Simulation of oak early life history and interactions with disturbance via an individual-based model, SOEL
Authored by Kenneth F Kellner, Robert K Swihart
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0179643
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Model Code URLs:
https://zenodo.org/record/803349#.XHiCJIWcEsk
Abstract
Early tree life history and demography are driven by interactions with
the environment such as seed predation, herbivory, light availability,
and drought. For oak (Quercus) in the eastern United States, these
interactions may contribute to oak regeneration failure. Numerous
studies have examined the impact of individual factors (like seed
predation) on the oak regeneration process, but less information is
available on the relative and combined impacts of multiple intrinsic and
extrinsic factors on early oak life history. We developed an individual-
based, spatially explicit model to Simulate Oak Early Life history
(SOEL). The model connects acorn survival, acorn dispersal, germination,
seedling growth, and seedling survival submodels based on empirical data
with an existing gap model (JABOWA). Using SOEL, we assessed the
sensitivity of several metrics of oak regeneration to different
parameters associated with early oak life history. We also applied the
model in three individual case studies to assess: (1) how variable acorn
production interacts with timing of timber harvest; (2) the effect of
shelterwood harvest-induced differences on seed predation; and (3) the
consequences of interactions between drought, seedling growth and
survival, and timber harvest. We found that oak regeneration metrics
including percent emergence, seedling density, and sapling density were
most sensitive to the amount of acorn production, acorn caching
probability by scatterhoarders, and seedling growth rates. In the case
studies, we found that timing harvest to follow large acorn crops can
increase the density of oak regeneration in the short term following
harvest, at least under some conditions. Following midstory removal,
lower weevil infestation probability and lower post-dispersal acorn
survival resulted in a modest decline in seedling density, but the
decline did not persist to the sapling life stage class. Drought
frequency had a powerful negative impact on both growth and survival for
individual seedlings, which resulted in large reductions in both
seedling and sapling density. The case studies presented here represent
only a few examples of what could be accomplished within the SOEL
modeling framework. Further studies could focus on different early life
history parameters, or connect the parameter values to different
predictor variables based on field data.
Tags
Sensitivity-analysis
White-tailed deer
Seed production
Eastern united-states
Northern-hemisphere trees
Red
oak
Acorn production
Competitive success
Predator satiation
Shelterwood method