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Dwarf forest

Dwarf forest, elfin forest, or pygmy forest is an uncommon ecosystem featuring miniature trees, inhabited by small species of fauna such as rodents and lizards. They are usually located at high elevations, under conditions of sufficient air humidity but poor soil. There are two main dwarf forest ecosystem types, involving different species and environmental characteristics: coastal temperate and montane tropical regions. Temperate coastal dwarf forest is common for parts of Southern California. Montane tropical forests are found across tropical highlands of Central America, northern South America and Southeast Asia. There are also other isolated examples of dwarf forests scattered across the world, while the largest dwarf forest is found in the Philippines.

An elfin forest in Sumatra's Gunung Leuser National Park

High-elevation tropical dwarf forest

 
Elfin forest on Mt. Kemiri, Sumatra, at an elevation of about 3000 m

High-elevation tropical locations in cloud forests contain mossy wet elfin forests due to high-elevation precipitation. These regions are characterized by low rainfall, with most of the water in the form of mist and fog. The water supplied is primarily available during the night, when clouds move from the ocean over the mountains, and are intercepted by the vegetation. During the day, water demands are increased as clouds rise over the mountain peaks without dissipating into available forms of precipitation.[1][2]

The forests are characterized by small trees (5-8m), with shallow root systems, and abundant epiphytes.[2] The epiphytes make up a large portion of the canopy, with greater abundances in high-elevation tropical elfin forests than what is found in other, non-elfin, tropical forests.[3]

Dwarf forests should be more commonly found on isolated mountains due to the massenerhebung effect. The massenerhebung effect is a phenomenon where treelines are typically higher among mountains in close proximity to other mountains. The mountains in close proximity affect the rate of wind and heat retention, decreasing the negative effects of climate. When the treeline is lower on isolated mountains, the climatic effects are more severe.[4]

Flora

Within montane dwarf forests, there are relatively few species, with a small number of dominant species that make up a large portion of the population. Low, horizontally-branching, shrub-like plants, and dense populations of moss, lichen, and liverworts are found due to high wind speeds, low temperatures and light reduction from persistent clouds and fog, which limit the growth of tall plants.[5] The high wind speeds act as the determining factor of the stature in dwarf forest flora, especially on ridges and slopes. A low stature increases the structural stability of the plants.[3] Wind-exposed trees invest more of their resources to increasing strength than to growth, compared to non-wind-exposed trees. The increased focus on strengthening leads to thicker trunks and twigs, which increases the ability of the trees to withstand greater wind stresses near the ridge-crest, where the majority of wind-exposed trees are found.[6] A large percentage of energy is also allocated to growing and maintaining heavy and extensive root structures, further strengthening the tree and increasing its resistance to high winds.[1]

Plants here have leaves with moisture-tolerant characteristics, such as drip tips and waxy cuticles.[5] They also have a slow rate of transpiration and metabolism due to low temperatures and low radiation penetration.[3] A large percentage of plants possess alkaloids and other natural products, likely to combat a high amount of herbivory from insects. This may also account for the low leaf surface area and low transpiration rates of the plants. One study showed that leaves of ten plant species had approximately 70-98% of all leaves damaged by insects.[5]

Fauna

Elfin forests occur at high elevations, which are generally associated with low vertebrate biodiversity. Hummingbirds and bats make up a large proportion of the vertebrates in some areas, usually as altitudinal migrants during seasonal shifts, such as for reproduction, or in response to food abundance.[7] Other vertebrate species mostly include small rodents.

Seasonal variations

Rainfall tends to be highly seasonal, sparse, and far between, therefore fog interception is a significant water source during dry seasons.[8] Throughout the year, wind speed, temperature and humidity are fairly consistent, with humidity usually greater than 90%.[1] At one study site in the Guajira Peninsula, dry season precipitation ranged from 1–4 days per month, while in the wet season, although increased, it was still a relatively low 4 to 12 days per month,[1] supporting the idea that the majority of the water in this region is held in low cloud cover and fog interception.[8] Sunshine duration is distributed bimodally and correlates with evaporation rates.[3]

Examples

 
Mount Hamiguitan pygmy forest in the Philippines

Coastal temperate elfin forest

 
Pygmy forest at Salt Point State Park in northern California

Elfin forests of California are the primary example of coastal temperate dwarf forests. They are expansive, and cover most of the mountains in the southern half of California, extending into Mexico, Nevada, and Arizona.[18] Other expanses of elfin forest are found throughout the state, in the northern and central regions.

In northern California, Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park is home to an elfin forest with Mendocino cypress (Cupressus pigmaea), and Sargent's cypress (C. sargentii), which is partially within a section of the Zayante Sandhill Area. On the Central Coast of California, on the southeastern shore of Morro Bay, Los Osos contains the El Moro Elfin Forest Natural Area. The area is approximately 90 acres. It derives the “elfin forest” title from the short California live oaks, which range in height from 4 – 20 feet, compared to the typical 30–80 feet. This region also contains the federally endangered Morro shoulderband snail (Helminthoglypta walkeriana). At a higher elevation, on Cuesta Ridge, the Land Conservancy of San Luis Obispo County manages the San Luis Obispo Elfin Forest of dwarf cypresses.

Factors such as soil moisture, solar radiation, and rockiness of soil influence species composition along an elevation gradient, resulting in certain shrub species, such as Adenostoma fasciculatum and Arctostaphylos glauca, being present in elfin forest habitats.[19]

Fire occurs at low-moderate frequency with high severity. Many plants have adapted to this by having serotinous seeds that open to germinate only under high heat.[19] Because of this, they are often the first to colonize a new area.

 
Pygmy coast live oaks in elfin forest, California

Flora

Chaparral areas can be waterlogged in the winter, and arid and desert-like in the summer, native plants in these dry elfin forests are generally much shorter, smaller, and compact than related plants elsewhere.[18]

Some of the plants commonly found in Californian elfin forests, including many introduced species, are: diminutive plants such as Mount Hood pussypaws (Cistanthe umbellata), alkali heath (Frankenia salina), and species of bird's-foot trefoil (Lotus); and trees and shrubs such as chamise (Adenostoma fasciculatum), manzanita (Arctostaphylos), Ceanothus, sumac (Rhus), sage (Salvia) and scrub-oak (Quercus berberidifolia) which naturally grow less than 20 ft (7m) tall.[citation needed]

Fauna

Californian elfin forest fauna includes many species of deer mice (Peromyscus spp.), harvest mice (Reithrodontomys spp.), California vole (Microtus californicus), California pocket mouse (Chaetodipus californicus), kangaroo rat (Dipodomys spp.) and several species of spiny lizards (Sceloporus spp.), along with other small vertebrates.[20][21] Invertebrates include burrowing scorpions (Opistophthalmus spp.), and various species of scorpions, spiders and ticks.

Seasonal variations

The Californian climate usually exhibits wet winters and dry summers. Plants found in elfin forests grow during winter months, and become dormant during the summer due to drought stress. Plant communities also rely on taking in moisture from the air by intercepting fog to supplement the low, seasonal rainfall.[22]

Formation

 
Trail signs at Salt Point alert hikers they are entering a pygmy forested region

Formation of coastal elfin forests in northern California and Oregon, began with a series of marine terraces. A combination of uplift and changes in ocean level formed a system of terraces, resulting in an “ecological staircase”, with each terrace approximately 100,000 years older than the one below it and supporting a distinct association of soils, microbes, plants, and animals. A dune being pushed farther away from the coast by fluctuating sea levels slides over the one before it and solidifies, raising the terraces. Pioneer plant communities colonize the young terrace. The succession of plant communities that repeats on each terrace eventually forms a very specific podzol known as the Blacklock series,[23] which offers an inhospitable environment for species and greatly stunts further growth on the terrace. Part of this soil profile includes an underlying clay or iron hardpan. Each terrace is relatively level and many are footed by paleo-dunes. Drainage is poor at best on these stairs and plants sit in a bath of their own tannins and acids for much of the wet season. Due to limited root mobility and acidic soil, plant communities on these terraces grow into stunted forms. Remnants of ecological staircases doubtless exist, however most have been destroyed for development or logging.

Analyses of pygmy forest soils show low levels of macro- and micronutrients, and high levels of exchangeable aluminium, which limits the ability of plants to grow. Low pH conditions support formation of an iron hardpan, preventing the trees from setting deep roots and preventing internal drainage of soil water.

As a result, the pine trees in the area are rarely more than three or four feet high, in a sort of natural bonsai effect. Many of the tree trunks, though only an inch thick, contain 80 or more growth rings. Only yards away, but with younger soils, the same species of tree grows many dozens of feet high.

Examples

Examples of high-terrace podzol pygmy forests include:

 
Pygmy forest on northwest slope of Hood Mountain

Other examples of California pygmy forests include:

Other types

 
Dartmoor Forest in Wistman's Wood, southwest England

Dwarf forests may occur over various world locations, with different origins.

On the British west coast, notable occurrences include Wistman's Wood in Devon and isolated patches in the Ross of Mull on the Isle of Mull in Scotland.[33]

Stunted tree growth can also occur in some cases of highly alkaline soils such as the Stora Alvaret (Great Alvar) formation on the island of Öland in Sweden. In that area there are certain extents of pygmy tree growth and also areas devoid of trees entirely with many associations of rare species, due to the unique soil chemistry.[34]

In New Jersey, the 3,830-acre (15 km2) West Pine Plains Natural Area within the Bass River State Forest preserves a pygmy forest, consisting of pitch pine and blackjack oak trees that reach a height of as little as four feet at maturity. The ground cover includes bearberry and teaberry sub-shrubs, lichens and mosses. While the same species are present in the vast surrounding region of the Pine Barrens, dwarf plant size is attributed to drier, nutrient-poor soil, exposure to winds, and frequent wildfires in the area.[35][36]

Conservation

In the high-elevation Antilles elfin forests reduced solar radiation and low evapotranspiration rates means these mountain regions retain moisture. Environmental degradation may affect this.[4]

Elfin forests in California serve important roles in regulating stream flow, preventing soil erosion, and preventing evaporation by shading the ground. Clear cutting for agricultural and economic development, amongst other things, may disrupt this.[22]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Cavelier, Jaime; Mejia, Carlos A. (November 1990). "Climatic factors and tree stature in the elfin cloud forest of Serrania de Macuira, Colombia". Agricultural and Forest Meteorology. 53 (1–2): 105–123. Bibcode:1990AgFM...53..105C. doi:10.1016/0168-1923(90)90127-R.
  2. ^ a b Cavelier, Jaime; Tanner, Edmund; Santamaría, Johanna (January 2000). "Effect of water, temperature and fertilizers on soil nitrogen net transformations and tree growth in an elfin cloud forest of Colombia". Journal of Tropical Ecology. 16 (1): 83–99. doi:10.1017/s0266467400001280. ISSN 0266-4674. S2CID 85622844.
  3. ^ a b c d Nadkarni, Nalini M. (December 1984). "Epiphyte Biomass and Nutrient Capital of a Neotropical Elfin Forest". Biotropica. 16 (4): 249–256. doi:10.2307/2387932. JSTOR 2387932.
  4. ^ a b Grubb, P.J. (1 January 1971). "Interpretation of the 'Massenerhebung' Effect on Tropical Mountains". Nature. 229 (5279): 44–45. Bibcode:1971Natur.229...44G. doi:10.1038/229044a0. PMID 16059069. S2CID 4245810.
  5. ^ a b c Howard, Richard A. (1970). "The 'alpine' plants of the Antilles". Biotropica. 2 (1): 24–28. doi:10.2307/2989784. JSTOR 2989784.
  6. ^ Lawton, Robert O. (September 1982). "Wind Stress and Elfin Stature in a Montane Rain Forest Tree: An Adaptive Explanation". American Journal of Botany. 69 (8): 1224–1230. doi:10.2307/2442746. JSTOR 2442746.
  7. ^ Bruijnzeel, L. A.; Veneklaas, E. J. (1998). "Climatic Conditions and Tropical Montane Forest Productivity: The Fog Has Not Lifted Yet". Ecology. 79 (1): 3–9. doi:10.2307/176859. JSTOR 176859. Retrieved December 2, 2014.
  8. ^ a b Cavelier, Jaime; Goldstein, Guillermo (August 1989). "Mist and fog interception in elfin cloud forests in Colombia and Venezuela". Journal of Tropical Ecology. 5 (3): 309–322. doi:10.1017/S0266467400003709. S2CID 85796076.
  9. ^ a b "Mount Hamiguitan Range Wildlife Sanctuary". Unesco World Heritage List. Retrieved December 28, 2015.
  10. ^ Ranada, Pia (24 June 2014). "Davao's Mt Hamiguitan named UNESCO World Heritage site". Rappler. Retrieved 19 October 2019.
  11. ^ Mount Hamiguitan Range Wildlife Sanctuary (PDF). Municipality of San Isidro, Province of Davao Oriental, Republic of the Philippines.
  12. ^ Maentz, Jacob (2017-01-16). "Mount Hamiguitan: A World Heritage Sanctuary". Jacobimages.com. Retrieved 19 October 2019.
  13. ^ a b Amoroso, Victor B.; Aspiras, Reyno A. (January 2011). "Hamiguitan Range: A sanctuary for native flora". Saudi Journal of Biological Sciences. 18 (1): 7–15. doi:10.1016/j.sjbs.2010.07.003. PMC 3730927. PMID 23961098.
  14. ^ "Mount Hamiguitan: Hiking to the World's Largest Pygmy Forest". eazytravel. Retrieved 20 October 2019.
  15. ^ "Endangered, Endemic, and Economically Important Plants in Hamiguitan Range Wildlife Sanctuary". Environment Information Network. Philippine Council for Agriculture, Aquatic and Natural Resources Research and Development (PCCARD), Department of Science and Technology (DOST), Republic of the Philippines. Retrieved 19 October 2019.
  16. ^ Weaver, Peter L. (2008). "Dwarf Forest Recovery after Disturbances in the Luquillo Mountains of Puerto Rico" (PDF). Caribbean Journal of Science. 44 (2): 150–163. doi:10.18475/cjos.v44i2.a4. S2CID 130838921.
  17. ^ Miranda Castro, Leopoldo; Puente Rolón, Alberto R.; Vega Castillo, Sondra (May 2000). "First List of the Vertebrates of Los Tres Picachos State Forest, Puerto Rico, with Data on Relative Abundance and Altitudinal Distribution". Caribbean Journal of Science. 36 (1): 117–126. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
  18. ^ a b Fultz, Francis M. (1923). The Elfin Forest of California (Second ed.). Times-mirror Press.
  19. ^ a b Keeley, Jon E.; Fotheringham, C. J. (October 1998). "Smoke-Induced Seed Germination in California Chaparral". Ecology. 79 (7): 2320–2336. doi:10.1890/0012-9658(1998)079[2320:sisgic]2.0.co;2.
  20. ^ Lillywhite, H.B.; Friedman, G.; Ford, N. (16 March 1977). "Color matching and perch selection by lizards in recently burned chaparral". Copeia. 1977 (1): 115–121. doi:10.2307/1443512. JSTOR 1443512.
  21. ^ Heske, Edward J.; Rosenblatt, Daniel L.; Sugg, Derrick (March 1997). "Population Dynamics of Small Mammals in an Oak Woodland". The Southwestern Naturalist. 42 (1): 1–12.
  22. ^ a b Bowman, Isaiah (1913). "The Dwarf Forests of Southern California". Bulletin of the American Geographical Society. 45 (1): 13–16. doi:10.2307/200360. JSTOR 200360.
  23. ^ "Official Series Description - BLACKLOCK Series".
  24. ^ "National Natural Landmarks - National Natural Landmarks (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nps.gov. Retrieved 2019-04-14. Year designated: 1969
  25. ^ . Natural Reserve System, University of California. Archived from the original on 2015-12-23. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  26. ^ "Charlotte M. Hoak Memorial Pygmy Forest". pygmy-forest.com. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
  27. ^ "Van Damme State Park". California Department of Parks and Recreation. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  28. ^ "Welcome to the Los Osos Elfin Forest". El Moro Elfin Forest Natural Area. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  29. ^ "Cuesta Ridge Botanical Special Interest Area". USDA Forest service. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  30. ^ "Los Padres National Forest" (PDF). Santa Lucia Ranger District. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  31. ^ . Archived from the original on September 3, 2011. Retrieved 2012-01-06.
  32. ^ "Mount Tamalpais". Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  33. ^ Hogan, C. Michael (2011). "Sea of the Hebrides". In P. Saundry; C. J. Cleveland (eds.). Encyclopedia of Earth. Washington DC: National Council for Science and the Environment.
  34. ^ . Ölands Tourist Office. 23 December 2015. Archived from the original on 23 December 2015.
  35. ^ "Bass River State Forest". Department of Environmental Protection of State of New Jersey.
  36. ^ "Pygmy Pine Plains". New Jersey: Pinelands Preservation Alliance.

dwarf, forest, elfin, forest, redirects, here, places, named, elfin, forest, elfin, forest, disambiguation, elfin, forest, pygmy, forest, uncommon, ecosystem, featuring, miniature, trees, inhabited, small, species, fauna, such, rodents, lizards, they, usually,. Elfin forest redirects here For places named Elfin Forest see Elfin Forest disambiguation Dwarf forest elfin forest or pygmy forest is an uncommon ecosystem featuring miniature trees inhabited by small species of fauna such as rodents and lizards They are usually located at high elevations under conditions of sufficient air humidity but poor soil There are two main dwarf forest ecosystem types involving different species and environmental characteristics coastal temperate and montane tropical regions Temperate coastal dwarf forest is common for parts of Southern California Montane tropical forests are found across tropical highlands of Central America northern South America and Southeast Asia There are also other isolated examples of dwarf forests scattered across the world while the largest dwarf forest is found in the Philippines A natural bonsai in the Mount Hamiguitan National Park in the Philippines a UNESCO World Heritage Site An elfin forest in Sumatra s Gunung Leuser National Park Contents 1 High elevation tropical dwarf forest 1 1 Flora 1 2 Fauna 1 3 Seasonal variations 1 4 Examples 2 Coastal temperate elfin forest 2 1 Flora 2 2 Fauna 2 3 Seasonal variations 2 4 Formation 2 5 Examples 3 Other types 4 Conservation 5 See also 6 ReferencesHigh elevation tropical dwarf forest Edit Elfin forest on Mt Kemiri Sumatra at an elevation of about 3000 m High elevation tropical locations in cloud forests contain mossy wet elfin forests due to high elevation precipitation These regions are characterized by low rainfall with most of the water in the form of mist and fog The water supplied is primarily available during the night when clouds move from the ocean over the mountains and are intercepted by the vegetation During the day water demands are increased as clouds rise over the mountain peaks without dissipating into available forms of precipitation 1 2 The forests are characterized by small trees 5 8m with shallow root systems and abundant epiphytes 2 The epiphytes make up a large portion of the canopy with greater abundances in high elevation tropical elfin forests than what is found in other non elfin tropical forests 3 Dwarf forests should be more commonly found on isolated mountains due to the massenerhebung effect The massenerhebung effect is a phenomenon where treelines are typically higher among mountains in close proximity to other mountains The mountains in close proximity affect the rate of wind and heat retention decreasing the negative effects of climate When the treeline is lower on isolated mountains the climatic effects are more severe 4 Flora Edit See also Elevational diversity gradient Within montane dwarf forests there are relatively few species with a small number of dominant species that make up a large portion of the population Low horizontally branching shrub like plants and dense populations of moss lichen and liverworts are found due to high wind speeds low temperatures and light reduction from persistent clouds and fog which limit the growth of tall plants 5 The high wind speeds act as the determining factor of the stature in dwarf forest flora especially on ridges and slopes A low stature increases the structural stability of the plants 3 Wind exposed trees invest more of their resources to increasing strength than to growth compared to non wind exposed trees The increased focus on strengthening leads to thicker trunks and twigs which increases the ability of the trees to withstand greater wind stresses near the ridge crest where the majority of wind exposed trees are found 6 A large percentage of energy is also allocated to growing and maintaining heavy and extensive root structures further strengthening the tree and increasing its resistance to high winds 1 Plants here have leaves with moisture tolerant characteristics such as drip tips and waxy cuticles 5 They also have a slow rate of transpiration and metabolism due to low temperatures and low radiation penetration 3 A large percentage of plants possess alkaloids and other natural products likely to combat a high amount of herbivory from insects This may also account for the low leaf surface area and low transpiration rates of the plants One study showed that leaves of ten plant species had approximately 70 98 of all leaves damaged by insects 5 Fauna Edit Elfin forests occur at high elevations which are generally associated with low vertebrate biodiversity Hummingbirds and bats make up a large proportion of the vertebrates in some areas usually as altitudinal migrants during seasonal shifts such as for reproduction or in response to food abundance 7 Other vertebrate species mostly include small rodents Seasonal variations Edit Rainfall tends to be highly seasonal sparse and far between therefore fog interception is a significant water source during dry seasons 8 Throughout the year wind speed temperature and humidity are fairly consistent with humidity usually greater than 90 1 At one study site in the Guajira Peninsula dry season precipitation ranged from 1 4 days per month while in the wet season although increased it was still a relatively low 4 to 12 days per month 1 supporting the idea that the majority of the water in this region is held in low cloud cover and fog interception 8 Sunshine duration is distributed bimodally and correlates with evaporation rates 3 Examples Edit Mount Hamiguitan pygmy forest in the Philippines Pygmy forest of Mount Hamiguitan on Mindanao Philippines at the elevation of 1160 1200 m a s l 9 It is a national park and a protected area since 2004 and was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2014 It is estimated to have around 1 380 different species with 341 endemic to the Philippines including the Philippine eagle the Philippine cockatoo and the Philippine tarsier Several species are endemic to Mount Hamiguitan itself like the Mount Hamiguitan pitcher plant Nepenthes hamiguitanensis the Mount Hamiguitan fern Lindsaea hamiguitanensis and the butterfly Delias magsadana 9 10 11 12 At 6 834 hectares 16 890 acres the extensive pygmy forest of Mount Hamiguitan is the largest known dwarf forest in the Philippines and possibly the world 13 14 It merges with mossy forests dipterocarp forests and montane forests at lower elevations 13 15 El Yunque National Forest of Puerto Rico features dwarf forest areas at elevations above 900 m 16 as does Los Tres Picachos State Forest 17 Coastal temperate elfin forest Edit Pygmy forest at Salt Point State Park in northern California See also California chaparral and woodlands Elfin forests of California are the primary example of coastal temperate dwarf forests They are expansive and cover most of the mountains in the southern half of California extending into Mexico Nevada and Arizona 18 Other expanses of elfin forest are found throughout the state in the northern and central regions In northern California Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park is home to an elfin forest with Mendocino cypress Cupressus pigmaea and Sargent s cypress C sargentii which is partially within a section of the Zayante Sandhill Area On the Central Coast of California on the southeastern shore of Morro Bay Los Osos contains the El Moro Elfin Forest Natural Area The area is approximately 90 acres It derives the elfin forest title from the short California live oaks which range in height from 4 20 feet compared to the typical 30 80 feet This region also contains the federally endangered Morro shoulderband snail Helminthoglypta walkeriana At a higher elevation on Cuesta Ridge the Land Conservancy of San Luis Obispo County manages the San Luis Obispo Elfin Forest of dwarf cypresses Factors such as soil moisture solar radiation and rockiness of soil influence species composition along an elevation gradient resulting in certain shrub species such as Adenostoma fasciculatum and Arctostaphylos glauca being present in elfin forest habitats 19 Fire occurs at low moderate frequency with high severity Many plants have adapted to this by having serotinous seeds that open to germinate only under high heat 19 Because of this they are often the first to colonize a new area Pygmy coast live oaks in elfin forest California Flora Edit Chaparral areas can be waterlogged in the winter and arid and desert like in the summer native plants in these dry elfin forests are generally much shorter smaller and compact than related plants elsewhere 18 Some of the plants commonly found in Californian elfin forests including many introduced species are diminutive plants such as Mount Hood pussypaws Cistanthe umbellata alkali heath Frankenia salina and species of bird s foot trefoil Lotus and trees and shrubs such as chamise Adenostoma fasciculatum manzanita Arctostaphylos Ceanothus sumac Rhus sage Salvia and scrub oak Quercus berberidifolia which naturally grow less than 20 ft 7m tall citation needed Fauna Edit Californian elfin forest fauna includes many species of deer mice Peromyscus spp harvest mice Reithrodontomys spp California vole Microtus californicus California pocket mouse Chaetodipus californicus kangaroo rat Dipodomys spp and several species of spiny lizards Sceloporus spp along with other small vertebrates 20 21 Invertebrates include burrowing scorpions Opistophthalmus spp and various species of scorpions spiders and ticks Seasonal variations Edit The Californian climate usually exhibits wet winters and dry summers Plants found in elfin forests grow during winter months and become dormant during the summer due to drought stress Plant communities also rely on taking in moisture from the air by intercepting fog to supplement the low seasonal rainfall 22 Formation Edit Trail signs at Salt Point alert hikers they are entering a pygmy forested region Formation of coastal elfin forests in northern California and Oregon began with a series of marine terraces A combination of uplift and changes in ocean level formed a system of terraces resulting in an ecological staircase with each terrace approximately 100 000 years older than the one below it and supporting a distinct association of soils microbes plants and animals A dune being pushed farther away from the coast by fluctuating sea levels slides over the one before it and solidifies raising the terraces Pioneer plant communities colonize the young terrace The succession of plant communities that repeats on each terrace eventually forms a very specific podzol known as the Blacklock series 23 which offers an inhospitable environment for species and greatly stunts further growth on the terrace Part of this soil profile includes an underlying clay or iron hardpan Each terrace is relatively level and many are footed by paleo dunes Drainage is poor at best on these stairs and plants sit in a bath of their own tannins and acids for much of the wet season Due to limited root mobility and acidic soil plant communities on these terraces grow into stunted forms Remnants of ecological staircases doubtless exist however most have been destroyed for development or logging Analyses of pygmy forest soils show low levels of macro and micronutrients and high levels of exchangeable aluminium which limits the ability of plants to grow Low pH conditions support formation of an iron hardpan preventing the trees from setting deep roots and preventing internal drainage of soil water As a result the pine trees in the area are rarely more than three or four feet high in a sort of natural bonsai effect Many of the tree trunks though only an inch thick contain 80 or more growth rings Only yards away but with younger soils the same species of tree grows many dozens of feet high Examples Edit Examples of high terrace podzol pygmy forests include Mendocino pygmy forest in Mendocino County California for example is an oligotrophic community caused by podzolized nutrient poor highly acidic soils The forest flora is dominated by dwarfed bishop pine bolander pine a variety of shore pine and Cupressus pigmaea Bishop pine occurs in both dwarfed and full size form the latter being trees whose roots have broken through the hardpan layer into the more fertile soil beneath This forest is found in several discontinuous areas with significant portions on the following public lands Jug Handle State Natural Reserve where it is the feature of the highest portion of the Ecological Staircase Trail Adjacent to the east is the Pygmy Forest National Natural Landmark 24 within Jackson Demonstration State Forest Russian Gulch State Park Jackson Demonstration State Forest includes a large pygmy forest area east of the towns of Mendocino and Casper The Hans Jenny Pygmy Forest Reserve co managed by the University of California Natural Reserve System and The Nature Conservancy 25 Within the Van Damme State Park is the Charlotte M Hoak Pygmy Forest 26 located along the northern border of the park A second pygmy forest location on the southern border has a self guided nature trail built entirely on an elevated walkway forming a short loop through the site 27 Salt Point State Park in Sonoma County California has a much smaller pygmy forest and a fifth terrace prairie ranging from 900 to 1000 feet and formerly supporting elk populations Like the Mendocino forest the dominant trees are also bishop pine bolander pine and C pigmaea Most of Salt Point is on the northernmost portion of the Salinian Block and the terrace staircase drops suddenly into the gulch that lies over the San Andreas fault SFB Morse Botanical Reserve in the Del Monte Forest of the Monterey Peninsula is centered on the small Huckleberry Hill pygmy forest of bishop pine and C goveniana in the middle of a more extensive forest of Monterey pine Bishop pine which tolerates extreme podzol conditions better than Monterey pine is found in the most heavily podzolized areas with a zone of bishop pine Monterey pine hybrids dominating the less heavily podzolized area Pygmy forest on northwest slope of Hood Mountain Other examples of California pygmy forests include Elfin Forest Natural Area El Moro Elfin Forest 90 acre State Nature Reserve of pygmy oaks coast live oak Quercus agrifolia Located on the southeastern shore of Morro Bay in Los Osos of coastal San Luis Obispo County A raised wooden boardwalk loops through and around the forest with viewing platforms 28 Cuesta Ridge Elfin Forest in the Cuesta Ridge Botanical Special Interest Area on western Cuesta Ridge of the Santa Lucia Range in San Luis Obispo County A pygmy sargent cypress Cupressus sargentii forest where serpentine soil stunts growth Protected within the 1 334 acre Cuesta Ridge Botanical Special Interest Area in the Santa Lucia Ranger District of the Los Padres National Forest 29 30 Dwarf Cupressus Preserve a second West Cuesta Ridge grove of the pygmy cypress forest C sargentii managed by the Land Conservancy of San Luis Obispo County 31 Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park select pygmy forest locales in the Santa Cruz Mountains in Santa Cruz County Mount Tamalpais dwarf forest a forest of small C pigmaea trees The mountain s serpentine soil stunts the growth of these trees causing them to grow only a few feet tall On Old Stage Road 0 5 miles northeast of the Bootjack Picnic Area 32 San Geronimo Ridge just south of Whites Hill in Marin County Hood Mountain near Santa Rosa in Sonoma County A pygmy cypress forest dominated by C sargentii and Arctostaphylos species can be found on the northwest slopes Other types Edit Dartmoor Forest in Wistman s Wood southwest England Dwarf forests may occur over various world locations with different origins On the British west coast notable occurrences include Wistman s Wood in Devon and isolated patches in the Ross of Mull on the Isle of Mull in Scotland 33 Stunted tree growth can also occur in some cases of highly alkaline soils such as the Stora Alvaret Great Alvar formation on the island of Oland in Sweden In that area there are certain extents of pygmy tree growth and also areas devoid of trees entirely with many associations of rare species due to the unique soil chemistry 34 In New Jersey the 3 830 acre 15 km2 West Pine Plains Natural Area within the Bass River State Forest preserves a pygmy forest consisting of pitch pine and blackjack oak trees that reach a height of as little as four feet at maturity The ground cover includes bearberry and teaberry sub shrubs lichens and mosses While the same species are present in the vast surrounding region of the Pine Barrens dwarf plant size is attributed to drier nutrient poor soil exposure to winds and frequent wildfires in the area 35 36 Conservation EditIn the high elevation Antilles elfin forests reduced solar radiation and low evapotranspiration rates means these mountain regions retain moisture Environmental degradation may affect this 4 Elfin forests in California serve important roles in regulating stream flow preventing soil erosion and preventing evaporation by shading the ground Clear cutting for agricultural and economic development amongst other things may disrupt this 22 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Elfin forests Krummholz subarctic and alpine dwarf forest Pedology soil study References Edit a b c d Cavelier Jaime Mejia Carlos A November 1990 Climatic factors and tree stature in the elfin cloud forest of Serrania de Macuira Colombia Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 53 1 2 105 123 Bibcode 1990AgFM 53 105C doi 10 1016 0168 1923 90 90127 R a b Cavelier Jaime Tanner Edmund Santamaria Johanna January 2000 Effect of water temperature and fertilizers on soil nitrogen net transformations and tree growth in an elfin cloud forest of Colombia Journal of Tropical Ecology 16 1 83 99 doi 10 1017 s0266467400001280 ISSN 0266 4674 S2CID 85622844 a b c d Nadkarni Nalini M December 1984 Epiphyte Biomass and Nutrient Capital of a Neotropical Elfin Forest Biotropica 16 4 249 256 doi 10 2307 2387932 JSTOR 2387932 a b Grubb P J 1 January 1971 Interpretation of the Massenerhebung Effect on Tropical Mountains Nature 229 5279 44 45 Bibcode 1971Natur 229 44G doi 10 1038 229044a0 PMID 16059069 S2CID 4245810 a b c Howard Richard A 1970 The alpine plants of the Antilles Biotropica 2 1 24 28 doi 10 2307 2989784 JSTOR 2989784 Lawton Robert O September 1982 Wind Stress and Elfin Stature in a Montane Rain Forest Tree An Adaptive Explanation American Journal of Botany 69 8 1224 1230 doi 10 2307 2442746 JSTOR 2442746 Bruijnzeel L A Veneklaas E J 1998 Climatic Conditions and Tropical Montane Forest Productivity The Fog Has Not Lifted Yet Ecology 79 1 3 9 doi 10 2307 176859 JSTOR 176859 Retrieved December 2 2014 a b Cavelier Jaime Goldstein Guillermo August 1989 Mist and fog interception in elfin cloud forests in Colombia and Venezuela Journal of Tropical Ecology 5 3 309 322 doi 10 1017 S0266467400003709 S2CID 85796076 a b Mount Hamiguitan Range Wildlife Sanctuary Unesco World Heritage List Retrieved December 28 2015 Ranada Pia 24 June 2014 Davao s Mt Hamiguitan named UNESCO World Heritage site Rappler Retrieved 19 October 2019 Mount Hamiguitan Range Wildlife Sanctuary PDF Municipality of San Isidro Province of Davao Oriental Republic of the Philippines Maentz Jacob 2017 01 16 Mount Hamiguitan A World Heritage Sanctuary Jacobimages com Retrieved 19 October 2019 a b Amoroso Victor B Aspiras Reyno A January 2011 Hamiguitan Range A sanctuary for native flora Saudi Journal of Biological Sciences 18 1 7 15 doi 10 1016 j sjbs 2010 07 003 PMC 3730927 PMID 23961098 Mount Hamiguitan Hiking to the World s Largest Pygmy Forest eazytravel Retrieved 20 October 2019 Endangered Endemic and Economically Important Plants in Hamiguitan Range Wildlife Sanctuary Environment Information Network Philippine Council for Agriculture Aquatic and Natural Resources Research and Development PCCARD Department of Science and Technology DOST Republic of the Philippines Retrieved 19 October 2019 Weaver Peter L 2008 Dwarf Forest Recovery after Disturbances in the Luquillo Mountains of Puerto Rico PDF Caribbean Journal of Science 44 2 150 163 doi 10 18475 cjos v44i2 a4 S2CID 130838921 Miranda Castro Leopoldo Puente Rolon Alberto R Vega Castillo Sondra May 2000 First List of the Vertebrates of Los Tres Picachos State Forest Puerto Rico with Data on Relative Abundance and Altitudinal Distribution Caribbean Journal of Science 36 1 117 126 Retrieved 7 February 2020 a b Fultz Francis M 1923 The Elfin Forest of California Second ed Times mirror Press a b Keeley Jon E Fotheringham C J October 1998 Smoke Induced Seed Germination in California Chaparral Ecology 79 7 2320 2336 doi 10 1890 0012 9658 1998 079 2320 sisgic 2 0 co 2 Lillywhite H B Friedman G Ford N 16 March 1977 Color matching and perch selection by lizards in recently burned chaparral Copeia 1977 1 115 121 doi 10 2307 1443512 JSTOR 1443512 Heske Edward J Rosenblatt Daniel L Sugg Derrick March 1997 Population Dynamics of Small Mammals in an Oak Woodland The Southwestern Naturalist 42 1 1 12 a b Bowman Isaiah 1913 The Dwarf Forests of Southern California Bulletin of the American Geographical Society 45 1 13 16 doi 10 2307 200360 JSTOR 200360 Official Series Description BLACKLOCK Series National Natural Landmarks National Natural Landmarks U S National Park Service www nps gov Retrieved 2019 04 14 Year designated 1969 Hans Jenny Pygmy Forest Reserve Natural Reserve System University of California Archived from the original on 2015 12 23 Retrieved 2015 12 23 Charlotte M Hoak Memorial Pygmy Forest pygmy forest com Retrieved 7 January 2016 Van Damme State Park California Department of Parks and Recreation Retrieved 2015 12 23 Welcome to the Los Osos Elfin Forest El Moro Elfin Forest Natural Area Retrieved 2015 12 23 Cuesta Ridge Botanical Special Interest Area USDA Forest service Retrieved 2015 12 23 Los Padres National Forest PDF Santa Lucia Ranger District Retrieved 2015 12 23 LCSLO Land Conservancy of San Luis Obispo County Land Conservation Archived from the original on September 3 2011 Retrieved 2012 01 06 Mount Tamalpais Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy Retrieved 2015 12 23 Hogan C Michael 2011 Sea of the Hebrides In P Saundry C J Cleveland eds Encyclopedia of Earth Washington DC National Council for Science and the Environment The Great Alvar Olands Tourist Office 23 December 2015 Archived from the original on 23 December 2015 Bass River State Forest Department of Environmental Protection of State of New Jersey Pygmy Pine Plains New Jersey Pinelands Preservation Alliance Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dwarf forest amp oldid 1136634321, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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