North America's former western edge; conservation biology versus restoration ecology
The
ranges to the west of the Greater Yellowstone portion of the South Central
Rockies forest have more maritime influence and have a few maritime species
such as grand fir. However, overall these are dry forests with open canopy of
Douglas-fir, ponderosa pine in the canyons, and a sagebrush-forest interface at
lower elevations. The canyons of the Salmon, Middle Fork Salmon, South Fork
Salmon, and Payette are hot and dry, with ponderosa pine, sagebrush, and
grasses. The Sawtooth Valley in the Sawtooth National Recreation Area is a high
glacial drift-filled valley with wet meadows, grasslands, and ponderosa pine.
To the east, the Boulder and Pioneer Mountains in the Challis and Sawtooth
National Forests are dry and partly wooded mountains with open Douglas-fir and
shrubland vegetation. Open canopies of Douglas-fir at higher elevations, and
sagebrush-grass vegetation are characteristic of the barren mountains in the
Lost River, Lemhi, and the Beaverhead Mountains, included in parts of the
Challis, Salmon, and Targhee National Forests (McGrath et al. 2001).
The
westernmost part of the area is made up of the Salmon River Mountains, a 100-
by 200-mile granite range. The Blue Mountains are believed to have joined to
western North America about 100 million years ago. This was followed by crustal
and mantle melting and granite formation. Granite in the southern portions dates
to 83 million years ago, and the northern portions date to 70 million years
ago. The present-day valley traversed by US 95 and State Route 55 from Boise
north to the Salmon River forms the western boundary of the Idaho batholith. This
valley follows the Salmon River suture zone, which separates the North American
crust to the east from the Blue Mountains, which are a collage of island arc
structures. By 51 million years ago, crustal extension produced the Challis
volcanic area to the east of the batholith area (Gaschnig et al. 2011). The
Salmon River Mountains are unique in that there is not a distinct trend or
dominating crest. The easternmost outcrops of the Idaho batholith include the
Anaconda and Sapphire blocks. These areas slid off toward the east and consist
of batholith, granites, and sediments bulldozed up against their northeast
corner (Schmidt and Schmidt 2000).
Mountains
of the Montana portion of this ecoregion range from heavily forested to forest
grassland mosaic but tend to have a vegetation of subalpine fir, Douglas-fir
and ponderosa pine. Prominent ranges in Montana are the Anaconda, Beaverhead,
Flint Creek, Garnet, Pioneer, and Sapphire Mountains. The mountains of the
Beaverhead National Forest along the southwestern Montana border with Idaho are
dry and open canopy to grassland-dominated with limited forest areas (Woods et
al. 1999).
In this
ecoregion, fire management is a critical land management issue. Following the
big burn of 1910 in northern Idaho and northwestern Montana, most forests were
subsequently managed for fire suppression.
Fuels accumulated, many forests are now perhaps more vulnerable to
wildfire than at any time in the past, and wildfires are increasing in
frequency and extent. Going forward, to make the transition to more natural
fire regimes, which potentially involves forest management and occasional
fires, there is a potential tension with watershed disruption. On the one hand,
forest management and fire contributes nutrients, wood, and habitat diversity
to streams. On the other hand, these disruptions can be detrimental in the
short term to water quality and watershed processes, thus harming rare aquatic
species. Rieman et al. (2010) describe this as a tension between conservation
biology and restoration ecology. Maintenance of ecological processes is needed
in some areas, restoration of more natural systems is needed in others, and
control to maintain systems in a particular state is needed in still others. Across
larger landscapes, there should be room for all three approaches. One such area
is the South Fork Boise River basin, in the Boise and Sawtooth National
Forests. The South Fork Boise watershed includes a variety of forest types and
habitats for native salmonid fishes, along with a range of landscapes from
pristine to highly altered. There was no
fire in this area for most of the 20th century. Dry and highly
altered forests coincide with high road density, and these areas are where
watersheds are most highly altered. The focus in these areas can be the
restoration of fire regimes through continued or increased management. Where
forest landscapes are in good condition, road density is also low and aquatic
habitats also tend to be in good condition. Management can focus on wildland
fire use and maintenance of aquatic ecological processes (Rieman et al. 2010).
There is one National
Historic Landmark in the Idaho Batholith section of the South Central
Rockies forests. Lemhi Pass (site 1),
Beaverhead National Forest, Montana, and Salmon National Forest, Idaho (N44˚38’
W113˚27’), is the site where, on August 12, 1805, a party of the Lewis and
Clark expedition led by Meriwether Lewis stood at the pass, the western
boundary of Louisiana, and looked over Spanish territory. It remained the
western boundary of the US until 1846. Lewis and his party were the first
Americans to cross the Continental Divide. It was near here that the expedition
also met up with a band of Shoshoni. By extraordinary luck, the Shoshoni chief
was Sacajawea’s brother, who was able to offer supplies and horses. The grade
to the pass on the eastern Montana side is gentle, and the elevation is 7,373
feet, making it an obvious lower elevation choice to cross the divide. However,
the Salmon River Mountains block the way to the west, making the historic trail
off the beaten path of modern transportation. Today the site is 12 miles east
of Tendoy, Idaho. The pass is a site on the Lewis and Clark National Historic
Trail and is crossed by the Continental Divide National Scenic Trail.
References
Gaschnig,
Richard M., Jeffrey D. Vervoort, Reed S. Lewis, and Basil Tikoff. 2011.
Isotopic Evolution of the Idaho Batholith and Challis Intrusive
Province, Northern U.S. Cordillera. Journal of Petrology 52:2397-2429.
McGrath,
C.L., A.J. Woods, J.M. Omernik, S.A. Bryce, M. Edmondson, J.A. Nesser, J.
Shelden, R.C. Crawford, J.A. Comstock, and M.D. Plocher. 2001.
Ecoregions of Idaho (color poster with map, descriptive text, summary
tables, and photographs). Reston,
Virginia, U.S. Geological Survey (map scale 1:1,350,000).
Rieman,
Bruce E., Paul F. Hessburg, Charles Luce, and Matthew R. Dare. 2010.
Wildfire and Management of Forests and Native Fishes: Conflict or Opportunity for Convergent Solutions? BioScience
60:460-468.
Schmidt,
Jeremy and Thomas Schmidt. 2000. Guide to
America’s Outdoors: Northern Rockies.
National Geographic Society, Washington, DC.
Woods,
Alan J., James M. Omernik, John A. Nesser, J. Shelden, and Sandra H.
Azevedo. 1999. Ecoregions of Montana (color poster with map,
descriptive text, summary tables, and photographs). Reston, Virginia, U.S. Geological Survey (map
scale 1:1,500,000).
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