Resilience of stand structure and tree species diversity in subtropical forest degraded by clear logging
Authored by Shinjiro Fujii, Yasuhiro Kubota, Tsutomu Enoki
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1007/s10310-009-0151-7
Sponsors:
Science and Technology Promotion Division of Okinawa Prefecture
Research Institute for Humanity and Nature
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Subtropical forests in the Ryukyu Islands have been degraded by
silvicultural practices, and thus their structural attributes are being
shifted to other states dominated by a few tree species. This study
clarified the mechanisms of the change, and examined the effect of clear
logging on the resilience of a subtropical forest. Sprouting
regeneration and typhoon disturbance were introduced into an
individual-based model, SEIB-DGVM, for describing stand development and
succession. The regeneration dynamics from young secondary to old-growth
stands were reproduced fairly well with the model. Sprouting recruitment
produced high stem density at the beginning of stand development, which
caused a self-thinning trajectory following the -3/2 power law. In the
late development stage after 70 years, tree species diversity fluctuated
because of the regenerative response of sprouting species and the
facilitatory effect of typhoon disturbance on the coexistence of
subordinate species. The death of canopy trees because of typhoon
disturbances reduced the dominance of Castanopsis sieboldii, and
depressed its dominance in the understory. Consequently, the understory
species could establish by virtue of fallen canopy trees, and tree
species diversity increased at the stand level. Clear logging
experiments in the model revealed that species diversity deteriorated, especially in the stand dominated by sprouting species. Resilience of
subtropical forests was determined by initial species composition before
clear logging. Our simulation results suggest that repeated logging
drives subtropical forests with high species diversity to a stand
monopolized by C. sieboldii.
Tags
Simulation
Dynamics
Global vegetation model
Field-measurements
Southern japan
Spatial-pattern
Okinawa island
Individual-based approach
Tropical
rain-forests
Seib-dgvm