Canopy Gap Dynamics in a Second-Growth Appalachian Hardwood Forest in West Virginia

被引:8
|
作者
Himes, Jamie Marie [1 ]
Rentch, James S. [1 ]
机构
[1] W Virginia Univ, Div Forestry & Nat Resources, Morgantown, WV 26506 USA
关键词
Appalachian hardwoods; canopy gaps; disturbance; stand dynamics; succession; SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS; CUMBERLAND PLATEAU; OAK FORESTS; DISTURBANCE; STANDS; PATTERNS; REGENERATION; SUCCESSION; AGE; REPLACEMENT;
D O I
10.2179/13-006
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
We examined canopy gaps on the 3,100 ha West Virginia University Research Forest (WVURF), a 70-80 year-old, second-growth, Appalachian hardwood forest near Morgantown, West Virginia. The objectives of this study were: (a) to describe gap characteristics (size, age, fraction, regeneration and gap-makers) of the forest as a whole, and (b) to assess whether gap characteristics varied by slope position (cove, midslope, ridge), slope aspect (NE, NW, SE, SW), and forest type (cove hardwood, mesic oak, xeric oak). Sixty transects were established, with a total length of 22,043 m. Eighty canopy gaps were identified. Average gap size was 98.6 (+/- 134.17) m(2). Gap age ranged from 2-29 years old with a mean age of 16.4 (+/- 6.3) yrs. Overall, 2.7% of the forest was composed of gaps. There were no differences in gap size by aspect or slope position. Cove hardwoods had larger gap sizes than mesic and xeric oak forests. There were no differences in gap age based on slope position, aspect, or forest type. Gap fraction did not differ by slope position, but gap fraction was greatest on southeast slopes and in cove hardwoods. Because the WVURF is a young forest in the stem exclusion and early understory initiation stages of development, tree mortality is primarily driven by stand-level competition. Thus, gaps are smaller compared to old-growth forests in the region, where overstory mortality is largely density independent. Almost two-thirds of gap-makers were Quercus spp., while Quercus spp. and Prunus serotina were the most important regeneration within gaps.
引用
收藏
页码:171 / 184
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Abundance and size distribution of cavity trees in second-growth and old-growth central hardwood forests
    Fan, Z. (fanzha@missouri.edu), 1600, Society of American Foresters (22):
  • [42] Population dynamics of Glaucomys sabrinus and Tamiasciurus douglasii in old-growth and second-growth stands of coastal coniferous forest
    Ransome, DB
    Sullivan, TP
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH, 2003, 33 (04) : 587 - 596
  • [43] Scarification for promoting sustainable resource management of Betula maximowicziana in a second-growth forest
    Goto, S.
    Tsuda, S.
    Nihon Ringakkai Shi/Journal of the Japanese Forestry Society, 2007, 89 (02): : 138 - 143
  • [44] History of fire in a southern Ohio second-growth mixed-oak forest
    Sutherland, EK
    11TH CENTRAL HARDWOOD FOREST CONFERENCE, PROCEEDINGS, 1997, 188 : 172 - 183
  • [45] Remnant Trees Affect Species Composition but Not Structure of Tropical Second-Growth Forest
    Sandor, Manette E.
    Chazdon, Robin L.
    PLOS ONE, 2014, 9 (01):
  • [46] The gap dynamics of canopy trees of a Tsuga canadensis forest community
    Rankin, WT
    Tramer, EJ
    NORTHEASTERN NATURALIST, 2002, 9 (04) : 391 - 406
  • [47] Forest dynamics with canopy gap expansion and stochastic Ising model
    Katori, M
    Kizaki, S
    Terui, Y
    Kubo, T
    FRACTALS-AN INTERDISCIPLINARY JOURNAL ON THE COMPLEX GEOMETRY OF NATURE, 1998, 6 (01): : 81 - 86
  • [48] Floristic conservation value, nested understory floras, and the development of second-growth forest
    Spyreas, Greg
    Matthews, Jeffrey W.
    ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, 2006, 16 (04) : 1351 - 1366
  • [49] Assemblages of myxomycetes associated with four different microhabitats in an old-growth red spruce/northern hardwood forest in West Virginia
    Stephenson, Steven L.
    Tawari, Lavanya
    Tewari, Shraddha
    Rojas, Carlos
    SYDOWIA, 2020, 72 : 13 - 19
  • [50] Crown conductance and tree and stand transpiration in a second-growth Abies amabilis forest
    Martin, TA
    Brown, KJ
    Cermak, J
    Ceulemans, R
    Kucera, J
    Meinzer, FC
    Rombold, JS
    Sprugel, DG
    Hinckley, TM
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH, 1997, 27 (06) : 797 - 808