Natural Communities of North Georgia
  • Home
  • Piedmont
    • Piedmont Overview
    • Mesic (Moist) Forests
    • Oak-Pine-Hickory Forests
    • Bottomland/Floodplain Forest
    • Pine-Oak Woodlands
    • Montane Longleaf
    • Prairies and Savannas (Upland)
    • Wet Meadows and Marshes
    • Granite Outcrops
    • Glades, Barrens, and Woodlands
    • Ultramafic Barrens and Woodlands
    • Cliffs and Bluffs
    • Flatwoods (Upland Depression Swamps)
  • Blue Ridge
    • Blue Ridge Overview
    • Northern Hardwoods
    • Montane Oak Forests
    • Fertile Cove Forests
    • Acidic Cove Forests
    • Oak Forests
    • Pine-Oak Woodlands
    • High Elevation Outcrops
    • Mafic Dome Rock Outcrops
    • Rock Outcrops, Cliffs and Bluffs
    • Ultramafic Barrens and Woodlands
    • Mountain Bogs
    • Seepage Wetlands
    • Spray Cliffs
    • Montane Bottomlands and Flooplains
  • Cumberland Ridge & Valley
    • Cumberland Ridge & Valley Overview
    • Mesic Forests
    • Dry Calcareous Forests
    • Acidic Oak-Pine Forests
    • Pine-Oak Woodlands
    • Montane Longleaf
    • Calcareous (Cedar) Glades
    • Calcareous Cliffs
    • Calcareous Prairies and Barrens
    • Acidic Glades and Barrens
    • Acidic Cliffs and Outcrops
    • Flatwoods
    • Acidic Seepage Wetlands
    • Bottomlands and Flooplains
  • Impact of Rock Type on Plant Composition
  • Plant Adaptations to Deciduous Forests

Blue Ridge Pine-Oak Woodlands 

 Blue Ridge Pine-Oak Woodlands have widely spaced trees that let large amounts of light on to the woodland floor. Pines and dry-site oaks dominate. Usually the shrub layer is sparse, allowing a lush ground cover to develop, although sometimes acid-loving shrubs form a dense cover.  These woodlands  grow on dry, acidic sites such as sharp ridges or south-facing slopes with stony, thin soils.  These sites are exposed and prone to lightning strikes, ice, and wind-throw.  Prescribed fire is typically needed to keep the landscape open and pine dominated, except on some very stony sites.

Indicator species:  Shortleaf pine, Table Mountain pine, Pitch pine, Virginia pine

What's special:   The combination of trees and lush ground cover allowed by the sunlight reaching the forest floor creates many different habitats for wildlife, adding important plant and animal diversity to the landscape.  Pitch pine and Table Mountain pine are unusual farther south, and add a distinctive element to these woodlands when present.

​Conservation: These communities are high-priority conservation habitats.  They were once more common in the Blue Ridge landscape, but fire exclusion has made them rarer.  Prescribed fire is the most important management strategy to preserve these sites and stands should be conserved rather than clearing and development.

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Related Communities:  As tree cover gets more dense, this community grades into Oak Forest.  As tree cover thins, the woodland will take on a grassland/savanna quality. An abundance of white ash, eastern red cedar, and hickories would indicate that there is mafic rock present creating a Mafic Domes community.  ​​ ​
Landscapes
Birds

​Plants
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​Click on a plant name to see plant images. Plant names are listed in order by scientific name. 


​Trees
Pale hickory Carya pallida
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Downy serviceberry Amelanchier arborea
Sourwood Oxydendron arboreum 
Shortleaf pine  Pinus echinata
Table Mountain pine Pinus pungens
Pitch pine  Pinus rigida
White pine  Pinus strobus
Virginia pine  Pinus virginiana
Scarlet oak  Quercus coccinea
Southern red oak  Quercus falcata
Blackjack oak Quercus marilandica
Rock chestnut oak  Quercus montana
Post oak  Quercus stellata
Black oak  Quercus velutina


Shrubs
New Jersey tea Ceanothus americanus
Trailing arbutus  Epigaea repens (a sub-shrub)
Black huckleberry Gaylussacia baccata
Mountain laurel  Kalmia latifolia 
Great rhododendron  Rhododendron maximum

Gorge rhododendron  Rhododendron minus 
Winged sumac Rhus copallinum
​Horse sugar  Symplocos tinctoria
Sparkleberry Vaccinium arboreum  (unlike most Vaccinium, often on mafic, ultramafic, or calcareous as well as acidic rocks)
Hillside blueberry   Vaccinium pallidum
Deerberry Vaccinium stamineum (unlike most Vaccinium, often on mafic, ultramafic, or calcareous as well as acidic rocks)

 
Ground Layer
Wildflowers
Purple gerardia Agalinis purpurea
Slender gerardia Agalinis tenuifolia
Hemp dogbane Apocynum cannabinum
Butterfly weed Asclepias tuberosa
White milkweed Asclepias variegata
Honesty weed  Baptisia tinctoria
Spurred butterfly pea Centrosema virginianum
Maryland golden-aster  Chrysopsis mariana
Butterfly pea Clitoria mariana
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Erect dayflower Commelina erecta
Woodland coreopsis Coreopsis major
Hyssopleaf eupatorium Eupatorium hyssopifolium
Late flowering boneset/thoroughwort Eupatorium serotinum
Eastern flowering spurge Euphorbia corollata
Appalachian sunflower  Helianthus atrorubens
Small-headed sunflower  Helianthus microcephalus
Quaker ladies  Houstonia caerulea

Summer bluet  Houstonia purpurea
Veiny hawkweed  Hieracium venosum
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Yellow stargrass Hypoxis hirsuta
Upland dwarf iris  Iris verna
Hairy lespedeza Lespedeza hirta
Downy trailing lespedeza Lespedeza procumbens
Smooth trailing lespedeza Lespedeza repens
Dense blazing star Liatris spicata
Blazing star Liatris squarrosa
Carolina lily  Lilium michauxii
Downy lobelia Lobelia puberula
Sensitive briar Mimosa microphylla
Common wild quinine Parthenium integrifolium
Maypop Passiflora incarnata
Southern beardtongue Penstemon australis

Silkgrass Pityopsis graminifolia
Gaywings Polygaloides passiflora
Fragrant rabbit tobacco Pseudognaphalium obtusifolium
Black-eyed Susan Rudbeckia hirta
​Fire pink Silene virginica
Rosinweed Silphium compositum
Horse nettle Solanum carolinense
Tall goldenrod Solidago altissima
Eastern gray goldenrod Solidago nemoralus
Licorice goldenrod/Fragrant goldenrod  Solidago odora
Eastern silvery aster Symphyotrichum concolor
​Common clasping aster Symphyotrichum patens
Frost aster Symphiotrichum pilosum
​Pencil-flower  Stylosanthes biflora
Virginia goat's-rue 
 Tephrosia virginiana
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Hairy spiderwort Tradescantia hirsuticaulis
Blue curls Trichostema dichotomum
Bird's-foot violet  Viola pedata

Grasses
Splitbeard bluestem Andropogon ternarius
Bushy bluestem Andropogon gerardii
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Broomsedge  Andropogon virginicus
Poverty oat-grass  Danthonia spicata
Silky oat-grass Danthonia sericea
Bigtop lovegrass Eragrostis hirsuta
Eastern beard grass Gymnopogon ambiguus
Eastern needlegrass  Piptochaetium avenaceum
Little bluestem  Schizachyrium scoparium 
Yellow Indiangrass  
Sorghastrum nutans
Purpletop/Greasy grass Tridens flavus
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Ferns

Bracken fern Pteridium latiusculum
Representative Trees in order by scientific name
Representative shrubs in order by scientific name
New Jersey tea (Ceonothus americanus) Richard and Teresa Ware
Trailing arbutus (Epigaea repens). J. Pakchar
Mountain laurel (Kalmia latifolia) by Richard and Teresa Ware
Great rhododendron (Rhododendron maxium) by Richard and Teresa Ware
Gorge rhododendron (Rhododendron minus) by Richard and Teresa Ware
Horse sugar (Symplocos tinctoria) in bloom. L. Edwards
Deerberry (Vaccinium stamineum) flowers by J. Pakchar
Sparkleberry (Vaccinium arboreum) Richard and Teresa Ware
Hillside blueberry (Vaccinium pallidum) in bloom. J. Pakchar
Hillside blueberry (Vaccinium pallidum)

​Ground layer in order by scientific name

Grasses in order by scientific name
Picture

​Contents of this site are based on the book The Natural Communities of Georgia, which can be purchased from the University of Georgia Press, Amazon, and other vendors.
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This site is a work in progress: comments and suggestions are welcome.  Email: ​naturalcommsga@gmail.com

  • Home
  • Piedmont
    • Piedmont Overview
    • Mesic (Moist) Forests
    • Oak-Pine-Hickory Forests
    • Bottomland/Floodplain Forest
    • Pine-Oak Woodlands
    • Montane Longleaf
    • Prairies and Savannas (Upland)
    • Wet Meadows and Marshes
    • Granite Outcrops
    • Glades, Barrens, and Woodlands
    • Ultramafic Barrens and Woodlands
    • Cliffs and Bluffs
    • Flatwoods (Upland Depression Swamps)
  • Blue Ridge
    • Blue Ridge Overview
    • Northern Hardwoods
    • Montane Oak Forests
    • Fertile Cove Forests
    • Acidic Cove Forests
    • Oak Forests
    • Pine-Oak Woodlands
    • High Elevation Outcrops
    • Mafic Dome Rock Outcrops
    • Rock Outcrops, Cliffs and Bluffs
    • Ultramafic Barrens and Woodlands
    • Mountain Bogs
    • Seepage Wetlands
    • Spray Cliffs
    • Montane Bottomlands and Flooplains
  • Cumberland Ridge & Valley
    • Cumberland Ridge & Valley Overview
    • Mesic Forests
    • Dry Calcareous Forests
    • Acidic Oak-Pine Forests
    • Pine-Oak Woodlands
    • Montane Longleaf
    • Calcareous (Cedar) Glades
    • Calcareous Cliffs
    • Calcareous Prairies and Barrens
    • Acidic Glades and Barrens
    • Acidic Cliffs and Outcrops
    • Flatwoods
    • Acidic Seepage Wetlands
    • Bottomlands and Flooplains
  • Impact of Rock Type on Plant Composition
  • Plant Adaptations to Deciduous Forests