Vaired Effects of Clear-cut Logging on Predators and Their Habitat in Small Streams of the Cascade Mountains, Oregon
- 1 February 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
- Vol. 38 (2) , 137-145
- https://doi.org/10.1139/f81-018
Abstract
Assemblages of aquatic vertebrate [Salamanders] and insect predators were inventoried in streams in old-growth and logged coniferous forests in the western Cascades of Oregon to assess effects of clear-cut logging on stream communities. Effects associated with logging depended on stream size, gradient and time after harvest. Clear-cut sections where the stream was still exposed to sunlight (5-17 yr after logging) generally had greater biomass, density and species richness of predators than old-growth (> 450 yr old) forested sections. Increases were greatest in small (1st-order), high gradient (10-16%) streams, where clear-cut sites had greater periphyton production and coarser streambed sediment than old-growth sites of similar size and gradient. Effects on predators were mixed in larger, lower gradient streams, where clear-cut sites showed accumulation of sediment and relatively small increases in periphyton production. Second-growth logged sections (12-35 yr after logging), reshaded by deciduous forest canopy, had lower biomass of trout and fewer predator taxa than old-growth sites.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Role of Aquatic Invertebrates in Processing of Wood Debris in Coniferous Forest StreamsThe American Midland Naturalist, 1978
- Competition, Food Consumption, and Production of Sculpins and Trout in Laboratory Stream CommunitiesThe Journal of Wildlife Management, 1968
- Quantitative analysis of watershed geomorphologyEOS, Transactions American Geophysical Union, 1957