Plant-and-Animal Communities (continued)
The Forest
On Gunsight Pass, the rain lancing down, I found a
sharpedged rock that split the continent in two. On both sides the rain
rivulets ran down, a fraction of an inch determining the stream's
destination: Pacific or Atlantic.
The Continental Divide is a mighty barrier, a line of
consequence that does more than determine watersheds. Its effect in
Glacier is dramatic, as a look at the forests will reveal.
Obstructing the eastward flow of the moisture-laden
Pacific winds, the Divide extracts a heavy annual tribute of
precipitation from the air mass, forcing it to rise up the mountain
chain, where it cools and condenses. Chief benefactors are the low
western valleys, which respond with a lush growth of Pacific
coastal-type forests.
The eastern valleys, however, deprived of abundant
annual moisture and exposed to the wind and temperature ravages of the
prairie's continental climate, support a dramatically different kind of
forest. Here Englemann spruce and subalpine fir are the climax trees,
contrasted with such trees as the western redcedar and western hemlock
of the mild and moist McDonald valley.
Elevation exerts an additional restriction on the
distribution of tree species. Since climatic conditions vary with change
in elevationlower temperatures resulting in shorter growing
seasons, and increased wind exposure resulting in greater loss of
moisture through evaporationwe would expect to find the forest
composition change as we ascend a mountain slope. In Glacier, eastern
valleys average 240 meters higher than western, and thus even if they
had more moisture they would not sustain the redcedars and hemlocks. All
plants have range limits, some narrow, some broad; and they excel where
their particular set of preferences as to moisture, soil, sunlight, and
wind exposure are best met. On sites that do not meet their optimum
requirements, they face being crowded out by species better adapted to
the prevailing conditions.
Physical features of the land determine vegetation
also. Certain trees prefer the moist areas along a streambedthe
great black cottonwoods, for example. And on steep hillsides, avalanches
prevent the growth of climax trees, permitting instead only shrubby,
pliant growthmountain-ash, mountain maple, alder, menziesia.
Forest communities are named for their dominant tree
species. Thus, an area in which Douglas-fir dominates is called a
"Douglas-fir forest." Glacier does have forests in which Douglas-fir is
the climax species; these are chiefly dry areas, below 1,800 meters,
with south and west exposures. But we usually associate the park with
its Englemann spruce-subalpine fir forests, found extensively between
1,200 and 2,100 meters, and with the western redcedar-western hemlock
forests in the McDonald valley.
Because forests mature slowly and change is usually
imperceptible, we are tempted to think of them as static and eternal.
But since a forest is a community of living things, it responds to
changes in the environment. Subtle physical or climatic changes, such as
a rising or falling water table or a slight increase or decrease in
annual precipitation, will favor some species of trees and hinder
others, eventually altering the composition of the forest.
Other changes are more dramatic. Most notable of
these is fire.
From Fire to Forest
Heat lightning, glimmering soundless behind the
western peaks. Then the first low rumble. At first the flashing had been
from cloud to cloud, but now, as the storm nears, the first
ground-spears appear, lighting up the night. Here is a big storm,
many-celled, engulfing more and more territory beneath its angry bulk.
Lightning dances into the dry August forest. In their towers the
lookouts stay awake.
Close strike and a flare-up! The ridge snag burns
like a Roman candle, sending bright embers down. Valley, ridge, and peak
blink on and off with blue light as the storm roars like night-firing
artillery.
Passing overhead, the low cloud belly brings a sudden
lash of rain. But it is not enough: tomorrow will mean long hours of
fire watch.
The next day dawns clear, a morning of heavy dew. The
ridge strikes did not ignite the forest. Inspecting the storm path,
aircraft and lookouts find no evidence of fire.
But two days later, in a morning of high wind, thin
smoke plumes rise upward. Smoldering in the thick duff of the forest
floor, a lingering hot spot explodes with the fanning wind. It quickly
spreads from a hectare to ten while the quadrants are called in and the
hot-shot crews dispatched; then to a hundred, bringing in the smoke
jumpers and mobilizing the vast fire-control network. A thousand
hectares, perhaps ten thousand might burn this week of big fires.
In the resulting skeleton forest, the scene of
devastation is almost overpowering: life seems forevermore excluded from
this blackened ruin. But fire is nothing new to forest communities. We
may think fire demonic because it takes from our life span this block of
mature forest, a sight we will never again see in this place. But nature
does not operate in terms of human time scales. This forest is simply
pushed back closer to its starting point, to begin again its long
progression toward a climax vegetation cover.
Forest Succession
Through a series of complex vegetation stages, each
characterized by different herbs, trees, and shrubs, the forest slowly
returns to the type of vegetation best suited to the physical and
climatic conditions of the site; this is called a climax community. The
fact that most of Glacier's forests are in some stage of recovery from
fire accounts in part for the mosaic of forest cover found here.
The forest of Huckleberry Mountain on the Camas Creek
road was consumed in the 1967 fire. By 1969, among the charred, lifeless
trunks of the former forest, lush grass and sunloving fireweed, thistle,
and paintbrush were growing. And by 1974 lodgepole pine seedlings along
the road were a meter or two high. Lodgepole is a fast-growing tree that
requires full sun to germinate. Forest fire is necessary for the
regeneration of these trees: the intense heat causes the tightly closed
cones to open, releasing the seeds that will establish the forest. So
young pines developed among fireweed, spiraea, willow, and mountain
maple shrubs.
The lodgepole forest near the western entrance to the
park has been developing since 1929, when fire destroyed the
redcedar-hemlock forest in the area between Apgar and West Glacier.
Beneath the scattered spires of old larch that survived the burn, the
lodgepoles have now grown up, forming a canopy that shades the forest
floor. Because lodgepole live only about 80 years and will not germinate
in shade, this forest will not exist long. Shade-tolerant Douglas-fir,
white pine, Engelmann spruce and western redcedar seedlings are now
taking hold. But the physical characteristics of this areathe
climate, terrain, and soilare ultimately most favorable for
western red cedar and hemlock; and unless other disruptions intervene,
this area will eventually again become a dense redcedar-hemlock
forest.
But this will not happen quickly. The soil after
hundreds of years of collecting debris will again become rich and moist.
Young hemlocks will germinate on and near decaying logs. When old
larches, firs, and pines fall, the slow-growing redcedars and hemlocks
will take their places in the canopy.
Forest succession is a more complicated story than
this; it is a fascinating study involving herbs, shrubs, small and large
trees, and animal populations. From location to location it will vary;
only in its broad outlines is it predictable. It is based on the
observation that, given time, a forestor any other plant
communitywill progress until it reaches climaxthat is, the
stage that will perpetuate itself.
How then are we to think about fire? Increasingly,
experts are concerned not so much with fire suppression as with fire
management. For suppression has at least three disadvantages: it allows
the accumulation of unburned fuels that can result in "fire storms" when
they are finally ignited; an undiversified climax forest is more
vulnerable to disease than is a mixed forest; and a dense forest canopy
discourages shrub growth, an important food source for deer, wapiti,
moose, and smaller animals.
As the well-being of the deer herd depends on the
predators that thin its numbers, so the long-term well-being of the
forest depends on fire to rejuvenate it periodically. We must realize
that wilderness is identified with fire, landslide, avalanche, windfall,
and flood. Nature not only has learned to cope with these agents of
changeshe depends upon them for maintaining the delicate balances
between landscape and life. There is in the business of nature, after
all, more than the pleasing of man's eye.
Spruce Morning
Of all times to get a rock in my boot! I had just
started out, the morning was still cool in this eastern valley, and the
heavy pack was not yet biting into my shoulders. Sitting down beside the
trail, I leaned the pack against the base of an old spruce and began
unlacing.
I could hear the scratching of the red squirrel
descending to investigate, but I didn't look up until it let go with
long indignant chatter at finding its territory invaded. I plunked out
the pebble and began relacing my boot. Cautiously the squirrel came
down, pausing frequently to scold, its lower jaw quivering with rage and
exposing yellow rodent teeth. Neighboring squirrels joined in and soon
the trees danced with flicking tails.
Down the squirrel came, almost to the ground, then
raced back up the tree, stopping at each lateral branch to deliver a
vocal broadside. Finding no danger to themselves, the other squirrels
soon quit the uproar and went about their morning business. I was
beginning to suspect that I was committing some graver offense than the
mere exercise of squatters' rightsperhaps I threatened its cache
of fir cones. Then into the corner of my vision shot another form,
streaking soundless as a shadow; the squirrel also saw itbut too
late. With a thin terrified squeak, the rodent started to go higher; but
the pine marten was above it. The squirrel quickly reversed itself,
sending bits of bark showering down.
As the squirrel leaped from the tree in desperation,
the marten overtook it in mid-air; they came down together. Clamping the
limp creature firmly in its jaws, the marten strode up the incline of a
fallen spruce. Before it hopped off onto a shelf of higher ground to
disappear, it looked briefly back at me. I fancied I could read, fixed
in its eyes, a certain recognition of my having distracted its prey.
A breeze made me shiver, snapping me back from that
swift vision of luxuriant fur, that blinding grace which flashed its
orange throat-patch through the trees, and I realized I was sweating.
For a moment I had been that squirrel, eyes wide with terror, seeing
fate bear down, and powerless before the natural order of things.
The incident got the other squirrels singing again;
but the confidence was gone, and soon it was quiet. What dreams do
squirrels dream, I wondered, looking around. I saw that place more
clearly then, having been caught between a marten and its prey. I saw
each spruce: its age, its condition, the onslaughts it had borne; the
beargrass coming up in an opening; and down the trail a meadow that was
yellow, white, and red with sulphur plant, mariposa, and Indian
paintbrush. Bees, flies, spiders, and butterflies worked that little
garden tucked among the crowding trees. Countless forms of life beneath
the soil and bark, in tunnel, crevice, hole, and pocket, working unseen
to sustain their lives, and somehow, when all were added up, maintaining
the forest as well.
A flicker called, its loud Klee-yer breaking
the forest hush. Birds, mammals, plants, insectsall hide together
here, their lives so skillfully embroidered that no loose thread exists
that my mind might grasp to unravel and understand the work.
The forest had once been a place that obstructed my
view, a great blank to stride through, a few hours of necessary blur
before the high lake or pass was reached. Now I was quite content to
remain awhile beneath these great-boled trees.
A forest, like the mountains themselves, supports
various levels of life. The floor and substratum are a great processing
plant where bacteria, fungi, and insects work, decomposing the plant and
animal litter, recycling dead and discarded tissue back to simpler
organic compounds, gases, and minerals, thereby providing sustenance for
growing plants. As spiders, shrews, wrens, and thrushes seem to know,
there is good hunting on the forest floor.
Just above the forest floor is the herb layer, a
seasonal layer of growth including flowers, mushrooms, grasses, and
other small plants.
Above that grows the shrub layer, then the understory
of young trees awaiting their chance to take a place in the forest's
canopy high above. From the swaying canopy, exposed to the full force of
sun and wind, to the dim, moist floor, the forest provides a wide range
of habitat.
Relatively few animals live in the treetops. The
almost incessant motion makes nesting too hazardous for birds. Red
squirrels venture up to cut cones in the canopy, but store their booty
and make their nests farther down.
In the mid-range between canopy and understory,
goshawks and Cooper's hawks nest. Woodpeckers, nuthatches, and
sap-suckers forage on the tree trunks and nest in cavities they excavate
or appropriate. Red squirrels and the nocturnal flying squirrels create
a major traffic here, along with the martens and owls that hunt
them.
The understory and shrub layers house the greatest
numbers of nesting birds. Here the effects of storm and rain are
minimized and protective cover is greatest. Vireos, thrushes, warblers,
hummingbirds, bluebirds, flycatchers, and others can be found among the
tangle of this sometimes impenetrable layer.
The most populated area, the forest floor, supports
an astonishing abundance of organisms. Below the busy traffic of mice,
shrews, and larger animals is a bewildering array of insects and other
invertebrates. The attrition rate in the litter of the forest
floora continual battleground difficult to comprehendis
enormous. The smaller the organism, the greater its numbers are likely
to be. This humus-rich, moist soil teems with bacteria, and a handful
will contain surprising numbers of small spiders, pseudo-scorpions and
almost microscopic mites.
Each year some two to three thousand kilograms, dry
weight, of falling material litter an average hectare of forest, All
this plant and animal wastetwigs, leaves, limbs, fallen trees,
feathers, hair, feces, and carcassesis processed by the armies of
decomposers that thrive on the forest floor. With the aid of larger
creatures that break up the plant and animal tissue, most microscopic
bacteria are able to decompose from a hundred to a thousand times their
own weight every day.
Few trees die of old age in the forest. The seedling
mortality rate is necessarily high, since far greater numbers of seeds
germinate each year than can reach maturity. Of those that do, many fall
victim to the ever-present dangers of disease, insect infestation,
windfall, stream erosion, and fire. Insects alone present a formidable
threat to trees, for they have evolved every means of
attackchewing and mining leaves, boring into twigs, eating cambium
and heartwood, sucking sap, triggering galls. If the insect world did
not police itself, aided by spiders, insectivorous birds and other
animals, forests and other plantlife would quickly fade before the
chewing, boring, sucking horde.
Through the trees the light on Citadel shows the
morning slipping by. As I start to get up I see a garter snake sliding
out into the dusty trail, seeking the sun-warmed earth. Moving slowly,
alert for danger, it probes the air frequently with its sensitive
tongue. But against the lightcolored duff its dark shape offers a fine
target, begging attack. A chipmunk, watching from a nearby lookout
stump, twitches its tail nervously over its back, curiousperhaps
suspicious at the sight of a snake. Very slightly the snake's head goes
up, its tongue flickering. For a few seconds reptile and rodent regard
each other. Then the chipmunk drops back soundlessly into its hollow
stump, and the snake lowers its head onto warm ground.
Some day soon, a sparrowhawk or weasel will interrupt
the snake's morning sunbath. The snake will fuel bird or mammal for a
time, as mice, fledgling birds, and insects now sustain the snake. The
chipmunk too, rummaging nearby, lives in shadows of talon and tooth.
Until that time of sharp encounter, each has its own
niche, a way of life, a shaft of sun, and food enough.
A Walk in the Redcedar Forest
Climax! The word takes on a true significance here,
among these broad-based trees. When you enter this forest the road noise
does not follow faras, when you walk into a cave and turn a
corner, sound and light are left behind. There is a surprising
spaciousness, a feeling of openness in a mature western redcedar forest.
With scant understory and the canopy so far above and everywhere
complete, it seems like some vast, high-ceilinged catacomb, pillared by
the huge, shaggy-barked cedars and the deeply scored trunks of the black
cottonwoods. The floor is strewn with fallen giants in magnificent
disarray, uplifted roots still grasping fractured rock.
A rainy day is a good time to walk a cedar trail,
when the dull light seems to shine from the wet moss, making the
under-leaves of devil's-club and Rocky Mountain maple glow. Wind and
rain, like light, penetrate with difficulty the latticework of this
canopy; thin lines of fog develop over the bogs. The air is fresh with
growing plants, snow-cold still when the first spring flowers
appear.
Fiddleheads of unfolding lady ferns line the trail in
May, pushing up from the hub of last year's leveled, lifeless fronds.
Beds of trillium shine their white, three-pointed flowers like
flashlights in the dark recesses. Unlike the small, hidden calypso
orchid, which bears its purple spikes and yellow throat low above the
moss, the trilliums make no secret of spring growth. They are bold,
handsome plants, broad-leaved and tall, with waxy white petals that
tinge to purple in their month-long bloom.
Moss covers everything. Boulders are green and
weightless-looking, resilient and topped with miniature forests of cedar
seedlings. Ancient fallen trees are disguised with blankets of moss,
sprouting hemlock here and there. The rich greens that characterize
Glacier's summers seem to begin here amid the moisture-glossed leaves of
twinflower, bunchberry and bead-lily.
Later, the spiders will spin thousands of kilometers
of gossamer filament among the trees. The orb-weavers will hang their
webs high and low, suspended in every opening. Walking through the
forest then, you will see shafts of sunlight whirling in the higher webs
until they seem like tops set spinning among the treetrunks.
Indianpipes, the "ghost flowers" that need no light
to grow, will break through the forest soil. Like mushrooms, with
fruiting bodies that are nourished by underground mycelia, these
saprophytes absorb their nutrients from a fungus that covers their
roots.
Receiving an average of about 18 centimeters more
annual precipitation than forests east of the Divide, Glacier's
redcedar-hemlock community hoards its moisture. Its dense growth and the
surrounding mountain walls inhibit the circulation of drying winds.
Mosses and ferns transpire their moisture, which you can feel; place
your hand close, and you will sense a coolness like the air exuding from
an ice cave. Draped from the tree limbs are long filaments of squawhair
and goatsbeard, black and grey lichen strands that flourish in the damp
air.
Except for the black bear, few large animals inhabit
the deep forest. Grizzlies find better forage in meadows or along the
forest edge. Since shade discourages shrubby undergrowth, deer and
wapiti will search elsewhere for browse. In summer, wapiti, grizzlies,
and mule deer bucks tend to wander up into high meadows.
Contrasted to the noisy, conspicuous birds of the
prairiemeadowlarks and bobolinksbirds of the forest seem
elusive and secretive. Although numerous, the varied thrushes,
Townsend's solitaires, and Swainson's thrushes are seldom seen; but when
approached, they fly silently off and are swallowed by the forest
shadow.
There seems to be serenity in a mature forest, as
though the struggle for life is somehow suspended, the needs of the
animals here less urgent, muffled. The towering redcedar forest seems to
be no battlefield at all, but rather a monument to what Earth can
do.
The Perpendicular Night
Behind Avalanche campground a trail leads back toward
Lake McDonald Lodge. I decided to follow it one June evening, to
experience the sensation of the deep forest changing into night. With
the nearby mountain wall intercepting the sun, dusk comes early to this
valley. On the prairie, night passes across the landscape in an even
line, forthright as a waxing tide; you can almost feel the globe in its
turning from the sun. There is reassurance in the night's coming, its
steady purple doming over the sky.
But here darkness seems to sprout from the earth. It
collects beneath the hemlock clumps, bridges the creekbottoms. It seems
to flit from place to place. You look about, uneasy, trying to catch it
here or there, but always miss its infiltrations. It captures the narrow
clearings when you look away; pockets of tree-darkness join together,
forcing the light upward until the tree-tops seem impossibly bright and
distant.
Through the trees I could see a dozen fires dance in
the growing shadow, wood-smoke and camp sounds filling the air. Turning
uptrail, I felt a reluctance to leave the presence of those firesa
senseless feeling, but strong. A growing forest-dread impelled me almost
physically backward to those circles of firelight. I felt the need to be
near a fire, to be reassured by heat and light. Fire was our greatest
friend, our greatest weapon. With it we beat the long ages of ice and
held the forest gloom away. There was no harm here, only silence; yet
the longer I walked, with beard-moss hanging down like daggers all
around, the more I craved the comradeship of fire.
Sudden hammering made me jump. Above the forest
darkness, a pileated woodpecker leaned out from a high larch snag,
braced against the trunk by its specialized, stiff tail feathers. This
was the first time I had seen this big white-and-black bird, the
"cock-of-the-woods." There was ample evidence of his work: the deep,
oblong excavations in the trunk and the pile of large wood chips at its
base, both characteristic of this species. Again he hammered, and I
could see the chips falling. After a little edge work around the hole,
he extracted a grub and flew off, yammering against the advancing
dark.
Near a stream I stopped to sit down, to listen to the
water and maybe catch sight of some small animal. Across the narrow
defile, from a slope dense with young hemlock, came the buzzing note of
a varied thrush. Several notes followed, all on a different pitch, all
drawn out, level and clear; the quality was pure but songless,
disjointed, deliberate, like someone testing the reed of a strange
woodwind. There seemed no gladness in the heart of this thrush. The song
was dark, haunting, lonely.
On the trail ahead I could make out a bird hopping
rapidly along. After passing the spot I could hear its song. There
couldn't be a hundred meters between us, yet it seemed to be coming from
a great distance. I listened for as long as it would sing. I tried to
hear it for what it was, a male Swainson's thrush proclaiming its
territory. But the ethereal, flute-like phrases seemed an evensong made
not for man's ears but only for the forest itself.
I hurried on after the bird had ceased. It was
getting dark beneath the trees, but I was beginning to be aware of
creatures underfoot, the mad dartings of shrew and vole, more imagined
than seen. When a deer mouse jumped away I got out my flashlight. Soon
the beam caught a woodrat sitting atop a fallen log. The light didn't
bother him in the least; as I approached, he picked up his bushy tail in
his forepaws. Whiskers twitching, he looked more caricature than real.
Then he bounded off the log with graceful, arching hops, and disappeared
into the night.
Against a patch of sky that appeared in a clearing, I
could make out bats, circling and dipping like swallows. Locating a
hovering moth, I kept the light beam on it until it vanished into a
furry streak of silence. It was time to head back.
By now it had become utterly dark within the trees, a
moonless, sightless, alien world, given over to the marble-black eyes of
the small night mammals and the creatures that hunt them. I thought of
the strange, unseen societies of the flying squirrels, the nocturnal
counterparts of red squirrels; of the great-horned owls, inspecting the
same ground the goshawks scanned during the day. Perhaps a foraging red
fox moved through the darkness nearby, or a coyote on night patrol.
The flashlight beam probed ahead along the trail. The
exposed roots were given unnatural shading and they seemed to thicken
and squirm as I approached. On either side the tree trunks appeared to
step backward from the dim glow of the light. I felt lost in this night,
thinking of the great darkness in all the timbered ridges that ran
westward from the Divide. In this vast cathedral of crowded tree and
peak, night was stood on end, the stars shrunken to a circle over head,
as if seen from the bottom of a well. Mouselike, shivering,
insignificant in this wilderness, I scurried back to find a fire and
fill my empty senses with its heat and snap and light, holding off the
fright of night and thinking of tomorrow's sun.
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