Reading List

READING LIST 2006

REFERENCE TEXT

Franklin, J. F. and C. T. Dyrness. 1987. Natural Vegetation of Oregon and Washington. Oregon State University Press.

OPTIONAL: Grossman, D. H., D. Faber-Langendoen, A. S. Weakley, M. Anderson, P. Bourgeron, R. Crawford, K. Goodin, S. Landaal, K. Metzler, K. Patterson, M. Pyne, M. Reid, and L. Sneddon. 1998. International classification of ecological communities: terrestrial vegetation of the United States. Volume I. The National Vegetation Classification System: development, status, and applications. The Nature Conservancy, Arlington, Virginia, USA.

For students with no prior ecology courses:

Kimmins, J.P. 1997. Forest Ecology: A Foundation for Sustainable Management. Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, NJ.

Barnes, B.V. et al. 1998. Forest Ecology. Fourth Edition. Wiley, New York, NY.

Waring, R.H. and Running, S.W. 1998. Forest Ecosystems: Analysis at Multiple Scales. Academic Press, San Diego, CA.

WEEKLY REFERENCE LIST

Until September, this list reflects the reading for 2005.  An email will be sent before classes start confirming the reading list for 2006. Some changes may be made during the course.

Articles from ESA journals used by permission.

**Background reading

Week 1

**Franklin, J.F. and C.T. Dyrness. 1973. Forest zones of eastern Oregon and Washington. In: Natural Vegetation of Oregon and Washington. Oregon State University Press, Corvallis, Oregon. pp. 160-208.

 

Sept 29: Hessburg, P. F., J. K. Agee, and J. F. Franklin. 2005. Dry forests and wildland fires of the inland Northwest USA: contrasting the landscape ecology of the pre-settlement and modern eras. Forest Ecology and Management 211:117-139.

 

Richy J. Harrod, Bradner H. McRae, William E. Hartl. 1999. Historical stand reconstruction in ponderosa pine forests to guide silvicultural prescriptions. Forest Ecology and Management 114, 433-446.

 

Running, S. W. 2006. Is global warming causing more, larger wildfires? Science 313:926-927.

 

Westerling, A. L., H. G. Hidalgo, D. R. Cayan, and T. W. Swetnam. 2006. Warming and earlier spring increase  western U.S. forest wildfire activity. Science 313:940-943.

 

OPTIONAL (policy background): HR 1904, The Healthy Forests Restoration Act of 2003

 

Week 2

**Franklin, J.F. and C.T. Dyrness. 1973. Environmental setting. In: Natural Vegetation of Oregon and Washington. Oregon State University Press, Corvallis, Oregon. pp. 1-43.

 

Oct 2: Waring, R.H. and J.F. Franklin. 1979. Evergreen coniferous forests of the Pacific Northwest. Science 204: 1380-1386. #

 

Oct 4: Lassoie, J.P., T.M. Hinckley, and C.G. Grier. 1985. Coniferous forests of the Pacific Northwest. In: B.F. Chabot, and H.A. Mooney (eds.) Physiological Ecology of North American Plant Communities pp. 127-161.#

 

Oct 6: McDowell, N., J.R. Brooks, S.A. Fitzgerald, & B.J. Bond, 2003. Carbon isotope discrimination and growth responses of old Pinus ponderosa trees to stand density reductions..#

 

INTERESTING, BUT NOT REQUIRED: Brooks J.R., F.C. Meinzer, R. Coulombe, & J. Gregg. 2002. Hydraulic redistribution of soil water during summer drought in two contrasting Pacific Northwest coniferous forests. Tree Physiology 22, 1107-1117.#

 

Week 3

**Franklin, J.F. and C.T. Dyrness. 1973. Forest zones of western Washington and northwestern Oregon. In: Natural Vegetation of Oregon and Washington. Oregon State University Press, Corvallis, Oregon. pp. 44-109.

 

Oct 9: : Agee, J.K and J. Kertis. 1988. Forest types of the North Cascades National Park Service Complex. Canadian Journal of Botany 65: 1520-1530. #

 

Oct 11: Donald McKenzie, David W. Peterson, David L. Peterson, Peter E. Thornton. 2003. Climatic and biophysical controls on conifer species distributions in mountain forests of Washington State. USA. Journal of Biogeography, 30,1093-1108.

 

Oct 13: Peterson, D. W. and D. L. Peterson. 2001. Mountain hemlock growth responds to climatic variability at annual and decadal time scales. Ecology 82:3330-3345.

 

BACKGROUND: Shaw, D.C., J.F. Franklin, K. Bible, J. Klopatek, E. Freeman, S. Greene, G.G. Parks. 2004. Ecological Setting of the Wind River Old- growth Forest. Ecosystems. 7: 427-439.#

 

Munger, T. T. 1930. Ecological aspects of the transition from old forests to new. Science 72:327-332.

 

Week 4

**Franklin, J.F. and C.T. Dyrness. 1973. Forest zones of western Washington and northwestern Oregon. In: Natural Vegetation of Oregon and Washington. Oregon State University Press, Corvallis, Oregon. pp. 110-129.

 

Oct 16: Franklin JF, TA Spies, R VanPelt, AB Carey, DA Thornburgh, DR Berg, DB Lindenmayer, ME Harmon, WS Keeton, DC Shaw, K Bible, J Chen. 2002. Disturbances and structural development of natural forest ecosystems with silvicultural implications, using Douglas-fir forests as an example.#

 

Oct 18: Keeton, WS and JF Franklin. 2005. Do remnant old-growth trees accelerate rates of succession in mature Douglas-fir forests? Ecological Monographs 75: 103-118.

 

Oct 20: : Winter, L.E. et al. 2001. Canopy disturbances over the lifetime of an old-growth Douglas-fir stand in the Pacific Northwest. Canadian Journal of Forest Research. 32: 1057-1070.

 

Antos, J. A., H. J. Guest, and R. Parish. 2005. The tree seedling bank in an ancient montane forest: stress toleraters in a productive habitat. Journal of Ecology

 

Week 5

Oct 23: Shainsky, L.J. and S.R. Radosevich. 1992. Mechanisms of competition between Douglas-fir and red alder seedlings. Ecology 73: 30-45.

 

Baumeister and Calloway 2006 Ecology 1816-1830.

 

Oct 25: Lutz, J. A. and C. B. Halpern. 2006. Tree mortality during early forest development: a long-term study of rates, causes and consequences. Ecological Monographs 76:257-275.

 

Halpern, C. B. 1988. Early successional pathways and the resistance and resilience of forest communities. Ecology 69:1703-1715.

 

Oct 27: Fastie, C. L. 1995. Causes and ecosystem consequences of multiple pathways of primary succession at Glacier Bay, Alaska. Ecology 76:1899-1916.

 

Week 6

Oct 30:  Van Pelt, R., T. C. O’Keefe, J. J. Latterell, and R. J. Naiman. 2006. Riparian forest stand development along the Queets River in Olympic National Park, Washington. Ecological Monographs 76:277-298.

 

Nov 1: Harcombe Wind and fire Forest Ecology and Management 2006

 

Nov 3: : Bonnet VH, AW Schoettle, WD Shepperd. 2005. Postfire environmental conditions influence the spatial pattern of regeneration for Pinus ponderosa. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 35:37-47. #

 

OPTIONAL: O’Conner J. E., M. A. Jones, and T. L. Haluska. 2003. Flood plain and channel dynamics of the Quinault and Queets Rivers, Washington, USA. Geomorphology 51:31-59.

 

Week 7

Nov 6: Weber, A, J Karst, B Gilbert, JP Kimmins. 2005. Thuja plicata exclusion in ectomycorrhiza-dominated forests: testing the role of inoculum potential of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. Oecologica 143:148-156.

 

Nov 8: Hansen, E. M. and E. MN. Goheen. 2000. Phellinus weirii and other native root pathogens as determinants of forest structure and process in western North America. Annual Review of Phytopathology 38:515-539.

 

Holah, J. C., M. V. Wilson, and E. M. Hansen. 1997. Impacts of a native root-rotting pathogen on successional development of old-growth Douglas fir forests.  Oecologia 111:429-433.

 

 

Nov 10: HOLIDAY

 

Week 8

Nov 13: Sprugel, D.G. 1991. Disturbance, equilibrium, and environmental variability: what is ‘natural’ vegetation in a changing environment? Biological Conservation 58: 1-18.

 

Nov 15: Agee, J.K. 2003. Historical range of variability in eastern Cascades forests, Washington, USA. Landscape Ecology. 18:735-740. #

 

Nov 17: Gara, R.I., W.R. Littke, J.K. Agee, D.R. Geiszler, J.D. Stuart, and C.H. Driver. 1985. Influence of fires, fungi, and mountain pine beetles on development of a lodgepole pine forest in south-central Oregon. In: D.M. Baumgartner (ed.) Lodgepole Pine: The Species and Its Management. Proceedings of a Symposium, Washington State University Cooperative Extension, Pullman, WA, pp. 155-162. #

 

Week 9

**Franklin, J.F. and C.T. Dyrness. 1973. Forest zones of western Washington and northwestern Oregon. In: Natural Vegetation of Oregon and Washington. Oregon State University Press, Corvallis, Oregon. pp. 130-159.

 

Nov 20: Heyerdahl, E.K., Brubaker, L.B., and Agee, J.K. 2001. Factors controlling spatial variation in historical fire regimes: a multiscale example from the Interior West, USA. Ecology 82:660-678.

 

Van Wagtendonk, J. W. 1994. Spatial patterns of lightning strikes and fires in Yosemite National Park. Proceedings of the 12th conference on fire and forest meteorology 12:223-231.

 

Nov 22: Miller, E.A. and C.B. Halpern. 1998. Effects of environment and grazing disturbance on tree establishment in meadow of the central Cascade Range, Oregon, USA. Journal of Vegetation Science 9:265-282.

 

BACKGROUND: Examining large scale ecological impacts

The Composite Burn Index: Field Measurements

The Normalized Burn Ratio (NBR and dNBR): Satellite Measurements

 

Nov 24: HOLIDAY

 

Week 10

**Franklin, J.F. and C.T. Dyrness. 1973. Forest zones of western Washington and northwestern Oregon. In: Natural Vegetation of Oregon and Washington. Oregon State University Press, Corvallis, Oregon. pp. 248-290.

 

Nov 27: Smith, D. W., R. O. Peterson, and D. B. Houston. 2003. Yellowstone after wolves. Bioscience 53:330-340.

 

Nov 29: Harcombe, P.A., S.E. Greene, M.G. Kramer, S.A. Acker, T.A., Spies, T. Valentine. 2004. The influence of fire and windthrow dynamics on a coastal spruce-hemlock forest in Oregon, SUA, based on aerial photographs spanning 40 years. Forest Ecology and Management 194, 71-82.#

 

Dec 1: Veblen TT, KS Hadley, EM Nel, T Kitzberger, M Reid, R Villalba, 1994. Disturbance regime and disturbance interactions in a Rocky Mountain subalpine forest. Journal of Ecology. 82, 125-135. #

 

Week 11

Dec 5: Brubaker, L.B. 1988. Vegetation history and anticipating future climate change. In: J.K. Agee and D.R. Johnson (eds.) Ecosystem Management for Parks and Wilderness, pp. 41-62. 51: 31-59. #

 

Dec 7: Hansen, A. J., R. P. Neilson, V. H. Dale, C. H. Flather, L. R. Iverson, D. J. Currie, S. Shafer, R. Cook, and P. J. Bartlein. 2001. Global change in forests: responses of species, communities, and biomes. Bioscience 51:765-779.

 

Brubaker, L. B., P. M. Anderson, M. E. Edwards, and A. V. Lozkin. 2005. Beringia as a glacial refrugium for boreal trees and shrubs: new perspectives from mapped pollen data. Journal of Biogeography 32:833-848.

 

Dec 10: none

Home

Schedule

Readings

Field Trips

Assignments

 

Text

Kaplan, Kaplan and Ryan. With People in Mind. Design and Management

Of Nearby Nature. Island Press. Washington, D.C. 1998

 

Reader

Selected readings, available in course-pack. Course pack is available from Professional Copy at 42nd and University Ave.

 

                                          Reading

 

WEEK OF:

 

January 8 - Introduction/Overview

Jensen, Clayne. 1995. Outdoor Recreation in America.

Ch. 1. Meaning and concepts

Ch. 2. Values in outdoor recreation

Ch. 3. History of outdoor opportunities

Eagles, Paul, (et.al.) 2002. Sustainable Tourism in Protected Areas Guidelines for Planning and Management.

Ch. 1. Introduction

Ch. 2. Protected areas, biodiversity and conservation

Ch. 3. Tourism in protected areas

 

January  15–22   Recreation Visitors

Jensen, Clayne. 1995. Outdoor Recreation in America.

Ch. 4   Lifestyle Trends and Influences

Ch. 13 Economic Factors

Kaplan, Rachel and Stephen Kaplan.  1989.The experience of nature.

Ch. 6  The restorative environment

Driver. Research on Leisure Benefits: An Introduction

Ajzen. Benefits of leisure: A social psychological perspective

Csikzentmihalyii and Kleiber. leisure and self-actualization

Kealy. Economic quantification of leisure benefits

Haggard and Williams. Self identity and leisure activities

U.S. Dept of Transportation. Conflict on multiple-use trails

 

January  29- Resource Management Organizations

Jensen, Clayne. 1995. Outdoor Recreation in America.

Ch. 8. Federal land agencies

Ch. 9. Federal water-resource agencies

Ch. 10. Wildlife  management

Ch. 11. The roles of state agencies

Ch. 12. Local government participation

Ch. 14. Private and commercial recreation

 

February 5-  Recreation Resources Planning and Management

Eagles, Ch. 4 Planning for protected area tourism

Hammit and Cole. 1987. Wildland recreation ecology and management

Ch. 9 Strategies and concepts of management

Knudson, Douglas. 2002. Outdoor Recreation

Ch. 20 Land classification systems

Ch. 21 Recreation carrying capacity

Stankey, George. 1985. The Limits of Acceptable Change for Wilderness Planning

Sharpe, Grant.  1994. A comprehensive introduction to park management

Ch. 12 Environmental impact

 

***(Field Trip – Saturday February 9th8:00 am – 6:00 pm)

Kaplan, Kaplan and Ryan. 1998. With people in mind. Design and management of nearby nature. Island Press. Washington, D.C.

 

February 12 – Recreation Resource Planning and Management Case Study

Davis, Kenneth.   Land Use. Ch. 9 Lake Tahoe – Jewel of the Sierras

Kearney, Anne, Gordon Bradley, et.al., 2006 Scenic Perception in a Nationally Treasured Landscape. (draft manuscript)

 

February 12 – Midterm exam (take home)

 

February 19- Visual Resources Management

Shelby, Bo (et. al.) 2003 Changes in scenic quality after harvest. Journal of Forestry

Bradley, Gordon. 1996 Forest Aesthetics: Harvest Practices in Visually Sensitive Areas

 

 

February 26– Visual Resources Management

Bradley, Gordon, Anne Kearney and Al Wagar. 2004 “Public Reaction Research”. Silvicultural Options for Young-Growth Douglas Fir Foressts:      The Capitol Forest Study – Establishment and First Results.  USDA Forest Service. PNW GTR 598

 

February 26- Recreation and Cultural Resource Management Issues

Pacific Crest Trail Planning and Management – US Forest Service

http://www.fs.fed.us/pct/

Webster, Donovan, 2005,  Footpath Atop the West. Smithsonian

 

March 4 - Case Study Presentations

 

March 11-Case Study Presentations

Rappel off The Maiden, CO, 1989

Reading List 2008

College of Forest ResourcesUNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
ESRM 381 Wildland Recreation and Amenities Management