Long‐term dynamics of large wood in old‐growth and second‐growth stream reaches in the Cascade Range of Oregon

Author:

Gregory Stanley1ORCID,Ashkenas Linda1,Wildman Randall1,Lienkaemper George2,Arismendi Ivan1,Lamberti Gary A.3ORCID,Meleason Mark4,Penaluna Brooke E.5,Sobota Daniel6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Sciences Oregon State University Corvallis Oregon USA

2. Retired Redmond Oregon USA

3. Department of Biological Sciences University of Notre Dame Notre Dame Indiana USA

4. Meleason Environmental Consulting LLC Salem Oregon USA

5. Pacific Northwest Research Station, U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service Corvallis Oregon USA

6. Water Quality Division Oregon Department of Environmental Quality Portland Oregon USA

Abstract

AbstractWe quantified temporal dynamics of wood storage, input, and transport over a 24‐year period in adjacent old‐growth and second‐growth forested reaches in Mack Creek, a third‐order stream in the Cascade Range of Oregon. The standing stocks of large wood in the old‐growth reach exceeded those at the second‐growth reach by more than double the number of wood pieces and triple the wood volume. Annual inputs of large wood were highly variable. Wood numbers delivered into the old‐growth reach were 3× higher and wood volume 10× greater than in the second‐growth reach. The movement of number and volume of logs did not differ significantly between the two reaches over time. Less than 2% of the logs moved in most years, and the highest proportion moved in the year of the 1996 flood (9% in old growth and 22% in second growth). Most of the large wood aggregated as jams in both reaches. The second‐growth reach lacked major jams, but 29% of the logs in the old growth were in full‐channel spanning jams. Long‐term observations of annual storage, input, and movement reveal the temporal dynamics of wood rather than static representations of the characteristics of wood. Input events and transport of wood in Mack Creek were episodic and varied greatly over the 24‐year study, which illustrates one of the major challenges and opportunities for understanding the cumulative dynamics of wood in streams.

Funder

National Science Foundation of Sri Lanka

Publisher

Wiley

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