Roundtop
Mountain, SC |
Jess
Riddle |
May
09, 2006 17:39 PDT |
Ents,
Last week, Will Blozan, I, and three other Appalachian Arborist
employees traveled to Roundtop Mountain in South Carolina to
treat a
population of Carolina hemlock trees for hemlock woolly adelgid
on
behalf of SC Department of Natural Resources. The peak lies on
the
Blue Ridge Escarpment within the 32,000-acre Jocassee Tract and
approximately three miles south of the North Carolina state line
(L.
L. Gaddy A Naturalists Guide to the Southern Blue Ridge Front).
Actually neither round nor a mountain in structure, Roundtop
Mountain
occupies a narrow, east-west ridge of gneiss that juts out from
a
larger ridge system that contains two of South Carolina's best
known
peaks: Sassafras Mountain, the highest point in SC at 3560'; and
Table Rock featuring sheer cliffs over 900 feet high and another
excellent population of Carolina hemlock. Moderately steep,
unexceptional slopes occupy the ridge's south side, but numerous
rock
outcrops, small cliffs, and a few large rock faces and
boulderfields
cover the upper north slope.
The SC DNR singled out the Carolina hemlock population for
treatment
due to the groves' reputation as one of the finest in the state.
That
reputation comes from the extent of the stand, stretching for
over
half a mile along the ridge-crest, and the undisturbed nature of
the
area. However, even in this stand, Carolina hemlock constitutes
only
a small proportion of the canopy. Stunted old chestnut oaks form
the
vast majority of the canopy on the steep, thin soiled slopes,
and
shade dense thickets of dwarf rhododendron mixed with some
mountain
laurel. Only galax grows in the dim, dry, acidic environment
below
the heath shrub layer. Red maple, sourwood, pitch pine,
shortleaf
pine, downy serviceberry, and sweetleaf also occasionally occur
on the
upper north slopes. Curiously, table mountain pine, which grows
with
Carolina hemlock on Table Rock and in Jones Gap State Park, is
absent.
Heath shrubs also thrive along the ridge crest with rosebay
rhododendron, dwarf rhododendron, and huckleberry and blueberry
(V.
stamineum) occupying separate areas. With the advent of fire
suppression, Carolina hemlock has also invaded the midstory on
the
ridge crest and upper south facing slopes. Those slopes have a
higher
overstory of mixed second growth hardwoods including white oak,
chestnut oak, scarlet oak, silverbell, sourwood, pignut hickory,
and
mockernut hickory. A description of the forests in the
boulderfields
and below the cliffs appears in a Roundtop Mountain post from
May
2003.
At the site, the older Carolina hemlocks grow exclusively in
close
proximity to exposed rock, most often at the top of cliffs.
Those
sites offer the fire sensitive species a refuge from fire, and
the
harsh conditions mean few other species can survive to compete
with
young hemlocks. The trees begin with scant soil, but often grow
large
roots across the rock surfaces to reach adjacent forest soils;
however, many trees growing on narrow rock ledges are confined
to a
thin layer of soil composed primarily of organic material
derived from
fallen leaves and needles. Some trees avoid that situation by
root
grafting into other hemlocks to indirectly access forest soils.
In
just a few days, the thin organic soils on rocks may go from
saturated
to parched and cracked leaving the rockbound trees without
access to
water.
Despite that water stress, the trees apparently frequently
attain
radial growth rates of 1/8 inch or more. The great solar input
to the
trees may account for much of that relatively rapid growth. The
exposed conditions allow the trees to rapidly reach the canopy
and
maintain extremely full grows; many trees have branches only a
few
inches from the ground and live foliage below the level of their
bases. Their rocky perches also expose the hemlocks to storms.
Some
trees quickly develop flat-topped crowns and branches that
double-back
on themselves. More severe storms snap the tops in some hemlocks
leaving the large lower branches to regrow the crown into a claw
like
structure. A single lightning strike can also damage multiple
trees
simultaneously on the rocky terrain. However, most trees still
maintain full, spruce-like crowns. Trees rarely exceed five feet
cbh
(two are over seven feet); heights were not measured but likely
reach
only about 60'. That small size coupled with the observed high
growth
rates suggests most of the hemlocks at the site are not very
old, but
many chestnut oaks appear significantly older.
Unfortunately, hemlock woolly adelgid threatens to make the
hemlocks'
life spans much shorter. The plague reached the stand at least
two
years ago, and has caused major decline in the eastern hemlocks
in the
surrounding area. However, the adelgid has heavily infested only
a
minority of the Carolina hemlocks, and even those trees still
show
vigorous growth. Hence, the trees should respond well to
treatment
with a systemic insecticide, and the vast majority of the stand,
including trees requiring rappelling to access, have now been
treated.
Jess Riddle |
RE:
Roundtop Mountain, SC |
Will
Blozan |
May
11, 2006 18:10 PDT |
Scott,
Imidacloprid (soil) treatments are well known to last several
years, and the
amount needed to control HWA is very small, but slow to get in.
Old-growth
hemlocks sampled in the Smokies 30 months after one soil
treatment had no
less than 5X the required levels of imidacloprid to kill HWA.
Some trees had
several hundred time more than needed. I treated three
28-38" diameter tres
in 2002 for HWA and they have not needed a retreatment even
though trees
nearby have heavy HWA.
Hardwoods may be different, but I do not know.
Will
|
RE:
Roundtop Mountain, SC |
wad-@comcast.net |
May
11, 2006 19:45 PDT |
Will
It is my understanding that the chemical has the same action in
all plants. I would have to check the label, but I don't think
it harms any plants. Lack of moist ground slows uptake. It does
not kill mites, and in landscape situations, the mites can
explode in population causing more trouble for the hemlocks. Do
the Hemlocks down there have HWA, needle scale and mites all on
the same tree? That seems to be the norm up here. I kind of
understand Lee's input. Something natural has to be found to
control the HWA. Keep up the fight though until they find it!
Scott
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