Results/Conclusions
Only ponderosa pine and white fir were sampled in sufficiently high numbers to allow estimation of dispersal parameters. Modal ponderosa pine dispersal distance was 45 m, almost twice the distance of white fir. Ponderosa pine seedling distribution was narrowly clustered around the modal dispersal distance, possibly because of dispersal limitation from large seed size. White fir, which has smaller seeds, maintained high dispersion densities at relatively long distances from individual trees. Ponderosa pine seedlings established preferentially in areas of high herbaceous cover, and white fir preferred bare soil. Conifer litter was the most common substrate by a wide margin in all regeneration environments, and even though it was not the most favorable substrate for either species it accounted for a high proportion of seedling occurrences. Group selection openings had a larger proportion of bare soil than the other environments (25% of soil surface vs. 12-15% in burned areas), which was associated with dense white fir regeneration. We conclude that adequate regeneration of the shade-intolerant ponderosa pine was occurring in group-selection openings, but insufficient natural regeneration of pine was occurring in the post-fire environments to effect substantial change in relative abundance of shade-intolerant species.