Simulating the impact of small-scale extrinsic disturbances over forest species volumetric light environment
Authored by DJ Marceau, A Menard, P Dube, AB Bouchard
Date Published: 2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2004.04.030
Sponsors:
Fonds pour la formation des chercheurs et l'aide à la recherche (FCAR)
Groupe de recherche en écologie forestière universitaire (GREFI)
Platforms:
SORTIE
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Small-scale disturbances (SSD) creating canopy gaps are fundamental to
successional dynamics in temperate forests. As gap-oriented management
becomes very popular, spatial aspects of gap dynamics, especially the
detailed impact of disturbances on the light environment for different
species, remain understudied. The aim of this study is to evaluate this
effect using the individual-based model SORTIE. Using different initial
conditions, 10 simulated data sets, each representing temperate forests, were artificially disturbed using four disturbance sizes. For each 3D
location of the simulation space, light availability was computed using
the gap light index to create volumetric light data sets. The growth
functions of the nine tree species incorporated in the simulation were
mapped to each light data set, generating species-dependent 3D cubes
illustrating the effect of small-scale disturbances over the different
species according to their autecologic relationship to light. The
general impact of the simulated SSD was assessed (1) by extracting the
3D boundaries associated to the absolute spatial influence of each
replicated SSD and (2) by analyzing the variation of light inside and
outside these boundaries, at different height levels. Results were
compared for each disturbance size. The species response to different
disturbance sizes was evaluated globally and also as a function of
height levels under the canopy. This study revealed that the impact of
different SSD schemes is highly variable among replicates. Nonetheless, results revealed that small size disturbances exhibit more heterogeneous
impact. A threshold effect was detected around a disturbance size of
1000 m(2) suggesting a relative SSD impact that decreases for large SSD
sizes. It was also found that species relationship is consistent between
different disturbance schemes. (C) 2004 Published by Elsevier B.V.
Tags
Spatially-explicit model
Field-measurements
British-columbia
Tropical forests
Shade tolerance
Temperate forest
Succession model
Gap dynamics
Interspecific
variation
Canopy recruitment