Porters
Creek |
Jess
Riddle |
Feb
27, 2006 19:00 PST |
Ents,
Will Blozan and I returned to the Porters Creek watershed (see
"Lowes
& Cannon Creeks" post from 2/9/06) to search a
previously unexplored,
north facing cove for new large and tall hemlocks. From the
mouth on
Porters Creek at 2800' elevation, the cove gradually gains 800'
elevation between two parallel, steep-sided ridges before ending
in a
steep, rocky slope. Buckeyes and a few other mesophytic species
line
the middle of the cove, and separate the contrasting forests on
the
northwest and northeast facing slopes. Hemlocks and rhododendron
cover the entire eastern ridge while an open forest of hemlock,
silverbell, fraser magnolia, tuliptree and striped maple
dominates the
cove's other side. Open, rich cove forests featuring red maple,
sugar
maple, hemlock, tuliptree, and buckeye also grow on the
northeast
facing slopes farther up Porters Creek.
In the cove:
Species Cbh Height
Buckeye, Yellow NA 134.2'
Cherry, Pin 3'6" 89.6'
Hemlock, Eastern 12'8" 165.3'
Magnolia, Fraser 7'6" 118.3'
Maple, Red 14'10" 126.9'
Maple, Striped 3'1" 69.6'
Maple, Sugar 11'2" 125.9'
Tuliptree 18'6" 167.5'
Tuliptree 12'0" 170.4'
Tuliptree 21'3" 173.4'
Along Porters Creek:
Species Cbh Height
Maple, Red 16'10.5" ~120'
Maple, Red NA 131.6'
Silverbell 6'8" 125.2'
In Tennessee, the 165.3' hemlock is second in height only to the
tree
recently relocated tree on Lowes Creek. The hemlock is the
forth-tallest known living hemlock. The fraser magnolia is the
tallest known in Tennessee, and falls short of the eastern
height
record by only 0.4'. The 21'3' x 173.4' tuliptree is the seventh
tuliptree over 20' in circumference found in the Porters Creek
watershed. The tree is also the tallest known tuliptree in
Tennessee,
and the tallest known tree in the state. The tree has
substantial
basal flair, and is likely smaller in volume than the extremely
columnar 18'6" tree in the same cove. However, the
16'10.5" cbh red
maple is not flaired at the base. By volume, the maple is either
the
second or third largest of the species. The silverbell is 0.6'
shorter than the recently found state height record, and grows
farther
down Porters Creek.
Jess Riddle & Will Blozan |
RE:
Porters Creek RED OAK? |
Will
Blozan |
Feb
27, 2006 19:52 PST |
Jess,
There was also the ~17'4" X ~128' northern red oak at the
base of the cove.
Will
|
RE:
Porters Creek |
Will
Blozan |
Feb
27, 2006 19:52 PST |
Dale & other ENTS,
FYI- The hemlock Jess listed (and the grove surrounding it) is
on the
hemlock woolly adelgid treatment schedule according to Tom
Remaley of the
NPS-GRSM. In general, the NPS is relying heavily on the input of
ENTS
(Blozan, Riddle, Davie) for their old-growth backcountry
treatment
priorities.
Will
|
Re:
Porters Creek |
Neil |
Feb
28, 2006 05:53 PST |
Dear Jess,
Is this the same Porter's Creek in which Dave Stahle and Matt
Therrel
cored tulip-poplar? Most of the trees in their somewhat-smallish
sample
are 120-150 years old, but there are a few over 220 yrs,
including one
at 300 years.
Neil
|
Re:
Porters Creek |
Jess
Riddle |
Feb
28, 2006 18:01 PST |
Neil,
I'm not familiar with that work by Stahle and Therrel, but if
they
were working in the Smokies, it is the same Porters Creek. The
stream
has extensive old-growth forests and an unusual amount of
tuliptree,
so the creek would be a logical study area for tuliptree. At two
spots along the creek, each a few acres in extent, tuliptrees
under
100 years old form nearly pure canopies. Those sites show no
signs of
human disturbance and are adjacent to large tuliptrees that show
signs
of advanced age, including a 20'10" cbh individual.
Jess
|
RE:
Porters Creek |
Will
Blozan |
Mar
02, 2006 06:30 PST |
Neil,
I helped core trees for Stahle on Porters Creek in 1997.
Will
|
|