Shallow landsliding, root reinforcement, and the spatial distribution of trees in the Oregon Coast Range

Canadian Geotechnical Journal
By: , and 

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Abstract

The influence of root reinforcement on shallow landsliding has been well established through mechanistic and empirical studies, yet few studies have examined how local vegetative patterns influence slope stability. Because root networks spread outward from trees, the species, size, and spacing of trees should influence the spatial distribution of root strength. We documented the distribution and characteristics of trees adjacent to 32 shallow landslides that occurred during 1996 in the Oregon Coast Range. Although broadly classified as a conifer-dominated forest, we observed sparse coniferous and abundant hardwood trees near landslide scars in an industrial forest (Mapleton) that experienced widespread burning in the 19th century. In industrial forests that were burned, selectively harvested, and not replanted (Elliott State Forest), swordfern was ubiquitous near landslides, and we observed similar numbers of live conifer and hardwood trees proximal to landslide scarps. We demonstrate that root strength quantified in landslide scarps and soil pits correlates with a geometry-based index of root network contribution derived from mapping the size, species, condition, and spacing of local trees, indicating that root strength can be predicted by mapping the distribution and characteristics of trees on potentially unstable slopes. In our study sites, landslides tend to occur in areas of reduced root strength, suggesting that to make site-specific predictions of landslide occurrence slope stability analyses must account for the diversity and distribution of vegetation in potentially unstable terrain.

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Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Shallow landsliding, root reinforcement, and the spatial distribution of trees in the Oregon Coast Range
Series title Canadian Geotechnical Journal
DOI 10.1139/t02-113
Volume 40
Issue 2
Year Published 2003
Language English
Publisher Canadian Science Publishing
Contributing office(s) Geology, Minerals, Energy, and Geophysics Science Center
Description 17 p.
First page 237
Last page 253
Country United States
State Oregon
Other Geospatial Oregon Coast Range
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