INDIVIDUAL-BASED SIMULATION-MODELS FOR FOREST SUCCESSION AND MANAGEMENT
Authored by JG Liu, PS Ashton
Date Published: 1995
DOI: 10.1016/0378-1127(94)03490-n
Sponsors:
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
Smithsonian Tropical Forest Research Institute
Rockefeller Foundation
Platforms:
SORTIE
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Individual-based forest models simulate forest dynamics on the basis of
establishment, growth and death of individual trees. This paper attempts
to review and compare two major types of individual-based forest models:
growth-yield and gap models. Although the two types of models share some
similar features, they differ in model structure and data requirements
and play several complementary roles. Growth-yield models are used by
foresters to assist timber production and evaluate growth and yield of
one to several commercial timber species in managed forests, while gap
models are generally developed by ecologists to explore ecological
mechanisms and patterns of structure and functional dynamics in natural
forest ecosystems. Site-specific environmental and species information
is necessary for constructing growth-yield models while gap models
require species-specific biological infomation of individual trees and
site-specific environmental data. The growth-yield models are more
diverse in terms of model structure. In contrast, gap models belong to
the same genealogy and later gap models are ultimately derived from the
earliest one although they may vary in detail. In the future, we expect
to see more individual-ased hybrid models which integrate gap models
with growth-yield models and ecophysiological models. As computer
technology advances explosively, individual-based models could be much
more efficient and user-friendly. There have existed disproportionately
few individual-based models for biodiverse forests such as evergreen
tropical rain forests. Development of individual-based models for
tropical rain forests is more challenging and is being stimulated by new
international conservation efforts.
Tags
Climate change
Consequences
Vegetation
Nitrogen
Computer-model
Gap model
Stand dynamics
Boreal forests
Soil-moisture
Tree-growth-models