Merrill R. Kaufmann
United States Forest Service
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Featured researches published by Merrill R. Kaufmann.
Forest Ecology and Management | 2003
Paula J. Fornwalt; Merrill R. Kaufmann; Laurie S. Huckaby; Jason M. Stoker; Thomas J. Stohlgren
Abstract We examined patterns of non-native plant diversity in protected and managed ponderosa pine/Douglas-fir forests of the Colorado Front Range. Cheesman Lake, a protected landscape, and Turkey Creek, a managed landscape, appear to have had similar natural disturbance histories prior to European settlement and fire protection during the last century. However, Turkey Creek has experienced logging, grazing, prescribed burning, and recreation since the late 1800s, while Cheesman Lake has not. Using the modified-Whittaker plot design to sample understory species richness and cover, we collected data for 30 0.1xa0ha plots in each landscape. Topographic position greatly influenced results, while management history did not. At both Cheesman Lake and Turkey Creek, low/riparian plots had highest native and non-native species richness and cover; upland plots (especially east/west-facing, south-facing and flat, high plots) had the lowest. However, there were no significant differences between Cheesman Lake and Turkey Creek for native species richness, native species cover, non-native species richness, or non-native species cover for any topographic category. In general, non-native species richness and cover were highly positively correlated with native species richness and/or cover (among other variables). In total, 16 non-native species were recorded at Cheesman Lake and Turkey Creek; none of the 16 non-native species were more common at one site than another. These findings suggest that: (1) areas that are high in native species diversity also contain more non-native species; (2) both protected and managed areas can be invaded by non-native plant species, and at similar intensities; and (3) logging, grazing, and other similar disturbances may have less of an impact on non-native species establishment and growth than topographic position (i.e., in lowland and riparian zones versus upland zones).
Biological Invasions | 2010
Paula J. Fornwalt; Merrill R. Kaufmann; Thomas J. Stohlgren
The 2002 Hayman Fire burned with mixed severity across 55,800xa0ha of montane Colorado forest, including pre-existing plots that were originally measured for understory plant composition and cover in 1997. We examined the influence of the Hayman Fire on exotic plants by remeasuring these plots annually from 2003 to 2007. We found that (1) exotic richness and cover generally increased as fire severity and time since fire increased; (2) the exotic species present in a plot before the fire were also largely present in the plot postfire, regardless of fire severity; (3) most of the new postfire species in a plot were present elsewhere in the study area before the fire, although some new species were truly new invaders that were not found in prefire surveys; (4) lightly burned riparian forests were not more susceptible to exotic invasion than surrounding uplands that burned with similar severity; and (5) native and exotic richness and cover were positively correlated or uncorrelated for all fire severities and years. Our findings indicate that exotics were stimulated by the Hayman Fire, especially in severely burned areas. However, exotic richness and cover remain low as of 2007, and correlations between native and exotic richness and cover suggest that exotics have not yet interfered with native understory development. Therefore, we conclude that exotic plants are not a major ecological threat at present, but recommend that monitoring be continued to evaluate if they will pose a threat in future years.
Plant Ecology | 2009
Paula J. Fornwalt; Merrill R. Kaufmann; Laurie S. Huckaby; Thomas J. Stohlgren
Throughout Pinus ponderosa–Pseudotsuga menziesii forests of the southern Colorado Front Range, USA, intense logging and domestic grazing began at the time of Euro-American settlement in the late 1800s and continued until the early 1900s. We investigated the long-term impacts of these settlement-era activities on understory plant communities by comparing understory composition at a historically logged and grazed site to that of an environmentally similar site which was protected from past use. We found that species richness and cover within functional groups rarely differed between sites in either upland or riparian areas. Multivariate analyses revealed little difference in species composition between sites on uplands, though compositional differences were apparent in riparian zones. Our findings suggest that settlement-era logging and grazing have had only minor long-term impacts on understories of upland Front Range P.xa0ponderosa–P.xa0menziesii forests, though they have had a greater long-term influence on riparian understories, where these activities were likely the most intense.
Forest Science | 1994
Barbara J. Yoder; Michael G. Ryan; Richard H. Waring; A. W. Schoettle; Merrill R. Kaufmann
Forest Ecology and Management | 2005
Sonia A. Hall; Ingrid C. Burke; D. O. Box; Merrill R. Kaufmann; Jason M. Stoker
Remote Sensing of Environment | 2006
Gensuo Jia; Ingrid C. Burke; Alexander F. H. Goetz; Merrill R. Kaufmann; Bruce C. Kindel
Tree Physiology | 1991
J.J. Landsberg; Merrill R. Kaufmann; D. Binkley; J. Isebrands; P. G. Jarvis
Archive | 2001
Merrill R. Kaufmann; Paula J. Fornwalt; Laurie S. Huckaby; Jason M. Stoker
Tree Physiology | 1991
Pauline Oker-Blom; Merrill R. Kaufmann; Michael G. Ryan
Archive | 2001
Laurie S. Huckaby; Merrill R. Kaufmann; Jason M. Stoker; Paula J. Fornwalt