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W. Henry McNab, Southern Research Station,
and Steven A. Simon, National Forests in North Carolina. (Prepared for the Chattooga
Ecological Classification Guidebook)
The following discussion was excerpted from a document produced by the USDA
Forest Service in October 1995 entitled "Ecological Classifications Mapping
and Inventory for the Chattooga River Watershed." This study was funded through
the Chattooga River Basin Ecosystem Management Demonstration Project, which
was implemented by the Forest Service as a direct result of a proposal written
by the Chattooga River Watershed Coalition (CRWC). The CRWC's proposal included
a request that the Forest Service conduct scientific studies which could be
used to guide management of the watershed's national forests based on principles
of landscape ecology and conservation biology.
Climate, the statistical expression of daily weather events or the expected
weather (Bradley 1985), is one of the most important environmental factors affecting
biological relationships throughout the Chattooga River Basin. Historical climate
provides insight into the broad-scale distribution of flora and fauna present
today.
The current climate provides a basis for understanding the ecological patterns
and processes that must be considered in making decisions for resource management.
The following discussion presents an overview of past and present climatic relationships
in the Chattooga River Basin. This information provides a basis for understanding
the relationships expressed in the classification of ecological units.
Climatic History
The earth's climate has changed continually since the land surface formed,
about 4.6 million years before present (BP). However, the Quaternary Period,
from about 2 million years ago BP to the present, was a time of particularly
significant environmental change in the Chattooga Basin. During the Pleistocene
Epoch, from 2 million to 10,000 years BP and referred to as the Ice Age, at
least four major glacial episodes in the northern latitudes had a profound effect
on vegetation to the south. Following the Wisconsin glaciation, which ended
about 6,000 years ago, vegetation continued to respond to gradual climatic change.
Examination of climatic conditions and vegetation distribution during the recent
Quaternary Period provides insight into the current vegetation patterns. The
study of climate prior to instrumental measurements must be done indirectly
by examination of ice cores, marine sediments and glacial deposits, tree rings
and pollen analysis, and historical written records.
One of the most complete studies of Quaternary climate in the Southeastern
US was obtained by Delcourt (1979) from an analysis of pollen stratigraphy [the
arrangement of rocks in layers or strata] from sediment cores. This site was
on the eastern Highland Rim, near Nashville, Tennessee, at an elevation of 1,000
feet. Although this pollen record was recovered about 160 miles northwest of
the Chattooga area, the general climate and flora should be similar. The predominant
arboreal species by time period are listed below, with an interpretation of
the paleoclimate [ancient climate]:
25,000 +/- 3,000 yrs. BP: Cool but not severely cold climate, with sufficient
soil moisture to sustain growth; jack pine, spruce, fir, mixture of deciduous
trees.
19,000 to 16,300 yrs. BP: Full effects of Late Wisconsin continental glaciation;
cool, long winters and short growing season; boreal conifers (spruce, fir, jack
pine), some temperate deciduous taxa.
16,300 to 12,500 yrs. BP: Severity of winters diminished, growing season lengthened,
progressive warming trend; spruce, fir, oak, ash, ironwood, hickory, birch and
elm; sugar maple and beech present about 13,000 yrs. BP.
12,500 to 9,500 yrs. BP: Warm-temperate weather conditions; transition from
coniferous to deciduous forest;rapid expansion of mixed mesophytic forest species
including oaks, ash, ironwood, hickory, birch, walnut, elm,beech, sugar maple,
basswood, hemlock.
9,500 to 5,000 yrs. BP: Warming and drying trend during mid-Holocene; predominance
of warm temperature species including oaks, sweetgum, black gum, chestnut.
5,000 to 200 yrs. BP: Increased precipitation; species same as mid-Holocene.
200 yrs. BP to present: Similar climate; ragweed and red maple increased, along
with sedimentation from wide spread land clearing following European settlement.
Similar species composition and climatic inferences have been made from pollen
records at other sample sites in Georgia, North Carolina, and in northern states.
Watts (1980) suggests that low mountain crests in the Southern Appalachian Mountains
were not forested during the Late Wisconsin (22,000 - 13,500 BP), and provides
the following comparison of climate then and now (in parenthesis) for Columbia,
South Carolina: January average temperature 14 degrees F (46 degrees F); July
average 68 degrees (81 degrees F); number of frost-free days 114 (248); precipitation
41 inches (42 inches). Whitehead (1973) summarizes evidence from studies of
pollen at 14 sites, and in reconstruction of full-glacial vegetation concludes
that the Chattooga area consisted of a pine-dominated boreal forest with few
deciduous species.
Relatively little is known of the paleofauna [ancient fauna] associated with
the climate and flora in this area. Although no fossil discoveries are known
in the Chattooga, discoveries in other areas (Arizona and coastal North Carolina)
suggest that the American mastodon (Mammut americanum) was present as recently
as 8,000 yrs. BP. The mastodon and other large fauna might have been important
in extending the distribution of some tree species with large seeds, such as
osage orange and Kentucky coffee tree, as climate warmed following the retreat
of the glaciers (personal communication, Rodney Snedeker 8/95). Other large
ungulates probably included the woodland bison (Bovidae sp.). In addition to
climate influences on paleoflora, Native Americans are believed to have had
a significant influence on the structure of vegetative communities through their
use of fire, which indirectly affected distribution and composition of paleofauna.
Paleoclimatologists believe the earth's climate has gone through a number of
similar climatic cycles during the past several million years. The distribution
of species responded to each cycle, and continues to show long term changes
in climate. The restricted distribution of cool climate communities, such as
northern red oak and northern hardwoods, to a small area at the highest elevation
in the Chattooga Basin indicates that adjustments in ranges are continuing.
Current Climate
Our knowledge of the contemporary climate of the Chattooga River Basin is based
on a relatively short history of observations. Information is available from
a thin network of recording sites, usually located at lower elevations in mountainous
terrain, and occasional scientific articles that report unusual phenomena. Climate,
however, is one of the most important factors affecting ecological relationships
in the basin. Temperature influences length of growing season, evapotranspiration
[the total water loss from the soil, including that by direct evaporation and
that by transpiration from the surfaces of plants], and soil properties. Precipitation
quantity and seasonal distribution affect soil moisture relations and stream
flow. Many land management practices and concerns, such as stream sedimentation,
prescribed burning and forest regeneration are affected by the prevailing climate.
Description of the current climate of the Chattooga River Basin will be presented
below, following the structure of the Forest Service's national hierarchy of
terrestrial ecological units, beginning with subsections and extending through
land-type phases.
Current Climate of the Southern Blue Ridge Subsection
The geographic location of the Chattooga Basin in the Southern Blue Ridge Subsection
of the southeastern US allows climatic patterns to be controlled by three sources
of influence. First and most widespread are subtropical cyclonic disturbances
that originate west of the Mississippi River, or in the Gulf of Mexico, and
move in a northeasterly direction across the Atlantic states. The second source
is from warm, moisture-laden air currents from the Gulf of Mexico that produce
high rainfall when they rise and cool along the Blue Ridge escarpment. Third,
and most unpredictable, are remains of tropical cyclones known as hurricanes
that strike the Atlantic or Gulf coasts and occasionally follow a path near
the Chattooga River Basin. Precipitation along the escarpment above the Chattooga
Basin is highest in the US east of the Cascade Mountains of Washington and Oregon.
The prevailing climate of the Southern Blue Ridge Subsection consists of cool,
short winters, and long, warm, wet summers. Winter weather is largely controlled
by continental influences, where cold fronts move from west to east, often bringing
large amounts of precipitation and cool temperatures. Polar air masses are responsible
for several short periods when temperatures will reach below 10 degrees F. Minimum
daily mean temperatures occur during January. Precipitation occurring as snow
during mid winter is usually uncommon, happening perhaps only 3 days annually
and amounting to a small percentage of the annual total. During later winter,
climatic patterns begin to change due to maritime influences as low pressure
systems move north-easterly from the Gulf of Mexico and bring smaller amounts
of precipitation. Heavier snowfall occurs occasionally as a result of a low
pressure front from the Gulf meeting a cold air mass along the Blue Ridge escarpment.
During spring and early summer, weather patterns begin to shift toward control
by low pressure fronts from the Gulf, which can bring moderate amounts of precipitation.
Thunderstorms are more frequent as air temperature begins to peak; maximum daily
temperatures occur during July. During mid to late summer, weather patterns
are controlled by high pressure areas, sometimes referred to as the Bermuda
high, which blocks warm fronts from the Gulf. Brief to extended intervals of
drought can occur during mid to late summer. Occasionally, low pressure cells
with high rainfall, but low winds, occur in late summer as a result of hurricanes
from the Gulf. The complex topography of the Chattooga Basin, particularly the
orographic [having to do with mountains] effect presented by the Blue Ridge
escarpment, and proximity to weather pattern influences by the Gulf of Mexico
combine to result in areas of the highest precipitation in the eastern United
States [See Table 1].
The influence of hurricanes on the climate of the Chattooga basin, particularly
precipitation, is less predictable than continental weather patterns. The main
influence of hurricanes over oceans is from their high wind speeds, but winds
subside quickly over land and the major climatic influence changes to precipitation.
Because of their relatively slow movement, an area within the path of a tropical
cyclone can receive several days of precipitation with amounts of several inches
daily or more. Wind speeds decrease quickly as a hurricane travels inland, but
intense, fast moving hurricanes may occasionally bring winds of over 50 mph
to the Chattooga Basin. For example, this occurred in early October 1995 when
hurricane Opal followed a path across the Florida panhandle then northward over
Atlanta, bringing over 6 inches of rainfall and high winds resulting in considerable
downed trees. The orographic effects of the Blue Ridge escarpment can also increase
precipitation rates.
Based on records from 1871 to 1977, 847 tropical cyclones of various intensities
were recorded, but only six were charted as passing directly over the basin
after making landfall. However, because of the large areal extent of tropical
cyclones, which range in diameter from 100 to 600 nautical miles, those that
follow a path along the South Carolina coast (about 200 nautical miles eastward)
could also affect weather in the Chattooga Basin. During this 107-year interval,
103 tropical cyclones passed within 200 nautical miles of the basin. On the
average, we estimate the climate of the Chattooga Basin could be influenced
by a tropical cyclone for 65 years out of 100. About 34 percent of tropical
cyclones form during September, and about 22 percent each during August and
October.
Subregional climatic relations of an area 100 miles square and centered over
the Chattooga Basin were obtained from a forest atlas maintained by USDA Forest
Service (1990). Based on the 34-year average (1951-1984) from standard NOAA
weather stations, and interpolated at 0.5 degree intervals for monthly minimum
and maximum temperature and precipitation, the Chattooga River Basin has an
average annual temperature of about 57 degrees F. Average January temperature
is about 40 degrees F, and for July is about 75 degrees F. Precipitation ranges
from 52 inches at lower elevations, to over 70 inches at higher elevations along
the Blue Ridge escarpment in North Carolina. Orographic effects of the escarpment,
which rises about 1000 feet from the Appalachian piedmont, is largely responsible
for the difference in precipitation.
Land-type Associations; General Climate
More specific climatic data, adequate to compute 30-year normals, are available
for weather stations in three of the five land-type associations (TLAs) in the
Chattooga Basin: Long Creek, South Carolina; Clayton, Georgia; and Highlands,
North Carolina (NOAA 1990). Mean temperatures are highest and precipitation
is lowest at Long Creek. These relationships are reversed for Highlands, and
Clayton is intermediate. Precipitation is evenly distributed between the winter
and summer seasons at the three locations. Temperatures among the stations are
relatively uniform during the winter, and vary somewhat during the summer. The
effect of altitude on temperature is evident by comparing values for Highlands
with the other stations. Winter temperatures are slightly higher at Clayton
than Long Creek, even though the former is at a higher elevation and is farther
north. An explanation is unknown, but could result from the large intermountain
basin where Clayton is situated. The overall climate of the mountain uplands
has the same seasonal regime and pattern as that of the lowlands.
Detailed historical climatic data for precipitation from 1893 to 1957 is available
for Rock House, South Carolina in the upper part of the Chattooga Gorge LTA,
as reported by Dumond (1970). This station was located 1.7 miles southwest and
4.2 miles east-southeast of Highlands, North Carolina at an altitude of 3,100
feet. Precipitation during the 64-year period averaged 82 inches, and ranged
from 46 to 114 inches. Annual mean temperature averaged 54.9 degrees F, with
a range of about two degrees. Although no longer active, this station provides
an important record of annual, long-term variation of climate that is especially
important to document periodic drought in the Chattooga Basin. The Rock House
data records 1925 as a year of historic low precipitation and high maximum temperature.
Land-type
Because local topographic relief has a strong influence on climate, estimates
of climate conditions on land-types requires computer programs that use appropriate
relationships to extrapolate conditions from nearby stations. Specific climatic
relationships are not available for land-types in the Chattooga Basin.
Land-type Phase
Land-type phases are the smallest ecological unit in the hierarchy. Characterization
of climate for LTPs will require use of on-site instrumentation.
Extreme Weather Conditions
Hursh and Haasis (1931) documented effects of the 1925 drought on arborescent
[treelike in shape or growth; branching] species in the Southern Appalachians
near Asheville, North Carolina at an altitude of 2,100 to 2,600 feet. Summer
precipitation (June-August) averaged 12.5 inches for the period 1903-1929, but
only 3.0 inches was recorded in 1925. Reduced radial growth and high mortality
was observed four years following the drought in black oak (Quercus velutina),
scarlet oak (Q. coccinea) and red oak (Q. borealis). Chestnut oak, (Q. montana),
hickories (Carya spp.) and pines (Pinus echinata and P. rigida) showed little
effects. Mortality was highest on areas with shallow soils of 18 to 20 inches
in depth. They concluded that drought is a significant factor affecting composition
and distribution of tree species in the Southern Appalachians.
Neary and Swift (1987) reported on effects of intense and heavy rainfall on
land disturbance caused by debris avalanching in the Southern Appalachian Mountains
near Asheville. A storm system from the Gulf of Mexico, with an estimated return
interval of about 100 years, occurred during early November 1977. During a 3-day
period, some areas reported over 10 inches of rainfall. The heavy rainfall associated
with this storm caused a number of debris avalanches, particularly on areas
with steep (70%) slopes and shallow residual soils of less than 36 inches in
depth. High rainfall is a climatic factor associated more with shallow soil
erosion and water quality, than with the distribution of vegetation.
Other Climatic Relationships
In an early study of orographic effects on precipitation throughout the Southern
Appalachian region, Donley and Mitchell (1939) found considerable variation
within uniform geographic zones that was not associated with altitude, but which
appeared to be related to local topographic effects that could not be quantified.
Dickson (1959) studied the effect of altitude on climatic variables in the Southern
Appalachian Mountains, and presented regression models for estimating temperature,
length of growing season, precipitation, and evapotranspiration at un-instrumented
sites. The relationship of rainfall with altitude was poorer than for temperature.
Dickson mentions a "spillover" effect on narrow ridges where updrafts carry
precipitation over the crest to the leeward slope, which results in less than
average rainfall on some ridgetops. Billings and Anderson (1966) measured soil
moisture on an exposed, narrow, pine-dominated ridge, and reported that "the
ridge is a local area of regular microclimatic drought," even in a region where
annual precipitation exceeds 100 inches.
In parts of the Chattooga Basin, Helvey and others (1972) investigated soil
moisture in relation to slope position and soil depth during the growing season.
They found that a simple sine function accurately describes annual soil moisture
trends, because growing and dormant seasons are almost equal in length and rainfall
is evenly distributed during the year. During a 20-day summer drought, soil
moisture losses on all slope positions are about three times greater than for
non-drought periods; however, ridges lose about 25 percent more soil moisture
than coves.
In a nearby area of higher elevations (1610 to 1855 meters) outside the Chattooga
Basin, Smathers (1982) evaluated the contribution of fog condensing on vegetation
to annual precipitation. He reported that fog increased precipitation from about
50 to 90 percent in mixed hardwood-conifer and heath balds, respectively. These
results suggest that even at lower elevations where fog may be less common,
precipitation increase from condensation could be a factor that influences soil
moisture gradients.
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