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Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of long term deer exclusion on a Pinus resinosa forest in north central Minnesota.

Bruce A. Ross, +2 more
- 01 Nov 1970 - 
- Vol. 51, Iss: 6, pp 1088-1093
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TLDR
Trees, shrubs, and herbs were sampled inside and outside an exclosure in a 230—year—old Pinus resinosa forest in north—central Minnesota from 1946 to 1969 and followed a normal successional sequence dominated by Pinus strobus with lesser amounts of Betula papyrifera.
Abstract
Trees, shrubs, and herbs were sampled inside and outside an exclosure in a 230—year—old Pinus resinosa forest in north—central Minnesota from 1946 to 1969. Prior to the building of the exclosure in 1937, white—tailed deer had existed at or above starvation population densities for 10 or more years. Overbrowsing continued outside the exclosure until 1945 when the deer were virtually eliminated by hunting. Since then deer numbers have gradually increased. Before 1937, severe browsing had apparently removed all tree reproduction greater than 1—2 years old. Since 1937, inside the exclosure the occurrence of seedlings and samplings has increased greatly and has followed a normal successional sequence dominated by Pinus strobus with lesser amounts of Betula papyrifera, Acer rubrum, Quercus borealis, and Abies balsamea. Outside, tree reproduction was scarce until after 1945; then Pinus resinosa, P. strobus, and Betula papyrifera saplings increased substantially. Only P. resinosa and B. papyrifera have grown abov...

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Assessing the consequences of global change for forest disturbance from herbivores and pathogens.

TL;DR: This work identifies 32 syndromes of biotic disturbance in North American forests that should be carefully evaluated for their responses to climate change and suggests a list of research priorities that will allow us to refine these risk assessments and adopt forest management strategies that anticipate changes inBiotic disturbance regimes and mitigate the ecological, social, and economic risks.
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Experimental Evaluation of Ecological Dominance in a Rocky Intertidal Algal Community

TL;DR: Algal succession in deeper Portage Head tidepools was found to be relatively slow with no clear dominance expressed after 5 yr, and the rate of algal succession following removal of the dominant algal species or of Strongylocentrotus is proportional to the degree of wave exposure.
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White-tailed deer impact on the vegetation dynamics of a northern hardwood forest

TL;DR: The net result of increased deer impact was an altered trajectory of vegetation development dominated by species avoided by deer or resilient to deer browsing, well below those observed in many eastern forests.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Forests of Itasca in the Nineteenth Century as Related to Fire

Stephen H. Spurr
- 01 Jan 1954 - 
TL;DR: The single outstanding impression is that most of the park was burned over periodically during the nineteenth century, and that there is every reason to believe that periodic fires had been common in previous centuries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Climax Forests of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan

Samuel A. Graham
- 01 Oct 1941 - 
TL;DR: This paper attempts to describe and interpret conditions existing in one of the habitat types in the region and is limited to conditions existing on the clay and sandy clay soils in the Ottawa National Forest near the western end of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.
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