Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 29, 1998
The True Firs of Crater Lake
National Park: A Closer Look
By Eugene L. Parker
Four of the nine species of true fir
(Abies) in the United States are native to Crater Lake National
Park. Of these, two have been incorrectly identified by some foresters
and botanists. There has been no such problem for two other Crater Lake
firs: subalpine fir (A. lasiocarpa), and Pacific silver fir
(A. amabilis). The problem, rather, has been with trees called
"white fir" and "Shasta red fir."
White fir
The term "white fir" has been broadly
used to include two identified varieties; Rocky Mountain ("typical")
white fir (A. concolor v.
concolor), and the Sierran white fir (A. concolor v.
lowiana). The Crater Lake tree is Sierran white fir. This is the
park's lower elevation fir, best seen and appreciated from Highway 62
viewpoints overlooking Castle Creek Canyon toward Medford and along
Highway 62 in the "panhandle" toward Klamath Falls.
As is the case along the Cascade Range
from central Oregon to the Siskiyous, west slope white firs (especially
at lower elevations) integrate with grand fir (A. grandis). Some
white firs, just inside the park's western boundary, show this trend,
especially by the coloring of outer bark texture. Outer bark on grand
fir, as seen in cross section, has alternating layers of dark brown and
violet, while that of both varieties of white fir have softer corky
layers of brown and tan. Crown formation, seed cone, and leaf characters
are used for separating the two white fir varieties (see Table I).
This species of fir at Crater Lake is
best identified as "Sierran" white fir, since some observers may
appreciate the varietal distinctions. The Rocky Mountain variety is
popularly cultivated as an ornamental throughout much of the northern
United States, and is recognized initially by its silvery-blue crown
color which resembles that of blue spruce (Picea pungens).
The natural distribution of Rocky
Mountain white fir is from the Wasatch and Uinta Mountains south and
eastward through Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, eastern Nevada,
southeastern California and northern Mexico. Sierran white fir is native
to east-central and southwestern Oregon, western Nevada. and in
California south to the Tehachapi and San Bernardino Mountains where the
two varieties join their ranges and blend morphologically.
Table I
The Basic Differences
|
Rocky Mountain White Fir |
Sierran White Fir |
| |
| Needles |
- No basal twist (spiral).
- Neatly arranged, of
uniform lengths.
- Stomate coloring bluish
over entire surface.
- Acutely pointed.
- Curved or sickle-shaped.
- Thickened to flat
four-angled cross-section, esp. on outward portion.
|
- Strong basal twist.
- Uneven lengths and
disorderly arrangement.
- Stomates in wide white
bands, but with bright green margins and lower midrib.
- Apex blunt or with
irregular notch.
- Upper side grooved or
channeled full-length, the longest leaves of any Crater Lake
true fir.
|
| |
| Cone Bracts |
- Rounded or slightly
heart-shaped with indistinct point; short; hidden.
|
- Heart-shaped or flattened
with distinct point, also shorter than 1/2 of scale.
|
| |
| Crown
Formation |
- Limb angle basically
upturned (ascending).
|
- Basically horizontal,
sometimes ascending later on outer portion.
|
| |
Red Fir
The terms "Shasta red fir" or "Shasta
fir" have been used to identify a species of Abies which occurs
at higher elevation in the park ever since 1939, when botanist Elmer
Applegate wrote that he did not recognize noble fir (A. procera)
in the southern Oregon Cascades. His opinion has since had wide
influence with foresters, so that the term "Shasta fir" has been used in
numerous publications. They have continued to list both Shasta red fir
(A. magnifica v. shastensis)
and "typical" or "California" red fir (A. magnifica v. magnifica)
in southern Oregon.
The type-locality for the variety
shastensis is Mount Shasta; for var. magnifica it is the
south central Sierra Nevada. Despite the widely-held perception that
"typical" red fir is native to Oregon, this variety has not been
verified by specimen documentation north of Mount Lassen, where both red
fir varieties occur together. The two red fir varieties are
morphologically separated by a key seed cone characteristic, that of
cone bract length (see Table II). Variety
shastensis has bracts (with reduced points) which are exserted
beyond the cone scale. In var. magnifica the bracts are shorter,
becoming totally hidden within the closed seed cones.
Some foresters have reasoned that
"Shasta fir" is the product of introgression between "typical" red fir
with hidden bracts, and noble fir with conspicuously-bracted cones. They
have established hypothetical red fir boundaries for such "Shasta fir,"
with the northern boundary at 44 degrees North Latitude (McKenzie Pass)
and the southern boundary in the vicinity of the 41st parallel in
northwestern California. This creates a "transition zone" for the
"Shasta fir" population, whereby Crater Lake National Park falls inside
this zone.
It should be emphasized that noble fir
and red fir are closely related, and that studies show them to be highly
variable relative to species distinctions based on chemistry, phenology,
and morphology. The smooth "Shasta fir" transition zone becomes
geographically problematic when the exclusive occurrence of bracted
"Shasta" red fir at the southern end of the "typical"' red fir habitat
is taken into account.
A number of botanists, meanwhile, have
recognized noble fir as extending south into northwestern California.
The most clearly defined morphological division between noble fir and
red fir populations seems to be the Klamath River Basin. The extent of
this division (through leaves, cones, progeny development and seedling
cotyledon count), is unmatched at any other location in the Cascade
Range or Sierra Nevada, greatly exceeding any differences apparent at
the "Shasta fir transition zone" boundaries. Although this "Klamath
division" follows the southwesterly course of the river to the coast,
noble fir has been verified in the Klamath Mountains south of the river.
Its absolute southern limit is not yet established, though noble
fir-like cones have been collected as far south as Mendocino County (see
Table II).
Table II
Noble Fir and Red Fir
Common
Characteristics
Leaves flattened four-angle
cross-section (rhomboid), blunt or acute, bent at base like a
"hockey-stick," stomatiferous above and below.
Cones large, upright,
cylindrical or tapered; light olive-green to dark purplish-brown.
Mature outer bark interior
layers of dark brown and deep violet.
|
Noble Fir |
Red Fir |
| |
| Leaves |
- Variable length groove on
adaxial (upper) surface, esp. in basal area on sterile
branches.
- Groove fades and is
replaced by keel (ridge) on outer section or absent in upper
crown.
|
- No groove on adaxial
surface except on occasional seedlings and small saplings.
|
| |
| Cones |
- Bracts variably shaped.
- Strongly pointed and well-exserted.
- Usually reflexed downward
to cover most or at least 1/2 of cone surface.
|
- Shorter than scales
(typical).
- Or slightly exserted (var.
shastensis).
- Sometimes reflexed upward
or downward, covering less than 1/2 of cone surface.
|
| |
| Bark |
- Thin to medium thickness.
- Ridges nearly vertical,
much-thickened at base of very old trees, esp. at higher
elevations.
|
- Thick and rough on old
trees on lower trunk.
- Zig-zag or irregular
chained pattern.
|
| |
Noble fir and Crater Lake
There is a compelling argument for
applying what has been learned about the true geographic range of noble
fir within Crater Lake National Park. Even though the bark of some trees
in the park resembles the red firs of the Lassen Shasta region, and
occasional phenotypes noble fir have cones with rather short Shasta-like
bracts, the trees in the Crater Lake vicinity should be interpreted as
noble fir. My argument, in summary form, is as follows:
- The established botanical keys for
noble fir and red fir identify the common fir north of the Klamath
River as noble fir, or at least as a morphological variant of noble
fir.
- The name "Shasta red fir" has been
borrowed from its original application to the short-bracted red firs
of California, and given blanket application to firs in Oregon south
of McKenzie Pass.
- The hypothesis that "Shasta fir"
in southern Oregon is a "hybrid swarm" or introgressed "transition
population" has been weakened by a study which found no evidence of
more genetic variability in the so called transition zone than
elsewhere.
- Noble fir and red fir are both
variable in cone and leaf morphology, and in oleoresin properties
(noble fir to a greater degree than red fir). Variability in noble
fir is more noticeable in southern Oregon, but variability north of
McKenzie Pass has been calibrated, with some of the most extensive
differences in resins found near the Columbia River.
- Early botanists named the common
southern Oregon species noble fir. It was only later that the
awareness of occasional cone and leaf variations suggested
relationship to the California firs. This resulted in polarized
opinions that have fueled a long-term controversy. Subsequent
interpretation of "typical"' or "pure" noble fir has produced an
arbitrary "north-of-the-McKenzie-theory" which holds that the firs
south of that point should not be identified as
A. procera. The primary authors of this hypothesis, however,
have recently concluded that the classic taxonomic characteristics
(cone and leaf morphology) of southern Oregon populations suggested
a close relationship to noble fir.
Recognition of the natural variations
in noble fir will restore the term "Shasta fir" to its area of origin
and intended application. The Lassen-Shasta region has trees with
thicker, rougher and more reddish bark than those in southern Oregon.
These firs also have larger cones with only partially-exserted or
completely hidden bracts, as well as foliage that is anatomically
distinguishable from noble fir.

Cones are one of the most commonly used ways to
identify trees. The Douglas-fir is not a true fir, as its hyphenated
name indicates. Drawing by Hugh Hayes in Trees to Know in Oregon
Corvallis: Oregon State Univesity Extension Service, 1995.
References
S.F. Arno and R. P. Hammerly, Northwest Trees.
Seattle: The Mountaineers, 1977.
W.B. Critchfield. Hybridization of the
California Firs.
Forest Science 34:1, 1988, pp. 139-151.
E.L. Parker, The Geographic Overlap of Noble
and Red Fir.
Forest Science 9:20, 1963, pp. 207-216.
F.C. Sorensen et al., Geographic Variation in
Growth and Phenology of Seedlings of the Abies procera - A. magnifica
Complex.
Forest Ecology and Management 36. 1989, pp. 205-232.
Gene Parker made numerous
contributions to the study of botany in southwestern Oregon before his
death in 1996. He will be remembered for specializing in true firs, an
interest which became the catalyst for several important discoveries in
Crater Lake National Park.
Drawings courtesy of U.S. Forest
Service, Klamath National Forest.