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| Permission
to reprint this coyrighted article which appeared in the Winter 1978 edition
of Frontiers magazine was granted by the Academy of Natural Sciences of
Philadelphia.
VEGETATION OF THE PINE BARRENS by Jack McCormick
Water, fire, and man have shaped the modern vegetation
of the Pine Barrens. The effects of water are illustrated most dramatically
by the growing conditions it creates -- soils flooded or saturated for
days, weeks or months during the year. These conditions limit the kinds
of plants that can grow on these soils.
Frequent and severe fires and man's repeated cutting are also of outstanding
importance to the vegetation's composition and distribution. No large
area in the region has escaped burning and/or cutting within the past
century. At least until the early 1900's, most forests in the Pine Barrens
were clear-cut every 25 to 50 years for firewood, charcoal production,
poles and lumber. Most of the forests were burned repeatedly, at intervals
of 10 years or less to 30 years or more. These frequent fires apparently
screened out many plants which grow along the margins, being predominant
in surrounding regions. The absence of these potential competitors and/or
the stimulation afforded by the fires may have favored many existing
Pine
Barrens plants that are absent or rare elsewhere.
Pitch pine, blackjack oak, and southern whitecedar are most characteristic
of the twenty or more trees forming the forests. Pitch pine grows on
sites
ranging from the driest to the wettest. Most of the trees, shrubs, herbs,
mosses and lichens, however, occur either on relatively dry sites (the
uplands) or on sites with soils saturated part of the year (the wetlands).
The abundant moisture in the wetland sites supports dense vegetation.
The wetland plants' moist condition reduces their flammability -- fires
occur less frequently here than in nearby uplands.
Upland agriculture and urban uses occupy about 15 percent of the Pine
Barrens area. Wetland communities, on sites with high water tables (at
least seasonally) occupy, approximately 20 percent of the region and
upland
forests, on sites where the water table seldom is less than 2 to 3 feet
below tile surface, cover the remaining 65 percent.
In some parts of tile region, upland and wetland vegetation types are
connected by a transition area. In these transitional areas, plants of
the two complexes grow side by side. However, in most places, tile boundaries
between the two complexes are sharp. These abrupt changes occur where
stream channels are flanked by banks at least 2 to 3 feet high and where
fires have consumed peat and muck accumulations on which transition vegetation
formerly grew.
UPLAND VEGETATION
Except for areas where human activities have destroyed the cover, the
Pine Barrens uplands are continuously forested. Truck farms utilize several
thousand acres, particularly along the western boundary and near Hammonton
and Vineland. Fallow fields scattered through the region are revegetated
rapidly by pitch pine and, less commonly, shortleaf pine. Along the western
margin, Virginia pine and redcedar are important oldfield trees. Redcedar
also is abundant in oldfields near the coast. The common Pine Barrens
shrubs, especially lowbush blueberry and hog huckleberry, seem not to
reproduce from seeds on these disturbed sites and the ground beneath
the
pines is covered by firesedge or, less frequently, orange broomsedge,
switchgrass or other grasse
Shortleaf pine, black oak, white oak, chestnut oak, post oak and blackjack
oak are prominent in the canopies of the upland forests throughout the
region. Scarlet oak is common in the northeastern section, southern red
oak is common in the southern section of the Pine Barrens, and these
trees
also appear in lowland forests near the region's perimeter
Most oak trees in the modern forest originated as sprouts after fires
or cutting, and many have two or more trunks that developed from a single
stool. The trunks of these trees is very susceptible to heart rot. The
rot fungi, and the excavations of carpenter ants, mechanically weaken
the trunks. The uppermost sections of many large oaks' crowns have been
snapped off by strong winds and the lower branches developed a new peculiarly
foreshortened crown. These trees are said to be stageheaded
Two hearths, the hog huckleberry and the lowbush blueberry, from the
bulk of the uplands forests' shrub layer. These plants reach 1 to 2 feet
in
height and are a uniform cover over a thousand acres, regarding less
of the overshadowing tree canopy. In many places, scrub oak (a shrub
from
3 to 15 feet tall) stands above the hearths, but appears noy to significantly
effect the lower shrubs. Thus, two shrub communities can be recognized
in the upland forests: a heath type and a scrub oak type. In the scrub
oak type, scrub oak covers 20 percent or more of the ground. The lower
cover formed by huckleberry and blueberry, however, it is essentially
the same as in heath undergrowth type
Herbaceous plants are sparse in the upland forests. Bracken fern and
wintergreen are the most common herbs with cowwheat, goatsrue and several
other species
occurring here and there. The cover of mosses and lichens is related
closely, but inversely to the proportion of ground blanketed by litter.
The litter
usually is continuous cover; lichens and mosses grow only on exposed
spots of soil.
Both the heath type and the scrub oak type of shrub layer occur in association
with the two principal upland forest types: the pine-oak forest and the
oak-pine forest. (When botanists refer to vegetation on a particular
area,
they usually do not include the word "heath" in the name, but it it is
implied.) Thus, there are four principal types of upland forecast communities
in the Pine Barrens: tile pine-oak, the pine-oak-scrub oak, the oak-pine,
and the oak-pine-scrub oak. Because the heaths are included in the scrub
oak type of shrub layer, these combinations reflect the almost uniform
occurrence of heaths throughout the uplands. In contrast, scrub oak and
the other various species of trees are distributed more or less irregularly.
The Pine-Oak Forests
Pine forests give the Pine Barrens its typical aspect. In these forests,
pitch pine covers 30 percent or more of the ground and contributes 50
percent or more of the tree stems 1 inch or more in diameter. Large broadleaf
trees, including black oak, chestnut oak, scarlet oak, and white oak,
cover no more than 25 percent of the ground and contribute no more than
25 percent of the stems.
Pine-Blackjack Oak Forest
Much of the central Pine Barrens is covered by open forests of pitch
pines, averaging about 25 feet high, and blackjack oaks, most averaging
less
than 20 feet. These forests are almost pure pitch pine, the blackjack
oak representing a small percentage. Post oaks, also less than 20 feet
tall, may be widely scattered to relatively abundant in these stands.
Black oaks and scarlet oaks are scattered through the pine-blackjack
oak
forests, but seldom exceed five trees per acre.
The pine-blackjack oak type is a product of frequent, severe fires' selective
action. Shortleaf pines and most treeform oaks are rare or absent from
these forests--they probably were eliminated by fires hundreds, or even
thousands, of years ago. The pygmy forests of the East and West Plains
are the extreme expression of this type. They consist of dense stands
of 4 to 6 feet tall pitch pines, blackjack oaks and, in place scrub oaks.
There are about 3,000 to 6,500 individuals (clones) per acre in the West
Plains vegetation. Of these, from 20 to 70 percent are pitch pines and
virtually all others are blackjack oaks and, less commonly, scrub oaks.
In one study, some 34,000 stems were were found per acre in a stand burned
7 years previously. In another study, approximately 16,000 stems were
found per acre in a stand unburned for 27 years. This difference in densities
may reflect natural thinning during the fire- free period and the presence
of a substantially greater proportion of oaks in the second area. Pine
roots in the Plains forecasts were found to support about seven stems
each; there were only two stems from each oak root.
Both heart and scrub oak undergrowth types occur beneath the pine-blackjack
oak forest type. In the Plains and several nearby areas, mountain laurel,
sheep laurel, sweetfern, broom-crowberry and bearberry are abundant from
place to place in the shrub layer. Pyxiemoss and falselheather are abundant
Herbs throughout the pygmy forests.
Pine-Black Oak Forests
Pitch Pine is the principal tree in these forests, but 10 to 20 percent
of the trees ,are black oaks, scarlet oaks or southern red oaks. white
oak or chestnut oak occur in a few limited areas. The smaller blackjack
oak may be absent, infrequent, or nearly as abundant as in the pine-blackjack
oak forest type. The average height of these forests' canopy is 35 feet.
The Oak-Pine Forests
Black oak, chestnut oak, scarlet oak, and white oak cover 40 percent
or more of the ground and contribute 50 percent or more of the tree stems
in oakpine forests. Pitch pine grows in nearly all these stands, but
it
is subordinate to the broadleaf trees and, in many areas, shortleaf pines
are more abundant than pitch pines.
Oak-pitch forests (600 to 900 trees per acre) generally are less dense
than pine-oak forests (1,100 to 1,200 trees per acre). The oak-pine forest
canopy ranges from 35 to 50 feet high but in stands left unburned for
1 century or more, the trees may be 75 to 100 feet tall.
Several kinds of treeform oaks are prominent in oak-pine forests. black
oak is the most common tree in the stands of the north Mullica River;
southern red oak becomes prominent to tile south. The abundance of chestnut
oak, scarlet oak and white oak vary from stand to stand. Of the two smaller
treeform oaks, post oak generally is more abundant than blackjack oak.
In a few places, the post oaks are relatively large and form part of
the
canopy.
In oak-pine forests, tree crowns spread over 70 percent of the ground
and 60 percent of the cover is treeform oaks. Half or more of the wood
in the tree trunks, however, is represented by pines. This is because
pines commonly sprout out from their branches after a fire and a new
crown
develops on the old trunk. Oaks, in contrast, seldom develop new crowns
from the old trunk after a fire-the old trunk dies ,and new stems sprout
from the root crown. In oak-pine forests, therefore, the root systems
of the pines and oaks may be of the same age. The trunks of the pine
trees,
however, are usually many years older and larger in diameter.
VEGETATION OF THE WETLANDS
Wetland vegetation occupies sites which may be inundated continuously
or where the soil is saturated for only a few weeks per year. Both the
floristic and the physiognomic diversities of wetland vegetation greatly
exceed those of upland vegetation. By virtue of regulations promulgated
under Section 404 of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments
of 1972 (Public Law 92-500), most of these areas are under the jurisdiction
of the United States Army Corps of Engineers and the United States Environmental
Protection Agency. Only by stringent regulation, continuous scrutiny,
minimal alteration, and informed husbandry will these immensely valuable,
but terribly fragile, habitats persist into the twenty-first century
and
beyond.
Wetland Herb Communities
Several kinds of treeless communities occur in ponds and streams, in
concentric hands around isolated depressions and in linear bands along
streams. Deeper
sections of ponds may be colonized by algae. Near the margins of ponds
and in stream coves, white waterlillies, spatterdocks, bladderworts,
and
other submerged or floating leaf plants may cover both the bottom and
the surface. Sphagnum mosses, sedges, rushes, pipeworts, chain ferns
and
other emergent plants occur in water no deeper than a few inches and
along the shore.
At scattered places such as the channels of intermittent streams, lowland
broomsedge, bullsedge and other grasses and grasslike plants form marshes.
Locally, these are called savannas. About 1900, savannas covered several
thousand acres in the Pine Barrens. Today, individual savannas are small
and, collectively, probably cover no more than a thousand acres. Thickets
of leatherleaf, or highbush blueberry and swamp forests of red maple,
blackgum, sweetbay and southern whitecedar have replaced most of the
former
savannas.
Wetland Shrub Communities
Leatherleaf grows in the channels of intermittent streams, on the margins
of ponds and over the central sections of many nearly isolated depressions.
These thickets are known locally as spungs (rhymes with rungs-the term
is also applied to broadleaf swamp forests). The ground in spungs is
covered
by sphagnum moss with scattered chain ferns projecting from it. Sheep
Laurel and Staggerhbush occur here and there in highbush blueberry edging
many streambanks. In stands of leatherleaf, highbush blueberry and small
trees of pitch pine and red maple occur as scattered individual.
Wetland Forests
Southern whitecedar, trident red maple, blackgum, sweetbay, and pitch
pine are the principle trees of the wetlands forest. A few stems of gray
birch and sassafras are present in many stands - the sassafras trees
may
be relatively large. The lowland forests, particularly the broadleaf
swamp type, extend well beyond the Pine Barrens limits.
In lowland forests within the region, but principally near its margins,
sweetgum ,pin oak, willow oak, basket oak, water oak ,and various other
trees are found.
Southern Whitecedar Swamp Forests
At maturity, southern whitecedar trees have straight stems devoid of
branches or foliage beneath their topmost sections. The trees usually
begin to
grow after a forest has been destroyed by fire or cutting. As many as
200,000 seedlings per acre may germinate during the first year. As this
generation of trees ages, their density is naturally thinned. By the
twentieth
year, 95 percent of the stems may have died and the forest has about
11,000 trees per acre. The thinning continues. but the mortality rate
is reduced.
During the 35th through 50th years, the density averages about 3.000
stems per acre. Surveys in New Jersey indicate that whitecedar forests,
70 to
80 years old are composed of around 1,000 mature trees per acre. However,
the densities of trees may vary considerably in different stands of the
same age and in different parts of a single stand Nevertheless, in fewer
than 100 100 years, more than 95.5 percent of the initial number of seedlings
succumb to disease, predation, starvation and other agents of natural
thinning.
Many of the Pine Barrens streams flow through whitecedar swamp forests.
The forests range from a few yards to a mile or more in width, with few
exceeding 1,000 feet. The mature trees generally are 50 to 60 feet tall.
Pitch pines may be scattered among the whitecedars with red maple, blackgum
and sweetbay formula more or less continuous understory. Crowns of highbush
blueberry, dangleberry, clammy azalea, sweetpepperbush, fetterbush, bayberry
and several (other shrubs merge with branches of broad-leaf trees. The
herbaceous vegetation is rather sparse in most stands, but it is composed
of many beautiful and often rare plants. Chain ferns, bladderworts, stundews,
pitcherplants, swamppink and partridgeberry are common. Curlygrass, a
grasslike boreal fern at the southern limit of its range in the Pine
Barrens,
is rare, but widely distributed in the whitecedar forests. Splagnum mosses
blanket hummocks around the bases of trees and much of the surface between
trees.
Broadleaf Swamp Forests
Trident red maple is the most abundant tree in the broadleaf forests.
Blackgum and sweetbay are the most frequent associates with wetland's
gray birch and sassafras abundant in places. Pitch pines are scattered
through most stands and may be as abundant as broadleaf trees in some
spots. Southern whitecedars occur in many stands.
In most places, the broadleaf trees are 30 to 40 feet tall. The tops
of taller shrubs (5 to 1 0 feet high) extend amid the trees' lowcr limbs.
Highberry blueberry and sweetpepperbusti are the most common shrubs.
Clammy
azalea, leatherleaf, fetterbush, hog huckleberry, dangleberry and sheep
laurel are less common, but occur throughout most stands. Most herbaceous
plants, mosses and lichens in the broadleaf swamp forests are of the
same
species as those in the cedar swamp forests. Shrubs, generally, are more
abundant and form a more continuous undergrowth in broadleaf swamp forests
than in cedar swamp forests. Herbaceous plants, in contrast, sem to be
more abundant in cedar swamp forests than in broaddleaf swamp forests.
Pitch Pine Lowland Forests BR> Pitch pine forms 90 percent or more of
this forest's canopy. Small clumps of red maple and blackgum are scattered
throughout and gray birch may be a minor compnent. The stands are dense;
few of the crooked trees, many with two or more stems from a single root
crown, are taller than 15 to 25 feet. These forests cover many isolated
depressions within the Pine Barrens, grow on level sites adjacent to swamp
forests or occupy hundreds of acres of other poorly drained soils.
More than twenty kinds os shrubs and woody vines occur in the undergrowth
of pitch pine lowlands forest. Over half of the shrub layer cover, however,
is hog huckleberry, sheep laurel and dangleberry. Nearly 30 percent of
the ground is covered by turkeybreard, wintergreen, bracken fern and
associated
herbs, including several orchids. Spogy smats of spagnum mosses cover
about 10 percent of the surface.
Regardless of the inordinate cutting and largely because of the frequent
fires, the vegetation of the of the New Jcrsey Pine Barrens is unique
in the world. Owing to this vegetstion and to the area's sparse settlement,
the Pine Barrens is of formidable significance as a natural open space
and recreation source to the people of New Jersey, of the Eastern Seaboard's
megapolitan rcgion and of the Nation.
Dr. McCormick was Curator and Chairman of the Academy's
Dept. of Ecology and Land Management from 1963-71. During this time, he
conducted a study for the National Park Service to determine the national
significance of the Pine Barrens. Today, Jack McCormick & Assoc. does
environmental consulting in Berwyn, PA and Washington, D.C. Dr. McCormick
was on the Pinelands Advisory Committee that wrote the legislation to form
New Jersey's Pinelands Environmental Council and recently served on the
N.J. Dept. of Environmental Protection's Water Quality Task Force. |