Forest [FAR1]

Legacy FAR1 strategy/approaches.

Taxonomy Machine Name
niacs_strategy
Taxonomy Alias
far1

Northern Michigan will have 30-50 fewer days of frozen ground during the winter by the end of the century.

Submitted by sdhandler on

In the Upper Midwest, the duration of frozen ground conditions suitable for winter harvest operations has already shortened by 2 to 3 weeks in the past 70 years. Cold-season soil temperatures are projected to increase between 1.8 and 5.4 °F by the end of the century, and total frost depth is projected to deline by 40 to 80 percent across northern Michigan by the end of the century. These conditions could increase water infiltration into the soil and reduce runoff, but they may also lead to greater soil water losses through increased evapotranspiration.

Northern Michigan's winter snowpack will be reduced from 30-80% by the end of the century.

Submitted by sdhandler on

A variety of models project that across the Upper Midwest, more winter precipitation will be delivered as rain, more snow will melt between snowfall events, and the snowpack will not be as deep or consistent. Lake-effect snowfall may increase in the short-term, but these events may convert to rain as temperatures increase.

Temperatures in northern Wisconsin and western Michigan will increase between 3 °F and 9 °F by the end of the century, with more warming during winter.

Submitted by sdhandler on

Northern Wisconsin and the western Upper Peninsula have already warmed more than 1.5 degrees since the first half of the 20th century, which is one of the fastest rates of warming across the country. All global climate models project that temperatures will increase with continued increases in atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations. More warming is projected under a high climate scenario (RCP 8.5) and more moderate warming is projected under a moderate climate scenario (RCP 4.5).

Northern Michigan temperatures will increase between 4°F and 10°F by the end of the century, with more warming during winter.

Submitted by sdhandler on

Northern Michigan has already warmed more than 1.5 degrees since the first half of the 20th century, which is one of the fastest rates of warming across the country. All global climate models project that temperatures will increase with continued increases in atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations. More warming is projected under a high climate scenario (RCP 8.5) and more moderate warming is projected under a moderate climate scenario (RCP 4.5).

Barrens

Submitted by sdhandler on

Barrens occur on coarse-textured, droughty soils with frequent fire return intervals. Tree cover is typically 5 to 25 percent, and typically includes jack pine, black oak, northern pin oak, or white oak.

Oak associations

Submitted by sdhandler on

Oak forests occur on sandy to dry-mesic soils. Oaks depend on high sunlight conditions for regeneration. Common tree species include northern red, white, black, and northern pin oaks.

Lowland-riparian hardwoods

Submitted by sdhandler on

Lowland and riparian hardwoods occur on alluvial soils or impermeable clay layers that are seasonally or annually inundated or saturated. Common tree species include red maple, northern white-cedar, silver maple, black ash, and green ash.

Northern hardwoods

Submitted by sdhandler on

Northern hardwoods occur on mesic soils that provide consistent moisture and nutrients. Gap-sized disturbances are common, but stand-replacing events are very infrequent. Common species include sugar maple, red maple, American beech, American basswood, and eastern hemlock.

Aspen-birch

Submitted by sdhandler on

Aspen-birch forests occur on a wide range of soil types and landforms, and are favored by frequent disturbance or management. Common species include quaking aspen, bigtooth aspen, paper birch, and balsam poplar.

Lowland conifers

Submitted by sdhandler on

This forest system occurs on peat or mineral soils that are saturated throughout growing season. Common tree species include northern white-cedar, black spruce, tamarack, and other boreal species.