Hi Again Folks,
I wanted to ask about the role of fire in Pine Barrens ecology. I've done a little reading on the benefits of controlled burning and how burning is essential to maintaining the Pine Barrens, but I am not sure about one thing.
What I was wondering is if the Pine Barrens could ever really become a full oak/mixed hardwood forest with the soil conditions being the way they are? I may misunderstand this, but if I understand correctly, the pine needles could add enough nutrients to the soil, in theory, to allow succession to continue, and the mixed detritus could eventually condition the soil enough for a full oak forest.
What I am wondering; is the porosity of the soil too great, and the soil too acidic, to maintain a full oak or mixed hardwood forest? Would it become a mixed pine/oak or oak/pine and stabilize, or is it actually climaxed 'as is' because of soil and acidity restrictions? I thought that with the porosity of the sand, that it would not retain the nutrients and that the conditions may always be 'just right' for the ecosystem that is there now (or am I wrong?)
Thank you for any info that you can share.
Chilehead
I wanted to ask about the role of fire in Pine Barrens ecology. I've done a little reading on the benefits of controlled burning and how burning is essential to maintaining the Pine Barrens, but I am not sure about one thing.
What I was wondering is if the Pine Barrens could ever really become a full oak/mixed hardwood forest with the soil conditions being the way they are? I may misunderstand this, but if I understand correctly, the pine needles could add enough nutrients to the soil, in theory, to allow succession to continue, and the mixed detritus could eventually condition the soil enough for a full oak forest.
What I am wondering; is the porosity of the soil too great, and the soil too acidic, to maintain a full oak or mixed hardwood forest? Would it become a mixed pine/oak or oak/pine and stabilize, or is it actually climaxed 'as is' because of soil and acidity restrictions? I thought that with the porosity of the sand, that it would not retain the nutrients and that the conditions may always be 'just right' for the ecosystem that is there now (or am I wrong?)
Thank you for any info that you can share.
Chilehead