Riparian areas are ecologically important: they add to biological and structural diversity, provide habitat for a variety of species, and maintain thermal regulation and bank stabilization of streams. Riparian buffers intended to protect aquatic resources are an integral part of forest management in the
Results/Conclusions
Species compositions differed between riparian and upslope communities within each age class. In riparian buffers adjacent forestry activities did not effect species richness over time but plant cover varied with the highest cover (82%) occurring 7-10 years post harvest. Upslope managed forests sites increased simultaneously in species richness and plant cover three years post harvest, peaked by year eleven, and declined in following years as tree canopy cover increased. Our data suggest that riparian areas along small forested streams in this area have a unique understory plant community that can temporarily be altered by adjacent forest harvesting activities, but the effect of management activities is short-lived.