Photographs of Old Growth Red Oak
and Red Spruce stands on the
Chebucto Peninsula (Nova Scotia)

These photos are posted to complement an article published in The Bridge
(Five Bridges Wilderness Heritage Trust Newsletter for November 2009)

See text

GOOD NEWS: On October 19th, 2009, the Nova Scotia government declared the Five Bridge Lake Wilderness Area a Candidate Wilderness Area. On Oct. 25, 2012, after a year of public consultations, the area was formally designated under the Wilderness Protection Act. So these two old growth forest stand are now legally protected as part of the Five Bridge Lakes Wilderness Area


View slide presentation by David Patriquin/Nick Hill on Multi-aged old growth red oak stand on the Chebucto Peninsula at Mersey Tobeatic Research Institute Old Forest Conservation Science Meeting (Debert NS, Oct 19-21, 2016).

Abstract:
A Rapid Appraisal study was conducted July 21-22, 2009 to verify existence of and characterize an OG red oak stand on Umlah Hill southeast of Oak Hill Lake. It had been known years ago by Ralph Wheadon as a NSDNR employee and fire warden for the area. The site was visited again on Sep 3-4, 2011 to look for charcoal in soil profiles. The study was supported in part by Five Bridges Wilderness Heritage Trust.

The stand has features of a multi-aged, old growth oak forest with snags and fallen dead in a range of diameters and distinct moose maple and witch hazel subcanopies. The overstory is made up mostly of red oak, some yellow birch, occasional white birch; red maple was common, but tended to be in the subcanopy/overgrown by oak. The stand covers approximately 15 ha. Cores indicate the larger trees are over 100 years of age. We observed scat from mainland moose as well as evidence of the brown bear and many cavities in snags. Some adjacent areas support younger oak stands with some, but not all of these features.

Soil profiles revealed charcoal layers in adjacent areas supporting younger oak stands, but not at Umlah Hill, which appears to have escaped area fires by being relatively isolated and surrounded by wetland. Wind induced tree top damage continuously causes decay in the tallest oaks and these produce single tree light gaps and valuable habitat for a suite of snag-dependent wildlife. This mature forest is thus composed not of trees of several centuries old, but of younger trees yet the forest has the same characteristics of typical OG. This type of old growth red oak forest is apparently now rare within the whole range of red oak in North America.