrier
Pinnacle and at the base of Mount Le Conte, areas now just
inside the
northern boarder of the national park. Farming also occurred
within
the main valley, but was primarily restricted to the flats along
the
larger streams' lower ends. Adjacent to the farms and along low
elevation streams, commercial logging operations cleared the
forests,
and sometimes ventured farther upstream for large tuliptrees and
black
cherries. However, that disturbance pattern has left large
sections
of the watershed completely untouched by logging operations.
Most
modern human activity in the area focuses on either those least
disturbed sections or the historically most altered ones. The
handful
of trails in Greenbrier, relatively few compared to some other
areas
of the park, lead through old fields to stone walls,
reconstructed
buildings, or cemeteries; or follow streams to waterfalls in
forests
with many large trees.
The former fields now stand out from the surrounding forest by
their
structural simplicity and lack of diversity. Arrow straight
tuliptrees have replaced straight rows of corn or potatoes.
While
only scattered red maples, black locusts and near the larger
streams
sweetgum, and sycamore compete with the tuliptrees in the
overstory,
the understory displays a patchier structure with thickets of
young
hemlocks, and striped maples in addition to more scattered
flowering
dogwoods, and near streams hornbeam and umbrella magnolia. In
some
areas, the naturalization of black walnut has supplemented that
native
diversity, and spicebush often occupies the understory in those
areas.
Settlers typically bypassed drier, less fertile, or steeper
surrounding slopes, but those areas were still cleared for
timber.
The richest of them, typically steep and north facing, also
support
tuliptree dominated canopies, but the tuliptrees are typically
larger
than those in farmed areas and the understory includes saplings
of
rich site species such as silverbell and yellow buckeye. On
other
moist sites hemlock can dominate and permit either a sparse
understory
or a dense rhododendron dominated understory. Drier slopes
feature
more mixed canopies that usually include chestnut oak and red
maple
over understories of mountain laurel.
Those same species also dominate the dry ridges in the unlogged
portions of the area. On the most exposed and driest ridges, the
oaks
and maples yield canopy space to table mountain pine, and
wintergreen
(Gaultheria procumbens) may form an evergreen ground cover. On
moister ridges that retain their original forest cover, eastern
hemlock becomes a major canopy constituent. On level or north
facing
ridges, the cool, wet climate between 4000 and 4500' elevation
allows
hemlock to exclude all other species from the overstory, but
rosebay
rhododendron thrives in the understory. At slightly lower
elevations,
north facing ridges and adjacent slopes with deep soils support
another hemlock dominated community that The Nature Conservancy
lists
as globally rare. Those conditions allow silverbell, but few
other
species, to compete effectively with the hemlocks. Since
rhododendron
is limited in extant in the community, a fairly continuous and
largely
evergreen herbaceous layer develops dominated by intermediate
wood
fern, partridgeberry, Indian cucumber and occasionally Frasers
sedge.
Curiously, hemlock does not appear as longed lived in this
community,
and does not obtain as large of diameters as on the higher
ridges.
Along the streams and lower slopes at mid elevations in the
uncut
forest, hemlock is even more ubiquitous and becomes the most
common
overstory species. The conifer shares space with red maple,
black
birch, yellow birch, and tuliptrees over a typically thick shrub
layer
of rosebay rhododendron, which precludes most herbaceous growth.
These forests are typically large statured with uneven canopies
usually around 120' high and trees frequently exceeding three
feet
diameter. On gentle topography along streams and in north facing
coves, these acidic cove forests occasionally give way to more
hardwood dominated rich cove forests, the botanical stars of the
Smokies and the Appalachian Mountains. These forests have gained
their notoriety by supporting spectacular displays of spring
wildflowers and massive trees. The overstory is mixed, but
typically
includes many sugar maples, yellow buckeyes, white basswoods,
and
silverbells. Tuliptree and hemlock may also form substantial
parts of
the canopy, and tuliptrees reach their largest sizes in this
community. Below the large hardwoods, the sparse understory
sometimes
includes striped maple or mountain maple, but is composed
primarily of
saplings of shade tolerant overstory species: yellow buckeye,
silverbell, and sugar maple. The rich soils support even greater
diversity in the thick herbaceous layer that often includes
large
flowered trillium, spring beauties, squirrel corn, Dutchman's
britches, foam flower, black cohosh, yellow mandarin and blue
cohosh
among others. In narrower coves, which often feature
boulderfields,
the composition usually shifts to include more squirrel corn and
Dutchman's britches in the herbaceous layer, more mountain maple
in
the understory, and more yellow buckeye and Dutchman's pipe vine
in
the canopy.
In the rainforest conditions that occur at higher elevations,
the
forests vary much less with topography. The broad domes of
yellow
birch crowns and narrow cones of red spruce crowns form a
strongly two
tiered canopy that stretches from the streams to the ridge
crests. On
the high peaks and ridges, that community extends from about
6000'
elevation down to around 4500'; in highly sheltered north facing
drainages that begin at high elevations, spruce and birch may
maintain
dominance down to around 4000' elevation. The overstory often
includes many large gaps that allow substantial light to reach
the
highly variable understory. Mountain maple frequently thrives in
those gaps along with witch-hobble, saplings of larger tree
species,
and a dense herb layer that may include umbrella leaf, Rugel's
ragwort, heartleaf aster, and an abundance of ferns and mosses.
However, the understory more commonly consists of an interwoven
tangle
of rhododendron, more often rosebay than catawba, that grows
more
horizontally than vertically, and can exclude all other vascular
plants. In those areas, tree regeneration occurs primarily on
fallen
logs.
Above that forest, on top of Mount Le Conte and Mount Guyot and
along
the ridge connecting them, Fraser fir becomes a successful
competitor.
At the highest elevations, the fir grows in extremely dense
stands
interrupted only by scattered red spruce and mountain ash. Going
down
slope, spruce gradually replaces fir, although Fraser fir may
still
form dense stands in the understory. The shade in the fir stands
may
be dense enough to preclude any vascular plants from growing
underneath them. However, the balsam woolly adelgid has made
such
stands far scarcer than they were a few decades ago by killing
the
vast majority of mature fraser fir, and in places leaving behind
ghost
forests of standing, bleached trunks that rot slowly in the
waterlogged, cool climate. Yet, some of the dense fir groves
that
have grown back since the first wave of adelgid induced
mortality are
already maturing since Fraser fir grows relatively quickly, only
reaches about 40' tall on most sites, and the adelgid does not
attack
until after the trees mature.
The extensive tract of uncut, high diversity, high productivity
forest
spanning Greenbrier's middle elevations has made the area a
focus of
ENTS in the south for the organization's entire history. Before
ENTS,
visitors, the park naturalist, and others were nominating
champion
trees from Greenbrier. Hence, the plethora of record trees known
from
the area reflects not only the high productivity and history of
protection of the forests, but also extensive active searching.
However, exploration of other sections of the southern
Appalachians
has revealed no other area with the abundance of massive
hardwoods
that Greenbrier boasts. The 2006-2007 National Register of Big
Trees
lists six national champions in Greenbrier; three of those have
now
fallen, but a larger tree has been found in Greenbrier for one
of the
fallen trees and two additional potential champions have been
located.
Greenbrier also ranks high by the method ENTS often uses to
evaluate
sites, the Rucker Index.
Rucker Height Index: 150.9'
Tuliptree 173.4'
Eastern Hemlock 165.3'
Yellow Buckeye 157.3'
Black Locust 151.3'
White Ash 149.0'
Bitternut Hickory 146'
Red Maple 142.6'
Northern Red Oak 141.8'
Sycamore 141.7'
Black Cherry 140.7'
The Rucker Index includes: eight trees in old-growth forests and
two
in second growth forests; three eastern height records (buckeye,
red
maple, and black cherry); and seven state height records. The
150.9'
value ranks fifth in the eastern US behind two other sections of
the
Smokies, Savage Gulf, and Congaree NP. The index is the second
highest in TN behind Savage Gulf. The two tallest trees in the
index
were both located in 2006, so the index continues to change.
Rucker Girth Index: 17.7'
Tuliptree 25.3'
Sycamore 18.75'
Eastern Hemlock 18.4'
Northern Red Oak 18.4'
Black Cherry 17.9'
Red Maple 16.9'
Yellow Buckeye 16.7'
White Ash 15.9'
Chestnut Oak 14.85'
Cucumbertree 14.1'
All ten of the trees in the girth index grow in old-growth
forests.
The hemlock, northern red oak, and red maple are each likely the
first
or second largest known in volume for their species. The red
maple
and white ash were both found in 2006.
Most areas in Greenbrier below 4000' and known to have uncut
forests
on gentle topography have been visited to look for large trees.
However, much less attention has been paid to slopes and
steep-sided
stream corridors. Those sites can also support highly productive
forest, but harbor record size trees much less frequently. The
cloud
shrouded high elevation forests maintain the greatest air of
mystery
in Greenbrier. In streamside areas, only one short section of
trail
extends above 4000' elevation, so the forests have received
extremely
little visitation. Remoteness, boulder filled stream channels,
and
extensive rhododendron thickets may hide other exemplary forests
in
the area's upper reaches.
Jess Riddle |
Re:
Greenbrier, GSMNP |
Lee
E. Frelich |
Feb
06, 2007 07:09 PST |
Jess:
The rich site with Trillium and spring ephemerals sounds great.
There must
not be a high deer population there, and the European/Asian
earthworm
invasion being tracked by Paul Hendrix and coworkers at U
Georgia must not
have reached the area yet. Such areas are slowly disappearing
all across
the eastern U.S. Chris Webster at Michigan Tech University has
been
studying deer in the Smokies and has found a similar damage
pattern to
native understory flora in certain areas with high deer
populations to that
we find up here. You should look up some of his recent
publications.
Lee
|
Re:
Greenbrier, GSMNP |
Jess
Riddle |
Feb
13, 2007 19:35 PST |
Lee,
Thanks for letting me know who's leading the research on deer
and
earthworm impacts on the Smokies. I will look up their current
research.
From what I've seen, largely intact herbaceous layers are still
much
more common in the park's old-growth forests than heavily
disturbed
herb layers. I would guess that most of the deer damage is
occurring
around Cades Cove, which has by far the largest fields in the
park and
smaller mountains in the immediate vicinity. I've always had the
impression that, on a park-wide basis, feral hogs are much more
destructive than deer to the native flora.
Jess
|
RE:
Greenbrier, GSMNP |
James
Smith |
Feb
15, 2007 16:20 PST |
I spoke to a ranger in Cades Cove a few years ago (a park
naturalist).
She was very happy over the fact that coyotes were so well
established
in the park. They had, she said, filled in the niche formerly
occupied
by wolves and were serving pretty much the same function. It was
her
belief that the coyotes were having a positive role in
controlling the
populations of both deer and feral hogs. She told me that
coyotes were
taking quite a lot of young hogs.
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