Spatial pattern and process in forest stands within the Virginia piedmont
Authored by DL Druckenbrod, HH Shugart, I Davies
Date Published: 2005
DOI: 10.1111/j.1654-1103.2005.tb02336.x
Sponsors:
United States Department of Energy (DOE)
Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Question: Underlying ecological processes have often been inferred from
the analysis of spatial patterns in ecosystems. Using an
individual-based model, we evaluate whether basic assumptions of
species' life-history, drought-susceptibility, and shade tolerance
generate dynamics that replicate patterns between and within forest
stands.
Location: Virginia piedmont, USA.
Method: Model verification examines the transition in forest composition
and stand structure between mesic, intermediate and xeric sites. At each
site, tree location, diameter, and status were recorded in square plots
ranging from 0.25 to 1.0 ha. Model validation examines the simulated
spatial pattern of individual trees at scales of 1-25 m within each
forest site using a univariate Ripley's K function.
Results: 7512 live and dead trees were surveyed across all sites. All
sites exhibit a consistent, significant shift in pattern for live trees
by size, progressing from a clumped understorey (trees >= 0.1 m in
diameter) to a uniform overstorey (trees > 0.25 m). Simulation results
reflect not only the general shift in pattern of trees at appropriate
scales within sites, but also the general transition in species
composition and stand structure between sites.
Conclusions: This shift has been observed in other forest ecosystems and
interpreted as a result of competition; however. this hypothesis has
seldom been evaluated using simulation models. These results support the
hypothesis that forest pattern in the Virginia piedmont results front
competition involving species' life-history attributes driven by soil
moisture availability between sites and light availability within sites.
Tags
United-states
Leaf-area index
Gap model
Succession model
Montpelier-plantation
Light transmittance
Aboveground
biomass
Deciduous forests
Soil-moisture
Old-growth