Wild Bird
Habitats
Eastern
Forest Cover Type Groups
Eastern
White-Red-Jack Pine. Eastern white pine (Pinus
strobus), red pine (Pinus resinosa),
or jack pine (Pinus banksiana) composes
most of the stocking. The northeastern and Lake
States pine types all occur as essentially pure
stands, usually on lighter soils. Eastern white
pine occurs from the Canadian Maritime Provinces,
across the Lake States to Manitoba, and down the
Appalachian Mountains to Georgia. It is
shade-tolerant and also occurs as a scattered
tree in other types, and on many soils. Red pine
is most extensive in the Lake States and southern
Ontario, and also extends east to New England,
Quebec, and the Maritime Provinces, where it
usually occurs on small outwash areas, rocky
slopes, or hilltops. It is shade-intolerant, and
occurs in even-age stands. Jack pine is mainly
found in the Lake States; it characteristically
originates after fire and is a short-lived,
intolerant pioneer on dry, sandy soils.
Red
Spruce-Balsam Fir. Red spruce (Picea
rubens) or balsam fir (Abies balsamea)
composes most of the stocking. These species
frequently occur together from the Maritimes and
adjacent Quebec, northern New England, New York,
and the Appalachians. Either may be pure or
compose a majority of the stocking; paper birch (Betula
papyrifera), aspen (Populus tremuloides
and P. grandidentata), red maple (Acer
rubrum), eastern white pine, and northern
white cedar (Thuja occidentalis) are
common associates. Red spruce is long-lived and
shade-tolerant; disturbance creates conditions
favorable for establishment of balsam fir.
Longleaf
Pine-Slash Pine. Longleaf pine (Pinus
palustris) or slash pine (P. elliottii)
composes a majority of the stocking. This type
occurs on the Gulf and Atlantic coastal plains
from Louisiana to South Carolina, on a range of
sites from sandy ridges to poorly drained
flatwoods. Excluding fire allows slash pine to
become established, and hardwoods and shrubs
commonly proliferate. Where longleaf pine stands
are treated with prescribed fire, an open
understory results.
Loblolly
Pine-Shortleaf Pine. Loblolly (Pinus taeda)
and shortleaf (P. echinata) pines together
compose the majority of the stocking. Loblolly
pine predominates except on drier sites; the type
occurs from Delaware south along the Atlantic
coastal plain and Piedmont to Florida and west
along the Gulf coastal plain to east Texas.
Typically found on moist sites, it spreads to
drier sites if fire is controlled. The type is
succeeded by upland oaks.
Oak-Pine.
Upland oaks and pines (usually loblolly or
shortleaf) each comprise 25 percent of the
stocking. Oak and pine types generally occur from
east Texas to Georgia on upland sites on the Gulf
coastal plain and Piedmont, and north in smaller
areas through the Appalachians to include table
mountain pine (P. pungens)-oak, Virginia
pine (P. virginiana)-oak, and pitch pine (P.
resinosa)-oak types.
Oak-Hickory.
Upland oaks and hickories (Carya spp.)
compose most of the stocking, and pines
constitute less than 25 percent of the stocking.
Oak-hickory forests occur across a wide
geographic range from Texas, Missouri, and Iowa
to southern New England, with many oak and other
hardwood species involved under various
physiographic conditions.
Oak-Gum-Cypress.
In these bottomland forests of the lower
Mississippi River Valley and those of its major
tributaries from the Ohio River south, tupelo (Nyssa),
blackgum (N. sylvatica), sweetgum (Liquidambar
styraciflua), oak (Quercus), or bald
cypress (Taxodium distichum), singly or in
combination, compose most of the stocking; pines
contribute less than 25 percent of the stocking.
Elm-Ash-Cottonwood.
Elm (Ulmus), ash (Fraxinus),
cottonwood (Populus deltoides), or red
maple compose most of the stocking in these
forests. Common associates in river bottoms
(especially the Missouri River drainage) are
sycamore (Platanus) and willow (Salix).
On uplands, including those in Lake States,
western New York, and southern New England,
common associates are red maple (Acer rubrum)
and American beech (Fagus grandifolia).
Northern
Hardwoods. Sugar (Acer saccharum) or
red maple, American beech, or yellow birch (Betula
alleghaniensis), singly or in combination,
compose most of the stocking. The northern
hardwood type group varies geographically in its
composition. It extends from the Maritimes
through Wisconsin and south through the central
Appalachians. Sugar maple is characteristic of
the type group. Beech is absent in much of its
western extent and on wetter sites in the East,
where red maple and yellow birch also become
common. Balsam fir and red spruce are common
associates in the Northeast, aspen is common
throughout; northern red oak (Quercus rubra),
white ash (Fraxinus americana), eastern
white pine, paper birch, and eastern hemlock (Tsuga
canadensis) are commonly associated in the
central and southern parts of the range, where
the type is often called mixed woods.
Aspen-Birch.
Quaking and bigtooth aspens or paper birch
compose a majority of the stocking. Aspen and
paper birch are transcontinental in distribution.
Both are pioneer types that establish after fire
and clearcutting. Aspen is unique in that almost
all stands regenerate from root suckers. The type
is short-lived and is succeeded on dry sites by
red pine, red maple, or oaks; on intermediate
sites by white pine; on moist fertile sites by
northern hardwoods; and on the wettest sites by
balsam fir. Paper birch is succeeded by
spruce-fir in the northern parts of its range and
by northern hardwoods and eastern hemlock on
well-drained, fertile sites elsewhere.
Birds
Ocurring in Eastern Forest Types
Western
Forest Cover Type Groups
Douglas-fir.
Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii)
composes most of the stocking. Common associates
are western hemlock (Tsuga heterophylla),
western redcedar (Thuja plicata), true
firs (Abies), redwood (Sequoia
sempervirens), ponderosa pine (Pinus
ponderosa), and larch (Larix). The
type group predominates in the Pacific Northwest,
but also occurs (decreasing southward) throughout
the Rocky Mountains south to northern New Mexico.
Hemlock-Sitka
Spruce. Western hemlock and/or Sitka spruce (Picea
sitchensis) compose most of the stocking.
Common associates include Douglas-fir, silver fir
(Abies amabilis), and western redcedar.
The type comprises the coastal forests of
Washington and Oregon.
Redwood.
Redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) composes
most of the stocking. The type is restricted to
the California fog belt, extending from
southernmost Oregon south along the Pacific Coast
to the Santa Lucia Mountains. The type extends
inland to the reaches of coastal fogs. Common
associates are Douglas-fir, grand fir (Abies
grandis), and tanoak (Lithocarpus
densiflorus).
Ponderosa Pine.
Ponderosa pine composes most of the stocking.
Common associates in the western part of the
range (California, Oregon) include Jeffrey (P.
jeffreyi), and sugar (P. lambertiana)
pines; to the north, Douglas-fir and
incense-cedar (Libocedrus decurrens); to
the east, limber (P. flexilis), Arizona (P.
ponderosa var. arizonica), and
Chihuahua (P. leiophylla var.
chihuahuana) pines; and throughout, white fir
(Abies concolor). The type is generally
distributed to the west, north, and east of the
Great Basin and the deserts of the Southwest.
Western White
Pine-Larch. Western white pine (Pinus
monticola) composes most of the stocking. The
type attains its best development in northern
Idaho and northwestern Montana. Common associates
include western redcedar, larch, white fir,
Douglas-fir, lodgepole pine (P. contorta),
and Engelmann spruce (Picea engelmannii).
Such admixtures produce the "mixed
conifer" type, as it is known locally.
Western larch (Larix occidentalis)
comprises a plurality of the stocking in some
areas between the Columbia River in eastern
Washington and the west slopes of the Rocky
Mountains in Montana. Common associates are
Douglas-fir, grand fir, western redcedar, and
western white pine.
Lodgepole Pine.
Lodgepole pine composes most of the stocking; the
mid-elevation type occurs to 11,000 feet in the
Rocky Mountains, to 11,500 feet in California,
and to 6,000 feet in Oregon and Washington. Best
development is on moist, sandy, or gravelly loam.
Common associates are subalpine fir (Abies
lasiocarpa), western white pine, Engelmann
spruce, aspen, and larch.
Fir-Spruce.
The true firs, Engelmann spruce, or Colorado blue
spruce (Picea pungens) compose most of the
stocking. Common associates are lodgepole pine
and, at high elevation, mountain hemlock (Tsuga
mertensiana).
Aspen-Hardwoods.
Aspen (Populus tremuloides) or red alder (Alnus
rubra) compose a majority of the stocking.
The aspen type is the most common and extensive
hardwood type in the western United States. It
occurs primarily at middle elevations on a
variety of sites in the Rocky Mountain
cordillera, where it is usually succeeded by
interior Douglas-fir. Aspen is usually first to
dominate burns and other disturbed areas, where
it produces even-aged stands. Where conifer seed
sources are absent, aspen may exist as a virtual
climax, where it vegetatively reproduces
repeatedly, developing into all-aged stands.
All western aspen
communities have an herbaceous understory,
commonly forbs, but sometimes grasses and sedges.
In the northern portion of the type range in the
West, willows, common bearberry, and buffaloberry
are common understory shrubs. Farther south,
snowberry, chokecherry, and western serviceberry
are more common.
Red alder is
essentially coastal and the most important
hardwood of the Pacific Northwest; best growth is
on moist, rich, loamy bottomlands.
Chaparral.
Chaparral consists of heavily branched, dwarfed
trees or shrubs, commonly evergreens, whose
canopy at maturity covers at least 50 percent of
the ground. Common constituent plants include
oaks (Quercus), Mountain-mahogany (Cercocarpus),
silktassel (Garrya), ceanothus (Ceanothus),
manzanita (Arctostaphylos), and chamise (Adlenostoma).
Pinyon-Juniper.
Pinyon pines (primarily P. edulis, P
cembroides, P monophylla) and junipers
(primarily Juniperus osteosperma, J. deppeana,
and J. monosperma) compose most of the
stocking. This type is widely distributed
throughout the semiarid West, usually on dry,
shallow, rocky soils of mesas, benches, and
canyon walls.
Birds
Ocurring in Western Forest Types
Eastern
Open, Wetland, Plains, Deserts, and Other
Nonforest Habitats
Field, Glade,
Orchard. Primarily grass, hayfields,
abandoned agricultural land, and fruit orchards
with grassy ground cover.
Pasture, Wet or
Sedge Meadow. Agricultural lands that are too
wet, steep, or rocky for crops; meadows dominated
by grasses or sedges (Carex spp.) with
soils that are saturated or seasonally flooded.
Fresh Marsh,
Pond. Palustrine and lacustrine wetlands,
permanently flooded, containing emergents such as
cattails (Typha), bullrushes (Scirpus),
rushes (Juncus), and floating-leaved
plants: spatterdock (Nuphar) and water
lily (Nymphaea).
Wooded Swamp,
Bog, Shrub Swamp. Palustrine, forested
wetlands, either needle-leaved evergreen or
broad-leaved deciduous; dominant plants are
Atlantic white-cedar (Chamaecyparis thyoides),
black spruce (Picea mariana), or red
maple. Wooded swamps are seasonally or
permanently flooded; bogs are permanently
flooded.
Lake, Stream,
River. Stratified lacustrine wetlands;
permanently flowing watercourses of any width.
Sand Pine,
Scrub Oak. Southeastern and southern
woodlands on droughty, infertile, coarse-textured
or sandy soils that support any of the scrub oaks
(Q. laevis, Q. incana, Q. marilandica, or Q.
stellata var. margaretta) or sand pine
(Pinus clausa).
Pocosins.
Bay-swamp, and pond pine (Pinus serotina)
woodlands with boggy soils in which broadleaf
evergreens predominate: black gum (Nyssa
sylvatica var. biflora), persea (Persea
barbonia), magnolia (Magnolia virginiana),
gordonia (Gordonia lasianthus) and
associates, of pond pine, Atlantic white-cedar.
Everglades,
Mangroves. Palustrine wetlands in southern
Florida that are semi-permanently flooded,
dominated by saw grass (Cladium jamaicense);
estuarine, intertidal wetlands dominated by
mangrove (Rhizophora).
Alpine Tundra,
Krummholtz. Elevated slopes above timberline
characterized by low, shrubby, slow-growing woody
plants and a ground cover of boreal lichens,
sedges, and grasses; the transition zone from
subalpine forest to alpine tundra characterized
by dwarfed, wind-sheared trees.
Birds
Occuring in Eastern Nonforest Habitats (exclusive
of Great Plains)
Great Plains
Habitats
Gulf Prairies
and Marshes. Moderate to tall dense open
grasslands dominated by seacoast bluestem (Andropogon
littoralis) and coastal sacahuista (Spartina
spartinae).
East Texas
Prairies, Cross Timbers, Pineywoods, and Post Oak
Savanna. Open grassy savanna to dense
brushland occurring in north-central Texas;
pine-hardwood forest and grazing lands of east
Texas; midgrass prairie dominated by little
bluestem (Andropogon scoparius) and shin
oak (Quercus mohriana).
South Texas
Shrub-Grassland. Vegetation ranges from
desert grass-shrub vegetation in west Texas to
mixed oak savanna in the eastern Edwards Plateau
region to open grassland on the Rio Grande plain.
Southern
Plains. Open to moderately dense short
grasslands occurring from southeastern Colorado
and central Oklahoma south through eastern New
Mexico and Texas panhandle. Natural vegetation is
characterized by grama (Bouteloua) and
buffalo grass (Buchloe).
Central Plains.
Grasslands ranging from short grasses in the West
to tall grasses in the East. Includes the region
from southeastern Wyoming and northeastern
Colorado east through Indiana.
Northern
Plains. Plains region from north-central
Montana and northwestern Minnesota south to
southeastern Wyoming and northwestern lowa. Area
supports grassland vegetation dominated by
western wheatgrass (Agropyron smithii) and
needlegrass (Stipa) in the West and by
little bluestem in the East.
Wetland and
Riparian Habitats. All Great Plains wetland
and riparian habitats, including marshes, ponds,
lakes, streams, stock ponds, and woodlands
associated with wetlands.
Shelterbelts
and Woodlots. Planted bands of trees that
serve as windbreaks to protect fields or
farmsteads; other wooded areas surrounded by
agricultural lands.
Pine-Oak,
Brushy Woodland, Badlands-Juniper. Includes
dry woodlands of pines and oaks with or without a
brushy understory. Badlands-juniper region is
largely devoid of vegetation but may have
scattered junipers on suitable sites.
Birds
Occuring in Great Plains Habitats
Southwestern
and Western Nonforested Habitats
Relict Conifer
Forest, Madrean Evergreen Woodland.
Warm-temperate forests and woodlands in the
Southwest. Relict conifer forests consist of
small populations of cypress (Cupressus)
and closed-cone pines, bishop pine (Pinus
muricata), and knobcone pine (P. attenuata),
restricted to canyons and suitable slopes along
drainages. Madrean evergreen woodland is composed
primarily of evergreen oaks but includes madrean
pines.
Aspen.
Mid-elevation sites in the Great Basin consisting
of pure or nearly pure stands of quaking aspen.
Great Basin
Shrubsteppe. Open to dense stands of shrubs
and low trees, including big sagebrush (Artemisia
tridentata), saltbush (Atriplex
confertifolia), greasewood (Sarcobatus
vermiculatus), or creosote bush (Larrea
divaricata).
Sonoran Desert
Scrub. Open to dense vegetation of shrubs,
low trees, and succulents dominated by paloverde
(Cercidium microphyllum), pricklypear (Opuntia
spp.), and giant saguaro (Cereus giganteus).
Chihuahuan
Desert Scrub. Open stands of creosote bush
and large succulents (Ferocactus pringlei,
Echinocactus platyaconthus) in southern New
Mexico and southwest Texas.
Mohave Desert
Scrub. Located between the Great Basin desert
scrub and the Sonoran desert scrub, it is
intermediate between them, sharing plant species
of both but containing the endemic arboreal leaf
succulent, Joshua tree (Yucca brevifolia).
Desert Riparian
Deciduous Woodland, Marsh. Woodlands,
especially of cottonwoods, that occur where
desert streams provide sufficient moisture for a
narrow band of trees and shrubs along the
margins.
Annual
Grasslands, Farms. Grasslands dominated by
wild oat (Avena spp.), ripgut brome (Bromus
rigidus), soft chess (Bromus mollis),
bur clover (Medicago hispida), and filaree
(Erodium spp.) with less than 5 percent
woody cover.
River, Riparian
Woodland, Subalpine Marsh. Occurs at
elevations where stream conditions provide
sufficient permanent moisture for emergent
plants, or for a narrow band of deciduous trees
and shrubs; at low elevation characterized by
cottonwood and sycamore, at mid-elevation by
white alder (Alnus rhombifolia) and
bigleaf maple (Acer macrophyllum), and at
high elevation by willow.
Mountain and
Alpine Meadows. Sedges (Carex) and
grasslike plants (Heleocharis, Scirpus)
above treeline.
Birds
Occuring in Southwestern and Western Nonforest
Habitats
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