* The species in a “species composition”
should make up two-thirds of the stand,
otherwise, a “MIX” (mix) will be added
in the species composition.
* Hemlock, white pine, white cedar are the
species of critical concern for the park
management. They were placed in the
third position even though they were
fourth or lower dominance, so as to
indicate their presence to any degree.
Species compositions were subsequently
aggregated to plant communities and forest
stands. Plant communities derived from species
compositions have the same naming conventions
as the species composition. Instead of three, only
two species are named. Forest stands represent a
group of species communities in which a certain
tree species is dominant or important. In the
polygon based database, each polygon contains
not only information of polygon boundaries, but
also vegetation classification at three levels.
Air Photography Interpretation
1992 black-and-white infrared aerial
photography was interpreted at the species
composition level. The boundaries and attributes
were automated into an Arc/Info coverage as an
initial vegetation coverage. The interpretation
was made in two ways. First, patches were
delineated using pictorial characteristics such as
tone and texture, creating the basic units for
species composition identification. Then the
species identification and species composition
designation for each patch was made by further
interpretation of the dominant species on air
photo and consultation of FLORADB and ITU.
Thus, air photos have been viewed at least twice.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSIONS
There were nearly 200 species compositions
identified and mapped throughout the Apostle
Island National Lakeshore. (Long Island was not
mapped as part of our exercise, due to the
existence of a recently completed vegetation
inventory and mapping (McEachern, 1991)).
Thirty-nine plant communities were established
by the aggregation of species compositions and
13 forest stands were designated at the top
classification level (Ventura and He, 1993).
62
The results derived from the methods discussed
above were evaluated independently through
additional ground-truthing, based on stratified
random sampling of 4 islands. The
classification was quite accurate at the highest
level of the classification and quite variable at
the species composition level (Hipp, 1994).
Major Forest Types of Apostle Island
National Lakeshore
The result and discussion present here is largely
the summarization of the forest stand level.
Detailed island by island discussion is beyond
the scope of this paper and can be found in
Ventura and He (1993).
Sugar maple, paper birch, and white cedar are
the dominant forests of the Apostle Islands
National Lakeshore. Although it seems that
white cedar is almost the only dominant forest
in several areas (e.g., Rocky, Cat, South Twin,
Ironwood, Raspberry, York, and the northern
half of Bear and Manitou Islands, Figure 3),
white cedar is not the leading dominant species
in many cases. To accommodate a special
management concern for white cedar in the
classification system, we included balsam-
fir/white cedar, paper birch/white cedar, yellow
birch/white cedar, and sugar maple/white cedar
in white cedar forest stands, where white cedar
was only the co-dominant species. Statistics
from the second classification level (plant
community) show that white cedar dominated
forest covers about 11.596 of the Apostle Island
following sugar maple at 20% and paper birch
at 17%. Sugar maple forest is dominant on the
south half of Basswood, Bear, Manitou, and
Outer Islands, many part of Stockton Island and
%
most of Oak Island. Paper birch forest is a
dominant mainly on the Mainland Unit, but it is Sn
often a locally dominant forest on Oak, Hermit, "
Sand, and Devils Islands. Paper birch forest is +
: . dq
dominant in areas along the coasts of almost all ©
the Apostle Islands. o
us
Yellow birch, balsam-fir, and red maple are a
common forests of the Apostle Islands National E
Lakeshore. Yellow birch dominated forest
occupies about 10% of the Apostle Islands, if
areas where it is co-dominant at the highest
classification level are included (yellow
birch/hemlock and yellow birch/white cedar). It