Associated Forest Cover
provided by Silvics of North America
Redwood is a principal species in only one forest cover type, Redwood
(Society of American Foresters Type 232) (42), but is found in three other
Pacific Coast types, Pacific Douglas-Fir (Type 229), Port-Orford-Cedar
(Type 231), and Douglas-Fir-Tanoak-Pacific Madrone (Type 234).
Pure stands of redwood are found only on some of the best sites, usually
the moist river flats and gentle slopes below 305 m (1,000 ft). Although
redwood is a dominant tree throughout its range, generally it is mixed
with other conifers and broad-leaf trees.
Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) is well distributed
throughout most of the redwood type. Distributions of other conifer
associates are more limited. Significant species on the coastal side of
the redwood type are grand fir (Abies grandis) and western hemlock
(Tsuga heterophylla) north from northern Sonoma County, CA, and
Sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis) north from the vicinity of
Humboldt Bay, CA.
Conifers associated less commonly on the coastal side of the redwood
type are Port-Orford-cedar (Chamaecyparis lawsoniana), Pacific yew
(Taxus brevifolia), western redcedar (Thuja plicata), and
California torreya (Torreya californica). Other conifers found
with redwood include Gowen cypress (Cupressus goveniana) and
several species of pine, including bishop pine (Pinus muricata), knobcone
pine (P. attenuata), lodgepole pine (P. contorta), Monterey
pine (P. radiata), and sugar pine (P. lambertiana).
The two hardwoods most abundant and generally distributed in the redwood
region are tanoak (Lithocarpus densiflorus) and Pacific madrone
(Arbutus menziesii). Other hardwoods found with redwood include
vine maple (Acer circinatum), bigleaf maple (A. macrophyllum),
red alder (Alnus rubra), giant chinkapin (Castanopsis
chrysophylla), Oregon ash (Fraxinus latifolia), Pacific
bayberry (Myrica californica), Oregon white oak (Quercus
garryana), cascara buckthorn (Rhamnus purshiana), willows (Salix
spp.), and California-laurel (Umbellularia californica).
Of the great variety of lesser vegetation found in association with
redwood, these species are especially common: bracken (Pteridium
aquilinum var. lanuginosum), sword fern (Polystichum
munitum), salal (Gaultheria shallon), blueblossom (Ceanothus
thyrsiflorus), California huckleberry (Vaccinium ovatum), Pacific
rhododendron (Rhododendron macrophyllum), salmonberry (Rubus
spectabilis), coyote-brush (Baccharis pilularis), and
snowbrush (Ceanothus velutinus).
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Climate
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The mild climate of the redwood forest region can be classed broadly as
super-humid or humid. Mean annual temperatures vary between 10° and
16° C (50° and 60° F). Differences between mean annual
maximum and mean annual minimum temperatures vary from -12° C (10°
F) for coastal points to -1° C (30° F) for the eastern edge of
the redwood type. Temperatures rarely drop below -9° C (15° F)
or rise above 38° C (100° F). The frost-free period varies from
6 to 11 months (34).
Annual precipitation varies between 640 and 3100 mm (25 and 122 in) and
is mostly winter rain, although snow sometimes covers the highest ridges.
Generally, January is the wettest month and July is the driest. With
substantial precipitation in all months except summer, only slight summer
drought on deep soils, and mild winters, the climate is productive, and
some of the world's grandest forests are indigenous to it (34).
The frequent summer fogs that blanket the redwood region seem to be more
significant than the amount of precipitation in delineating the redwood
type. The major effect of fog is to decrease water loss from evaporation
and transpiration. An additional effect of condensation and fog drip from
tree crowns is an increased soil moisture supply during the dry summers
(1). The natural range of redwood is limited to areas where heavy summer
fogs from the ocean provide a humid atmosphere, although its successful
growth in plantations or amenity plantings is not as limited. Redwood is
among the most successful trees in the Central Valley of California, and
at low elevations in the Sierra Nevada. It grows well at considerable
distance from the ocean in New Zealand, France, Spain, and elsewhere
(26,27).
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Damaging Agents
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Fire is the principal damaging agent in both
young-growth and old-growth stands. The above-ground portions of young
stands may be killed outright by a single ground fire, but the stands
sprout and reoccupy the site. Fires are especially damaging to trees less
than 20 years old because their thin bark does not protect them. Also,
more flammable litter lies on the ground, and the microclimate is drier
than under old-growth forest.
Old-growth redwood stands show evidence of three or more severe fires
each century (23,44). In many instances, fires may only reduce the
thickness of the protective bark, which may be more than 30 cm (12 in)
thick. In other instances, fires cause basal wounds through which heart
rots enter. The combination of recurring fires and advancing decay
produces large basal cavities called "goose pens." In extreme
instances, mature trees may be so weakened mechanically that they fall.
In its northern range, in and around Redwood National Park, CA, fire has
a moderate ecological role in redwood stands. Light ground fires that do
not open the canopy favor western hemlock regeneration but usually
eliminate older hemlock from the stand. Douglas-fir establishment is
infrequent and unsuccessful under a full overstory canopy, even following
light ground fires on mesic sites. Relatively hot fires appear essential
for the establishment of Douglas-fir trees in discrete age classes.
Redwood, grand fir, and tanoak maintain their status in redwood stands
with and without the influence of fire (47,48).
Frequency distributions of fires indicate a natural pattern of several
short intervals between fires followed by one or more long interval. This
suggests that prescribed burning to maintain ecosystems should also be
done on a short-short-long interval pattern (23).
Redwood has no tree-killing diseases other than seedling diseases
previously listed, but heart rots cause extensive cull. Most common heart
rot in the southern part of the range of redwood is a brown cubical rot,
caused by Poria sequoiae. Most significant farther north is a
white ring rot caused by P. albipellucida (5,22).
A twig branch canker (Coryneum spp.) has been observed
on sprouts and plantation trees of seedling and sapling size. This canker,
which girdles stems and branches, could become damaging in plantations
(5,22).
Several insects are found on redwood but none cause significant damage.
These include a flatheaded twig borer and girdler (Anthaxia
aeneogaster), two redwood bark beetles (Phloeosinus sequoiae and
P. cristatus), and the sequoia pitch moth (Vespamima sequoiae)
(21).
Bark stripping by the American black bear has caused serious damage in
some parts of the redwood region. Wide strips of bark are ripped from the
tree, often from the top to the ground, during April to August. Trees 10
to 30 years old and 15 to 25 cm (6 to 10 in) in diameter are damaged most
and many may be girdled. Woodrats often injure planted trees on cutover
land and occasionally attack sprouts and larger trees.
In a few instances, redwood is deformed by fasciation, a flattening of
the normally cylindrical stem by formation of a row of linked meristems.
The causes of most fasciations are unknown (40).
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Flowering and Fruiting
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Redwood is monoecious; inconspicuous
male and female flowers are borne separately on different branches of the
same tree. The ovulate conelets grow into broadly oblong cones (10).
Redwood female strobili become receptive and pollen sheds between late
November and early March, although flowering usually is over by the end of
January. Weather conditions during pollination may directly affect seed
quality. Continuous rains during flowering wash pollen from the male
strobili and little pollen may reach the receptive female strobili. Dry
periods during pollination permit better pollen dispersal and improve seed
viability.
Redwood cones are terminal and are 13 to 29 mm (0.5 to 1.1 in) long.
They mature in autumn of the first year after flowering and are open from
early September until late December. Although cones persist for several
months, they open and shed seeds soon after ripening.
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Genetics
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Sequoia is unique within Coniferales, being of a hexaploid
nature (41). It was thought that redwood originated as an allopolyploid
from hybrids between early Tertiary or Mesozoic species of Metasequoia
and some extinct Taxodiaceous plant such as the modern giant sequoia.
However, the types and numbers of marker chromosomes found in Metasequoia
and Taxodium distichum are different than those present in
Sequoia, making it unlikely that these species contributed to the
polyploidy of Sequoia. Comparisons between the marker chromosomes
in Sequoia and those in Sequoiadendron indicate that
genomic contribution by Sequoiadendron to Sequoia is not
probable (41).
Races of redwood are not known, but the following cultivars (cultivated
varieties) have been recognized (16):
cv. 'Adpressa' Tips of shoots creamy white. Awl-like leaves.
cv. 'Glauca' Leaves 6 mm (0.25 in) long, glaucous, bluish.
cv. 'Nana Pendula' Leaves glaucous, branches pendulous.
cv. 'Pendula' Branches pendulous.
cv. 'Prostrata' Prostrate at first; leaves green, glaucous
beneath.
Four varieties of redwood now available in nurseries show a range of
growth habits, texture, color, and form. They are named Aptos Blue, Los
Altos, Soquel, and Santa Cruz (6).
An uncommon form of redwood, the albino redwood, has been described in a
few locations within the redwood region (17). These albinos result from a
genetic disorder and exist by attachment to a normal green tree, generally
at the roots. The tallest albino observed was 19.8 m (65 ft) tall.
Albinism is often a useful trait in genetics research to determine
mutation rate, and for other purposes.
Preliminary results from studies of self and related outcross families
indicate that, compared with outcrosses, selfing produced no additional
cone abortion or variable effects on germination. Under stress conditions
in nurseries and outplantings, some inbreeding depression becomes evident,
and restricting inbreeding in redwood seed-orchards seems prudent (30).
The tissue culture techniques described earlier also allow genetic
manipulation of redwood at the cellular level. Possibilities being
explored include the production of di-haploid redwood from female
gametophyte cultures (2).
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Growth and Yield
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Redwood is long lived, grows taller than any
other tree species in the world, and is exceeded in bulk only by the giant
sequoia. Redwoods are sexually mature at 10 years or less but continue to
increase in volume for centuries. The oldest redwood found so far,
determined by growth ring counts, is nearly 2,200 years old. Old-growth
redwood forests sometimes are incorrectly called even-aged and overmature
when, in fact, few forests in the world can match many redwood stands in
range of ages and mixture of vigorously growing and decadent trees.
Redwood probably is best known for its great size, although the average
redwood is smaller than commonly believed. Trees larger than 30 cm (12 in)
in d.b.h. on a 12-ha (30-acre) old-growth tract in Humboldt County, CA,
fell approximately into these divisions: 30 to 77 cm (12 to 30 in) in
d.b.h., 50 percent; 78 to 153 cm (31 to 60 in), 32 percent; 155 cm (61 in)
and larger, 18 percent. Redwoods 366 to 488 cm. (144 to 192 in) in d.b.h.,
found scattered over the entire range, are considered large. Trees 610 cm
(240 in) or more in diameter at a point 1.5 m (5 ft) above the ground are
rare.
Redwoods more than 61 m (200 ft) tall are common, and many trees growing
on riverside benches, where soils are deep and moist, are taller than 91 m
(300 ft). The tallest measured redwood was 112.1 m (367.8 ft) in 1964
(50).
Large trees and dense stocking combine to produce high yields. More than
81 percent of the commercial redwood forest land is classified as highly
productive, and only 2 percent is poor for growing trees. Flats along
rivers have yielded approximately 10,500 to 14,000 m³/ha (about
750,000 to 1,000,000 fbm/acre) in scaled logs. Harvest cuttings in Del
Norte County, CA, on units of 5.3 ha (13 acres) and larger, produced gross
volumes ranging from 1330 to 3921 m³/ha (95,000 to 280,000 fbm/acre,
Scribner).
Biomass accumulates to record levels. A redwood stand in Humboldt State
Park in California provides the greatest biomass ever recorded, with a
stem biomass of 3461 t/ha (1,544 tons/acre) (20).
Economical conversion of old-growth redwood to young managed stands by
shelterwood or selection cutting is difficult because net growth is
negative during the decade after logging. Windthrow, slow growth of
residual trees, and damage to established reproduction when residual trees
are removed contribute to economic losses. Considering effect on growth,
small clearcuttings seem to be a good method for converting old-growth
redwood to young managed stands (9).
Young-growth redwood is often nearly as spectacular in size and yield as
old growth. Dominant young-growth trees on good sites are 30.5 to 45.7 m
(100 to 150 ft) tall at 50 years, and 50.3 to 67.1 m (165 to 220 ft) at
100 years. Height growth is most rapid up to the 35th year. On the best
sites, however, height growth continues to be rapid well past 100 years
(24,33).
Diameter growth of individual young trees can be rapid or extremely
slow. In dense stands where competition is severe, annual diameter
increment is commonly less than 1 mm (0.03 in). Occasionally, 40 or more
rings per centimeter (more than 100/in) can be counted. At the other
extreme, diameter growth sometimes exceeds 2.5 cm (1 in) a year. One
redwood growing with little competition was 213 cm (84 in) in d.b.h. when
108 years old.
The yield of young-growth redwood stands at 100 years is expected to
range from 742 m³/ha (10,600 ft³/acre) on low sites to 3576 m³/ha
(51,080 ft³/acre) on high sites (32). The same stands yield 781 to
4998 m³/ha (55,760 to 357,000 fbm/acre International quarter-inch
rule), and yields of more than 2800 m³/ha (about 200,000 fbm/acre
International quarter-inch rule) are common in young-growth redwood
stands. At earlier ages, however, the greatest yields are in stands that
contain a mixture of redwood and Douglas-fir (25).
Natural pruning in young redwood stands often is not good. Although live
crowns may be limited to the upper third of the trunk, dead limbs are
persistent. Branch stubs, although decayed, may remain more than 50 years.
In old trees, some branch stubs have affected the quality of the timber
over a 200-year period. Trees in the intermediate crown class, however,
often prune well naturally, and some trees in a heavily stocked stand have
clean trunks for 23 to 30 m (75 to 100 ft) at 85 years.
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Reaction to Competition
provided by Silvics of North America
The redwood forest is a climax type.
When growing with other species, redwood usually is a dominant tree.
Douglas-fir can keep pace with redwood on many sites and occupy dominant
and codominant crown positions along with redwood. Redwood has been
classed as tolerant or very tolerant, the two highest categories in a
scale of five shade tolerance classes. It is probably most accurately
classed as very tolerant of shade in most situations.
Redwood stands are dense. At 60 years, redwood may have a basal area of
more than 126 m²/ha (550 ft²/acre) on the best sites (32). Heavy
stocking is desirable because the relatively high tolerance permits land
to support a large number of dominant and codominant trees per unit area.
Under some conditions, redwood can endure suppression almost
indefinitely. A 25-cm (10-in) suppressed tree might be more than 100 years
old. Small trees may be suppressed for more than 400 years but still
maintain a remarkable capacity to accelerate growth rates when released if
they have not been crowded too closely and are not injured seriously
during logging or slash burning. Large trees also can accelerate growth
when released from competition.
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Rooting Habit
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Redwoods have no taproots, but lateral roots are
large and wide-spreading. Small trees have better-than-average
windfirmness, and large redwoods are windfirm under most conditions.
A study in extreme northwestern California indicated that a combination
of wet soil and strong winds is necessary for significant windfall damage.
Consequently, windfall is caused by only a few of the many winter storms.
Storms that cause windfall come mainly from the south. Uprooting accounted
for 80 percent of the redwood windfall in this study (7).
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Seed Production and Dissemination
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Redwoods start to bear seeds
when 5 to 15 years old (8). One study showed that seed viability increased
with the age of parent trees (38,39). Maximum seed viability was reached
when trees were more than 250 years old. Seeds produced by trees younger
than 20 years generally were less than 1 percent viable, and seeds from
trees more than 1,200 years old were not more than 3 percent viable.
Redwoods produce abundant seeds almost every year. Even trees in the
intermediate crown class often produce seed crops. Fair to abundant crops
were produced in 5 consecutive years in north coastal California (8).
Cones often are rare, however, or nonexistent on large areas for many
years in stands in Mendocino County, CA (central part of the range). Large
mature stands on Maui, HI, have few or no cones or pollen (27).
Trees with new, narrow crowns resulting from sprouting of dormant buds
after fire has killed the crown produce few cones during the first 4 years
after the fire. About one-half such narrow-crowned trees, locally called
fire-columns, bear cones in the fifth year, and almost all produce cones
by the seventh or eighth year.
The germination rate of redwood seeds is usually low. Poor germination
often results from a low percentage of sound seeds (less than 15 percent)
rather than from dormancy. When obviously defective seeds are removed,
germination rarely is below 80 percent, and is sometimes 100 percent (27).
Identification of defective seeds often is difficult, however, because
many seeds appearing sound are filled with tannin. In one seed study,
soundness varied significantly with seed size. Seeds passing 12, 10, and 8
mesh screens were 2, 8, and 15 percent sound, respectively. Seeds from
seven populations were photographed by X-ray. The distribution in
categories was as follows: seeds empty or tannin filled, 58 to 97 percent;
seeds from embryos damaged by fungi, 0 to 11 percent; and sound seeds, 1
to 32 percent (38,39).
Although only scant evidence is recorded on storage of redwood seeds,
they do not seem to store well. One seed lot was stored successfully for 3
years but lost its viability completely after 5 years (19).
Redwood cones dry readily under conditions of low humidity and quickly
release their seeds with slight shaking. But because weather conditions at
cone ripening in nature usually are unfavorable for rapid drying, seed
dispersal may be spread over periods that vary considerably in length.
Rains, however, may hasten seed dissemination. One observer found in many
instances that redwood seeds remained in the open cones until a drenching
rain dissolved the tannic crystals in the cones (38,39). Seed
dissemination during the winter months seems characteristic of redwood in
the northern stands. More than four-fifths of the sound seeds in one study
were shed during December and January.
Redwood seeds are small and light, number about 265,000/kg (120,000/lb),
but lack efficient wings to slow them in falling (10). They fall at rates
between 1.5 and 6.2 m/s (4.9 and 20.5 ft/s), averaging 2.6 m/s (8.6 ft/s).
These rates are faster than for most other wind-disseminated forest seeds
and limit seed dispersal considerably.
Timbered edges of clearcut units have effective seeding distances of
only 61 m (200 ft) uphill and 122 m (400 ft) downhill under average
redwood stand conditions. A recent study in Del Norte County, CA, showed
that the largest clearcut units should not be more than 12 to 16 ha (30 to
40 acres) if regeneration will be completed by natural seeding (38,39). No
silvicultural reasons exist for restricting the size of clearcuts, if
areas are regenerated by artificial methods. Maximum size of clearcuttings
is specified in Forest Practice Rules, based on erosion hazard, or other
criteria.
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Seedling Development
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Redwood seeds, generally, are ready to
germinate soon after they fall to the ground if seedbeds are moist and the
weather is warm enough. Redwood seeds do not require pretreatment to
germinate, but germination speed is increased by an overnight soak in
aerated water (27). Mineral soil is the best seedbed, but seeds will
germinate readily in duff, on logs, in debris, or under other vegetation,
and in either shade or full sunlight if adequate soil moisture is
available. Redwood seed germination is epigeal.
New redwood seedlings require a greater supply of soil moisture for
survival than that needed by seedlings of most associated trees (19). Late
spring and early fall rains can be critical survival factors. Apparently,
redwoods have no root hairs. Consequently, redwood roots do not seem to
function efficiently in extracting soil moisture. This fact may limit
natural distribution to sites where favorable water relations result from
high rainfall, humid air, moist soil, or low summer temperatures, or from
various combinations of these conditions. Redwood seedlings on fully
exposed soil can withstand considerable surface heat if their roots have
reached a permanent moisture supply. Otherwise, they die before soil
surface temperatures reach 60° C (140° F). Redwood seedlings are
extremely vulnerable to infection by damping-off and Botrytis fungi during
their first year (22).
In its early stages, redwood grows rapidly in height. Seedlings often
grow about 46 cm (18 in) in the first season and trees 4 to 10 years old
sometimes grow 0.6 to 2.0 m (2 to 6.5 ft) in a year. In many instances,
however, rapid height growth of trees that originate from seed does not
commence until the trees are more than 10 years old.
Juvenile growth of redwood is best in full sunlight. Although redwood
seedlings can endure heavy shade, growth there is slow. Photosynthetic
capacity in redwood is remarkably high at low light intensities and keeps
increasing as light intensity increases, much like more intolerant
species. Redwood grew vigorously in much weaker light than 12 other tree
species studied (38,39). For example, it increased its size 8.8 times in
10 percent of full sunlight in a 9-month period, more than twice the
growth of any of the other species in the test. For appreciable growth,
Engelmann spruce (Picea engelmannii) and Douglas-fir require twice
as much light as redwood. Pine requires three to four times as much.
Radial growth of redwood in Mendocino County, CA, at points 6, 14, and
32 km (4, 9, and 20 mi) from the coast did not vary markedly in growth
pattern. Radial growth began after mid-March, increased to a maximum in
late May, and then declined at a fairly uniform rate to a minimum at the
end of September. Radial growth was negligible from October 1 to March 15.
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Soils and Topography
provided by Silvics of North America
The parent rock material of the redwood region is largely massive marine
sandstone formed in the Tertiary and Upper Mesozoic periods. Considerable
shale and lesser amounts of Mesozoic limestones and Franciscan slates,
cherts, limestones, and sandstones also are present, and schists are
fairly common in some localities.
High-site soils for redwood consist of Xerochrepts, Haploxerults, and
Haplohumults of the Hugo, Josephine, Melbourne, Empire, Sites, and Larabee
series (orders Inceptisols and Ultisols) and associated alluvial soils.
The high-site residual soils have been derived from either consolidated or
soft sedimentary rocks. In the Coastal Forest Practice Act District of
California, which encompasses the natural range of redwood, the Hugo soil
series predominates. In current soil taxonomic terms, the Hugo series is a
Typic Distrochrept of the order Inceptisols (45,46). It is a member of a
loamy-skeletal, mixed, mesic family, typically pale brown, moderately
acid, gravelly (sandy) clay loam A horizons, and pale brown, strongly acid
gravelly (sandy) clay loam B horizons. Limits of redwood forests sometimes
are determined by soil types. For example, redwood does not grow on soils
having high amounts of magnesium and sodium.
Fertility of soils under redwood stands has been studied by measuring
the replaceable calcium concentration, expressed in equivalents, present
in a square meter (10.76 ft²) to a depth of 30 cm (12 in). This
measure indicates fertility best because it separates nutritional
properties from other environmental effects. Equivalents ranged from 4 to
more than 80, with 63 appearing to be optimum (49).
Soil nutrient levels that were observed to change during harvest of
old-growth or second-growth redwood recovered to nearly original values
during regrowth. In the one-meter soil profile, carbon, nitrogen,
phosphorus, and exchangeable potassium and sodium increased in amount,
while calcium decreased (52). Soil organic matter showed a small decline
and recovery after logging (18).
The lowest amount of soil moisture available during the year has been
related to minimum basal area growth of redwood stands. Basal area is used
as an index of stand development. This minimum available soil moisture,
expressed as a percentage of storage capacity, ranged between 18 and 86,
with 62 correlated with maximum basal area (49).
The redwood region, generally, is characterized by irregular ridges
oriented northwest to southeast with deep narrow valleys. Consequently,
the principal streams drain to the northwest. Much of the terrain is
rough, steep, and extremely dissected both by major streams and smaller
drainages. Redwoods grow from sea level to about 915 m (3,000 ft)
elevation, but most are found between 30 and 760 m (100 and 2,500 ft). The
best stands have developed on flats and benches along the larger streams,
on moist coastal plains, river deltas, moderate westerly slopes, and
valleys opening toward the sea.
Although most redwood stands are close to the ocean, redwood does not
tolerate ocean winds, and considerable evidence suggests that it is
sensitive to ocean salts carried inland during storms. Usually redwoods do
not grow on hillsides that face the ocean. The absence of redwood near the
ocean also may be caused by the absence of forest soils of sufficient
depth and fertility to support redwood.
Redwoods are smaller and give way to other species as altitude, dryness,
and slope increase. In the north, redwoods clothe all exposures and reach
their maximum development as forest trees. In the southern part of the
range, redwoods are restricted to western or northern exposures, and at
the extreme southern extension they are restricted almost entirely to the
bottoms of narrow canyons that cut through steep foothills abutting the
ocean. Trees near the mouths of these canyons often are exposed to onshore
winds and frequently have flat tops with dead limbs on the windward side.
This effect has been attributed to the trees' inability to replace
moisture lost through desiccation by winds.
On alluvial flats, where redwoods reach their maximum development, soils
have been built up by deposits of sediment from successive floods. In one
area the ground level has been raised 3.4 m (11 ft) in 700 years. In
another, repeated flooding in the past 1,000 years deposited nearly 9.1 m
(30 ft) of silt and gravel around the bases of many large redwood trees.
Deposits from a single flood have been as deep as 76 cm (30 in). Redwoods
adapt to the new ground levels by originating new and higher root systems
(43,51). This flooding generally kills competing species and thereby
allows redwood to maintain nearly pure stands on such plains.
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Special Uses
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Redwood is used where decay resistance is important. Clark and Scheffer
(14) found that decay resistance varied among trees or within the
heartwood of individual trees. Decay resistance decreased from outer to
inner hardwood. Wood classified as very decay resistant was about five
times more prevalent in old-growth than in young-growth trees.
A prominent special feature of the redwood is its production of burls
from which beautifully figured table tops, veneers, bowls, and other
turned products are cut. These burls are found on any part of the trunk
and in sizes varying from an inch to many feet in diameter. Their cause is
unknown. Small burls containing hundreds of dormant buds often are cut and
placed in shallow containers, kept moist, and allowed to sprout. These
live burls serve as attractive house plants.
Another feature of redwood is its extremely tough and fibrous bark. The
bark must be removed before logs reach the head saws so that sawing
uniform lumber will be possible. The bark is used as hog fuel, insulation,
or garden mulch.
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Vegetative Reproduction
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Redwood can be propagated by cuttings,
but few large-scale attempts of this kind have been reported. In an early
study in California, 40 percent of the cuttings from the tops of
fast-growing seedlings that had been pushed into forest nursery soil with
no special treatment developed root systems (38,39). Currently, rooting in
excess of 90 percent is obtained routinely, with mist in a favorable
medium, using juvenile cuttings from seedlings (27). Cuttings from older
trees are more difficult to root.
Studies in the past 10 years have improved the cutting procedure by
hedging-a technique that seems to maintain the juvenility of the donor
tree. A single seedling and its clonal descendants can produce about 1
million cuttings in 3 years by repeated hedging of seedlings and their
descendants (29).
Modern methods of plant tissue culture also have propagated redwood
successfully (3). Tissues from outstanding mature trees may be cultured in
nutrient medium, becoming undifferentiated masses of cells or callus. In
different nutrient media, fragments of the callus can be induced to
differentiate into small plants. When these plants become large enough,
juvenile cuttings can be taken from them (30). In France, scientists have
found that shoots of redwood 10 to 20 mm (0.4 to 0.8 in) long are the best
reactive material for producing explants, with fragments of the annual
shoots being more reactive than the annual sprouts of 2-year-old shoots
(13). Tissue cultured plantlets are generally twice the size of seedlings
of the same age (2).
Redwood can sprout from stumps and root crowns anytime of the year.
Numerous and vigorous sprouts originate from both dormant and adventitious
buds within 2 to 3 weeks after logging. Sprouting capacity is related to
variables associated with tree size or age. Stumps of small young trees
sprout more readily than those of large old trees (35). Stumps often are
circled by more than 100 sprouts. Many sprouts may be necessary to sustain
a healthy stump-root system (4,15). Powers and Wiant (37) found that
sprout vigor was related to sprout density. Sprout vigor was reduced at
densities less than one sprout per 2 feet of stump circumference. Each
sprout soon develops its own root system, and in a remarkably short time
the dominant sprouts create circles of new trees around the old stumps.
Depending on the intensity of thinning or partial cutting in redwood,
sprouts grow and develop successfully in openings (11,31). A recent study
showed that more than 90 percent of all redwood stumps sprouted in a
40-year-old redwood stand thinned to 25, 50, and 75 percent of the initial
basal area. Consequently, all thinned stands contained several hundred
redwood sprout clumps per acre, and several thousand individual sprouts.
The heavier the thinning, the more sprouts developed into vigorous young
crop trees (31).
Sprouting by redwood is principally from root crowns, but sprouts
sometimes grow from the sides and tops of stumps. These high sprouts are
less desirable because they are mechanically weak and not as vigorous as
root-crown sprouts. Sprouts originating from the sides and top of stumps
often are destroyed by strong wind.
Sprouts are commonly about 60 to 90 cm (24 to 36 in) tall at the end of
the first year but may be more than 1.8 m (6 ft) tall. In one instance, a
fire killed all sprouts around a stump. About 300 new sprouts appeared
within a few days, and at the end of one growing season many reached 2.1 m
(7 ft). Sprouts grow more rapidly than seedlings and the initial impetus
lasts many years. However, the best phenotypes at age 40 to 80 in stands
originating from both sprouts and seedlings often are found to be of
seedling origin (27).
Early estimates of stocking from root crown sprouts varied from 20 to 35
percent of full stocking. A later study showed that redwood sprouts on old
growth cutover redwood land in Mendocino and Humboldt Counties, CA,
provided only 8 percent of full stocking. This finding is low compared to
more recent stand examinations where the majority of redwood stems in 163
moderately to fully stocked young growth stands originated from sprouts
(33).
Redwood can also sprout along almost the entire length of its trunk. If
the crown of a tree is destroyed by fire or mechanically damaged, or the
stem is suddenly exposed to light, numerous dormant buds along the trunk
are stimulated and produce new foliage. Most of the trunk is then covered
by feathery foliage extending 0.6 to 0.9 m (2 to 3 ft) from the trunk.
Eventually, normal crowns develop again.
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Distribution
provided by Silvics of North America
The range of redwood extends southward from two groves on the Chetco
River in the extreme southwest corner of Oregon (lat. 42° 09' N.), to
Salmon Creek Canyon in the Santa Lucia Mountains of southern Monterey
County, CA (lat. 35° 41' N.). This redwood belt is an irregular
coastal strip about 724 km (450 mi) long and generally 8 to 56 km (5 to 35
mi) wide (39). Within this region, redwood trees grow now, or could grow,
on an estimated 647 500 ha (1.6 million acres). Of this area, 260 200 ha
(643,000 acres) comprise the commercial coast redwood forest type (more
than 50 percent redwood stocking). The remainder of the area contains
parks, other forest types containing redwood, and recently logged redwood
type (12). The old-growth redwood, much of which is in State and National
Parks, occupies less than 80 940 ha (200,000 acres) (36). The old-growth
in commercial forests will be harvested within the next few decades. A
major discontinuity splits the type in southern Humboldt County, CA. South
of Sonoma County, CA, redwoods grow in detached and irregular areas to the
southern extremity of the range (38,39).
- The native range of redwood.
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Brief Summary
provided by Silvics of North America
Taxodiaceae -- Redwood family
David F. Olson, Jr., Douglass F. Roy, and Gerald A. Walters
Redwood (Sequoia sempervirens), also called coast redwood and
California redwood, is native to the central and northern California
coast, a region of moderate to heavy winter rain and summer fog so vital
to this tree. It is one of three important North American trees of the
family Taxodiaceae. Close relatives are the giant sequoia (Sequoiadendron
giganteum) of the Sierra Nevada in California and the baldcypress (Taxodium
distichum) of the southeastern states.
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