'Pine barrens', also known as "pine plains", "sand plains", "pinelands", "pine bush", and "pitch pine-scrub oak barrens", occur throughout the northeastern
U.S. from
New Jersey to
Maine (see
Atlantic coastal pine barrens) as well as the
Midwest and
Canada. Pine barrens are plant communities that occur on dry, acidic, infertile soils dominated by
grasses,
forbs, low
shrubs, and scattered
trees; most extensive barrens occur in large areas of sandy
glacial deposits, including
outwash plains, lakebeds, and outwash
terraces along
rivers. The most common trees are the
Jack Pine,
Red Pine,
Pitch Pine,
Blackjack Oak, and
Scrub Oak; a scattering of larger
Oaks is not unusual. The
understory is composed of grasses,
sedges, and forbs, many of them common in dry
prairies. Plants of the
heath family, such as
blueberries and
bearberry, and shrubs such as prairie willow and
hazelnut are common. These species have adaptations that permit them to survive or regenerate well after fire. Pine barrens support a number of rare species, including
lepidoptera such as the
Karner Blue butterfly (''Lycaeides melissa samuelis'') and the
barrens buckmoth (''Hemileuca maia''), and plants such as the
Sand-plain Gerardia (''Agalinis acuta'').
Barrens are dependent on fire to prevent invasion by woody species. In the absence of fire, barrens will proceed through
successional stages from
savanna to closed-canopy
forest. Open barrens are now rare and imperiled globally, as suppression of
wildfires has allowed woody vegetation to take over in most one-time barrens. In
North America, barrens exist primarily in the
Midwest and along the east coast.
In 1968,
John McPhee published a book, entitled ''The Pine Barrens'', exploring the history, ecology and geography of the New Jersey Pine Barrens, infused with his own personal memoirs.
See also
★
List of pine barrens
Sources
★
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
★
Map of Northeastern Pitch Pine Barrens
★
Pine Barrens in Rhode Island
★
Historic and prehistoric changes in the Rome, New York pine barrens. In ''Northeastern Naturalist'', 1999, by Frank E Kurczewski
★ The pine barrens john mcphee (1968)