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Fir Waves
Album
Fir Waves 

Page Type: Album

Image Type(s): Flora, Informational, Scenery

 

Page By: nartreb

Created/Edited: Aug 30, 2006 / Feb 20, 2009

Object ID: 220736

Hits: 2054 

Page Score: 88.61% - 13 Votes 

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Fir Waves

Sometime around June of 2005, BobSmith noticed, in one of my photographs, a peculiar wavelike pattern of alternating bands of living and dead evergreens (spruce or fir, I wasn't sure which at the time). I also spotted it in some (but by no means all) of my other photos of New England evergreen forests.

I Googled around and discovered that the phenomenon is called "fir waves", and seems to exist only in New England, upstate New York, and Japan. You can also find proof in this album that they exist in Quebec [at least near the U.S. border]. In addition, Matthew Becker of BYU informs me (citing a 1999 paper in Acta Oecologica by Puigdefábregas et al.) that a similar phenomenon is present in evergreen beeches (Nothofagus) on Tierra del Fuego. Becker's own paper reviewing fir waves together with "ribbon forests" and "hedges" is available online (with subscription).

Matt Worster noticed that fir waves sometimes show up in satellite photos.

This album is dedicated to fir waves. Post your best fir wave photos here.

Note that a blowdown or stand of dead trees is not necessarily a fir wave. A wave, by definition, is a disturbance that propagates. That motion is not visible in a photo, but if you see alternating bands you're probably looking at a wave.

External Links

This background info from an online ecology course nicely summarizes a 1976 paper by Sprugel about the causes of fir waves.

For more on fir waves and their causes, see my older posting on the SP Forum. (SP didn't have an Album feature in those days...)

Images


Fir waves

The Brothers from Mt Coe

North Brother (on the...

Fir Wave on Mont Gosford

Fir Wave on Gothics

South Brother from The Owl

North Twin, from South...

Slide Peak seen from the...

Rime Ice and Valley Color

Hiking into a fir wave

Close up of Barren Mountain

Fir Waves

Witherle Ravine on Katahdin

North Brother from The Owl



Comments

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Viewing: 1-2 of 2

chilkootGreat idea!

Voted 10/10

I like this album. It will be interesting to see all the places people have observed these. I've only noticed them in Maine and in the Whites.
Posted Aug 30, 2006 3:02 am

nartrebRe: Great idea!

Hasn't voted

I know they exist in the Adirondacks too because ecologists study them there (specifically on Whiteface, if I remember correctly). On my one trip to the 'Dacks I didn't notice any, though.
Posted Aug 30, 2006 3:11 pm

Viewing: 1-2 of 2


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