The State of the System and Steps Toward Resilience of Disturbance-dependent Oak Forests

Current ecological, economic, and social conditions present unique challenges to natural resource managers seeking to maintain the resilience of disturbance-dependent ecosystems, such as oak (Quercus spp.) forests. Oak-dominated ecosystems throughout the U.S. have historically been perpetuated thro...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tricia G. Knoot, Lisa A. Schulte, John C. Tyndall, Brian J. Palik
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2010-12-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol15/iss4/art5/
id doaj-8e8049837fab4a29a57047add7ef5403
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8e8049837fab4a29a57047add7ef54032020-11-24T23:48:17ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872010-12-01154510.5751/ES-03589-1504053589The State of the System and Steps Toward Resilience of Disturbance-dependent Oak ForestsTricia G. Knoot0Lisa A. Schulte1John C. Tyndall2Brian J. Palik3Department of Natural Resource Ecology and Management, Iowa State UniversityDepartment of Natural Resource Ecology and Management, Iowa State UniversityDepartment of Natural Resource Ecology and Management, Iowa State UniversityUSDA Forest ServiceCurrent ecological, economic, and social conditions present unique challenges to natural resource managers seeking to maintain the resilience of disturbance-dependent ecosystems, such as oak (Quercus spp.) forests. Oak-dominated ecosystems throughout the U.S. have historically been perpetuated through periodic disturbance, such as fire, but more recently show decline given shifting disturbance regimes associated with human land management decisions. We characterized the state of the social-ecological oak forest ecosystem in the midwestern U.S. through the perspectives of 32 natural resource professionals. Data from interviews with these change agents provided an integrative understanding of key system components, cross-scale interactions, dependencies, and feedbacks. Foremost, private landowner management decisions figured prominently in influencing oak regeneration success and were directly and indirectly shaped by a suite of interdependent ecological, e.g., deer herbivory, invasive shrub occurrence; economic, e.g., the cost of oak regeneration practices, the stumpage value of maple as compared to oak; and social forces, e.g., forestland parcelization, and personal relationships. Interviewees envisioned, and often preferred, a decline in oak dominance throughout the region, pointing to issues related to general landowner unwillingness to restore oak, the current trajectory of forest change, the threat of forest loss due to parcelization and housing development, and a combination of ecological and social factors that decrease the economic feasibility of restoration efforts. However, a decline in oak dominance may result in ecological communities that have no compositional equivalent on record and may not offer a desirable endpoint. Increasing social support offers the potential to enhance system capacity to manage for oak.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol15/iss4/art5/conservationoak forestsprivately-owned landsqualitative interviewsresiliencesystems analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tricia G. Knoot
Lisa A. Schulte
John C. Tyndall
Brian J. Palik
spellingShingle Tricia G. Knoot
Lisa A. Schulte
John C. Tyndall
Brian J. Palik
The State of the System and Steps Toward Resilience of Disturbance-dependent Oak Forests
Ecology and Society
conservation
oak forests
privately-owned lands
qualitative interviews
resilience
systems analysis
author_facet Tricia G. Knoot
Lisa A. Schulte
John C. Tyndall
Brian J. Palik
author_sort Tricia G. Knoot
title The State of the System and Steps Toward Resilience of Disturbance-dependent Oak Forests
title_short The State of the System and Steps Toward Resilience of Disturbance-dependent Oak Forests
title_full The State of the System and Steps Toward Resilience of Disturbance-dependent Oak Forests
title_fullStr The State of the System and Steps Toward Resilience of Disturbance-dependent Oak Forests
title_full_unstemmed The State of the System and Steps Toward Resilience of Disturbance-dependent Oak Forests
title_sort state of the system and steps toward resilience of disturbance-dependent oak forests
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2010-12-01
description Current ecological, economic, and social conditions present unique challenges to natural resource managers seeking to maintain the resilience of disturbance-dependent ecosystems, such as oak (Quercus spp.) forests. Oak-dominated ecosystems throughout the U.S. have historically been perpetuated through periodic disturbance, such as fire, but more recently show decline given shifting disturbance regimes associated with human land management decisions. We characterized the state of the social-ecological oak forest ecosystem in the midwestern U.S. through the perspectives of 32 natural resource professionals. Data from interviews with these change agents provided an integrative understanding of key system components, cross-scale interactions, dependencies, and feedbacks. Foremost, private landowner management decisions figured prominently in influencing oak regeneration success and were directly and indirectly shaped by a suite of interdependent ecological, e.g., deer herbivory, invasive shrub occurrence; economic, e.g., the cost of oak regeneration practices, the stumpage value of maple as compared to oak; and social forces, e.g., forestland parcelization, and personal relationships. Interviewees envisioned, and often preferred, a decline in oak dominance throughout the region, pointing to issues related to general landowner unwillingness to restore oak, the current trajectory of forest change, the threat of forest loss due to parcelization and housing development, and a combination of ecological and social factors that decrease the economic feasibility of restoration efforts. However, a decline in oak dominance may result in ecological communities that have no compositional equivalent on record and may not offer a desirable endpoint. Increasing social support offers the potential to enhance system capacity to manage for oak.
topic conservation
oak forests
privately-owned lands
qualitative interviews
resilience
systems analysis
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol15/iss4/art5/
work_keys_str_mv AT triciagknoot thestateofthesystemandstepstowardresilienceofdisturbancedependentoakforests
AT lisaaschulte thestateofthesystemandstepstowardresilienceofdisturbancedependentoakforests
AT johnctyndall thestateofthesystemandstepstowardresilienceofdisturbancedependentoakforests
AT brianjpalik thestateofthesystemandstepstowardresilienceofdisturbancedependentoakforests
AT triciagknoot stateofthesystemandstepstowardresilienceofdisturbancedependentoakforests
AT lisaaschulte stateofthesystemandstepstowardresilienceofdisturbancedependentoakforests
AT johnctyndall stateofthesystemandstepstowardresilienceofdisturbancedependentoakforests
AT brianjpalik stateofthesystemandstepstowardresilienceofdisturbancedependentoakforests
_version_ 1716269483303108608