Southern Appalachian spruce-fir forests are relatively uncommon communities that occur at high elevations in the mountains of North Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, and West Virginia. These forests are relicts of the Pleistocene left over from a period of glaciation during which spruce-fir forests were distributed contiguously throughout the Appalachians. Previous examinations of the southern Appalachian spruce and fir ecotone have indicated the importance of elevation as a driver of species composition. Dominant tree species exhibit a gradient from northern hardwoods to red spruce (Picea rubens) to Fraser fir (Abies fraseri) as elevation increases. These communities have been sampled by the Carolina Vegetation Survey (CVS), a large-scale res...
High elevation fir and spruce-fir forests of the Southern Appalachians were sampled in the Black Mou...
The Black Mountain range of western North Carolina supports some of the most extensive, but threaten...
The Black Mountain range of western North Carolina supports some of the most extensive, but threaten...
Southern Appalachian spruce-fir forests are relatively uncommon communities that occur at high eleva...
Introduction: Although the spruce-fir area of the Southern Appalachians has interested several inves...
Dominated by the endemic Fraser fir (Abies fraseri), the high-elevation forests of the Southern Appa...
Red spruce-Fraser fir forests are geographically limited to high elevations in the Appalachian Mount...
There are many factors that influence forest species composition and many are linked to topographica...
Spruce-Fir forests are relicts from the Pleistocene and have migrated back north after the previous ...
Spruce-Fir forests are relicts from the Pleistocene and can only be found within the Southern Appala...
Spruce-Fir forests are relicts from the Pleistocene and can only be found within the Southern Appala...
The southern Appalachian fir and fir-spruce forests are unique glacial relict communities that occup...
Red spruce is a shade-tolerant conifer whose distribution and abundance reflect Quaternary climate h...
High elevation fir and spruce-fir forests of the Southern Appalachians were sampled in the Black Mou...
I used dendrochronological techniques to investigate the temporal stability of a climate signal in r...
High elevation fir and spruce-fir forests of the Southern Appalachians were sampled in the Black Mou...
The Black Mountain range of western North Carolina supports some of the most extensive, but threaten...
The Black Mountain range of western North Carolina supports some of the most extensive, but threaten...
Southern Appalachian spruce-fir forests are relatively uncommon communities that occur at high eleva...
Introduction: Although the spruce-fir area of the Southern Appalachians has interested several inves...
Dominated by the endemic Fraser fir (Abies fraseri), the high-elevation forests of the Southern Appa...
Red spruce-Fraser fir forests are geographically limited to high elevations in the Appalachian Mount...
There are many factors that influence forest species composition and many are linked to topographica...
Spruce-Fir forests are relicts from the Pleistocene and have migrated back north after the previous ...
Spruce-Fir forests are relicts from the Pleistocene and can only be found within the Southern Appala...
Spruce-Fir forests are relicts from the Pleistocene and can only be found within the Southern Appala...
The southern Appalachian fir and fir-spruce forests are unique glacial relict communities that occup...
Red spruce is a shade-tolerant conifer whose distribution and abundance reflect Quaternary climate h...
High elevation fir and spruce-fir forests of the Southern Appalachians were sampled in the Black Mou...
I used dendrochronological techniques to investigate the temporal stability of a climate signal in r...
High elevation fir and spruce-fir forests of the Southern Appalachians were sampled in the Black Mou...
The Black Mountain range of western North Carolina supports some of the most extensive, but threaten...
The Black Mountain range of western North Carolina supports some of the most extensive, but threaten...