Neighborhood analysis of underplanted Korean pine demography in larch plantations: Implications for uneven-aged management in northeast China
Authored by Shinichi Tatsumi, Toshiaki Owari, Mingfang Yin, Liangzhi Ning
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2014.03.022
Sponsors:
Japanese Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS)
Platforms:
R
OpenBUGS
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Quantifying the growth and survival of underplanted Korean pine (Pious
koraiensis Sieb. et Zucc.) in existing plantations provides a critical
step toward developing an uneven-aged management system in northeast
China. We conducted neighborhood analysis to quantify the effect of
individual-level competition on the growth and survival of underplanted
Korean pines in larch plantations (Larix olgensis A. Henry and Larix
kaempferi {[}Lamb.] Carr.). The growth rate depended significantly on
target tree size and the strength of competition from neighboring trees, whereas survival depended solely on tree size. The survival rate
increased sharply with increasing tree size, and trees that had reached
ca. 3 cm in diameter at a height of 0.3 m rarely died, even under strong
competition. The effect of competition from neighbors on growth was
determined by the neighboring tree's size and its spatial relationship
with the target tree. Neighbors located near and southwest of the target
tree produced stronger competition than trees at greater distances and
different azimuths. Our simulation in which Korean pines were
underplanted in strip openings showed that their growth rates increased
with increasing strip width. The growth rate was also related to the
strip's azimuth and the underplanting position within the opening. The
results indicate that planting Korean pines in northwest to southeast
strips would create a more heterogeneous size structure than planting in
northeast to southwest strips. Our results suggest that spatial factors
such as strip width, strip direction, and planting position strongly
influence the development and productivity of unevenaged Korean
pine-larch stands. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
forests
growth
Oregon coast range
Douglas-fir stands
Regeneration dynamics
Changbai
mountain
Light regimes
Koraiensis
Temperate
Seedlings