The indicator measures the relative proportion of land covered by riparian hardwoods species which include alder, aspen, willow, cottonwood, and dogwood and are associated with moist soils adjacent to streams, springs, wetlands, and small lakes. The relative proportion of the riparian hardwoods is important as this vegetation type enhances vegetation richness in the Region, provides habitat for a relatively high diversity of wildlife species (including sensitive species) and is resilient to natural disturbances such as flooding and fire. TRPA has adopted several policies and ordinances designed to promote the conservation and protection of existing deciduous vegetation types and Environmental Improvement Program partners have implemented numerous deciduous riparian restoration and enhancement projects, restoring or enhancing aspen habitat.
Estimated percent of land area occupied by deciduous riparian vegetation in the Lake Tahoe Region. Changes in the percent cover are a result of different interpretations of the baseline amount of undisturbed vegetation and changing mapping techniques/resolution, not necessarily actual changes in vegetation type. Sources: (USDA, 2010)
Data provided by the USDA Forest Service, R5 Remote Sensing Lab. Access detailed datasets on Tahoe Open Data, including, vegetation type summary, vegetation spatial data, and detailed vegetation attributes.
Vegetation Distribution in the Tahoe Region - 2010 Ecobject.
This indicator measures the relative proportion of land covered by riparian hardwoods (known as deciduous riparian vegetation) in the Tahoe Region. This vegetation grouping is commonly associated with moist soils adjacent to streams, springs, wetlands and small lakes (Potter, 2005). Species considered to be riparian hardwood include alder, aspen, willow, cottonwood, and dogwood. The relative proportion of riparian hardwoods is important because this vegetation type enhances vegetation richness in the Region, provides habitat for a relatively high diversity of wildlife species (including sensitive species) and is rare in the Lake Tahoe Region (Manley and Schlesinger, 2001; Murphy and Knopp, 2010). Riparian hardwoods are also resilient to natural disturbance such as flooding and fire (Sheppard et al., 2006). This indicator does not measure the condition or vigor of riparian hardwoods.
Moist soils, direct sunlight and natural disturbance influence the abundance and distribution of riparian hardwoods. Fire suppression has allowed encroachment of shade-tolerant white fir into areas previously dominated by riparian hardwood species.The Angora Fire and more recent Caldor Fire, have created large openings where these hardwoods can expand along riparian corridors.
EIP Indicators
Since 2007, EIP partners have restored or enhanced over 1,000 acres of aspen habitat.
Example EIP Projects
Monitoring Programs
No photos available.
No documents available.
April 2017. EcObject Vegetation Map v2.1 Product Guide. USDA Forest Service, R5 Remote Sensing Lab.