Literature DB >> 33571316

The forests of the midwestern United States at Euro-American settlement: Spatial and physical structure based on contemporaneous survey data.

Christopher J Paciorek1, Charles V Cogbill2, Jody A Peters3, John W Williams4,5, David J Mladenoff6, Andria Dawson7, Jason S McLachlan3.   

Abstract

We present gridded 8 km-resolution data products of the estimated stem density, basal area, and biomass of tree taxa at Euro-American settlement of the midwestern United States during the middle to late 19th century for the states of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Illinois, and Indiana. The data come from settlement-era Public Land Survey (PLS) data (ca. 0.8-km resolution) of trees recorded by land surveyors. The surveyor notes have been transcribed, cleaned, and processed to estimate stem density, basal area, and biomass at individual points. The point-level data are aggregated within 8 km grid cells and smoothed using a generalized additive statistical model that accounts for zero-inflated continuous data and provides approximate Bayesian uncertainty estimates. The statistical modeling smooths out sharp spatial features (likely arising from statistical noise) within areas smaller than about 200 km2. Based on this modeling, presettlement Midwestern landscapes supported multiple dominant species, vegetation types, forest types, and ecological formations. The prairies, oak savannas, and forests each had distinctive structures and spatial distributions across the domain. Forest structure varied from savanna (averaging 27 Mg/ha biomass) to northern hardwood (104 Mg/ha) and mesic southern forests (211 Mg/ha). The presettlement forests were neither unbroken and massively-statured nor dominated by young forests constantly structured by broad-scale disturbances such as fire, drought, insect outbreaks, or hurricanes. Most forests were structurally between modern second growth and old growth. We expect the data product to be useful as a baseline for investigating how forest ecosystems have changed in response to the last several centuries of climate change and intensive Euro-American land use and as a calibration dataset for paleoecological proxy-based reconstructions of forest composition and structure for earlier time periods. The data products (including raw and smoothed estimates at the 8-km scale) are available at the LTER Network Data Portal as version 1.0.

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Year:  2021        PMID: 33571316      PMCID: PMC7877788          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0246473

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


  15 in total

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7.  Four centuries of change in northeastern United States forests.

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8.  Statistically-Estimated Tree Composition for the Northeastern United States at Euro-American Settlement.

Authors:  Christopher J Paciorek; Simon J Goring; Andrew L Thurman; Charles V Cogbill; John W Williams; David J Mladenoff; Jody A Peters; Jun Zhu; Jason S McLachlan
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-02-26       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Novel and Lost Forests in the Upper Midwestern United States, from New Estimates of Settlement-Era Composition, Stem Density, and Biomass.

Authors:  Simon J Goring; David J Mladenoff; Charles V Cogbill; Sydne Record; Christopher J Paciorek; Stephen T Jackson; Michael C Dietze; Andria Dawson; Jaclyn Hatala Matthes; Jason S McLachlan; John W Williams
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-12-09       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Quantifying trends and uncertainty in prehistoric forest composition in the upper Midwestern United States.

Authors:  Andria Dawson; Christopher J Paciorek; Simon J Goring; Stephen T Jackson; Jason S McLachlan; John W Williams
Journal:  Ecology       Date:  2019-09-13       Impact factor: 5.499

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