scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Comparing the influence of site quality, stand age, fire and climate on aboveground tree production in Siberian Scots pine forests.

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In lichen-type forests, it was found that ANPP at the landscape level declined sharply when the interval between stand-replacing fires was less than 120 years, illustrating that fire strongly influences ANPP of boreal Scots pine forests.
Abstract
Temporal patterns of stem and needle production and total aboveground net primary production (ANPP) were studied at the tree and stand level along four chronosequences of Siberian Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) forests differing in site quality (poor lichen type or the more fertile Vaccinium type) and in frequency of surface fires (unburned, moderately burned (fire return interval of approximately 40 years), or heavily burned (fire return interval of approximately 25 years)). The maximum range of variability in aboveground production was quantified for: (1) possible long-term changes in site quality; (2) stand age; (3) non-stand-replacing, recurring surface fires; and (4) interannual climate variability. For (1) and (2), total ANPP was low in the lichen-type chronosequence, reached a maximum of 170 g C m(-2) year(-1) after 100 years and decreased to 100 g C m(-2) year(-1) in older stands. Maximum ANPP in the Vaccinium-type chronosequence was 340 g C m(-2) year(-1) and occurred earlier in the 53-year-old stand than in the other stands. Along the lichen-type chronosequences, peak ANPP was paralleled by maximum carbon allocation to stem growth. (3) In mature trees, damage by recurrent surface fires decreased stem growth by 17 +/- 19% over a 10-year period relative to pre-fire values. At longer timescales, ANPP was hardly affected by fire-related differences in mortality. (4) Needle- plus stem-NPP, reconstructed for a 3-year period, varied within a range of 15 g C m(-2) year(-1) in the lichen-type stands and 35 g C m(-2) year(-1) in the Vaccinium-type stands. For the same period, the coefficient of variance was higher for needle-NPP (20 +/- 10%) than for stem-NPP (12 +/- 7%). Needle- and stem-NPP did not covary in time. Most 30-year time series of stem-NPP at the tree level exhibited strong autocorrelation. In older trees, stem-NPP was positively correlated with growing season precipitation. Thus, the factors driving variability in ANPP ranked according to their maximum influence as: stand age (controlled by the frequency of stand-replacing fires) > site quality > growth depression because of surface fire damage approximately equal age-related reduction in ANPP > interannual variability approximately equal long-term effects of fire (stand density reduction). In lichen-type forests, we found that ANPP at the landscape level declined sharply when the interval between stand-replacing fires was less than 120 years, illustrating that fire strongly influences ANPP of boreal Scots pine forests.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Impacts of climate change on natural forest productivity – evidence since the middle of the 20th century

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a concise overview of the climate controls of forest production, provide evidence of how the main controls have changed in the last 55 years, and outline their findings of observed and documented impacts on forest productivity and a brief discussion of the complications of interpreting trends in net primary production.
Journal ArticleDOI

Net primary production and net ecosystem production of a boreal black spruce wildfire chronosequence

TL;DR: In this article, the impact of wildfire on boreal forest chronosequence net primary production (NPP) was measured in seven black spruce (Picea mariana (Mill.) BSP)-dominated sites comprising a boreal forests chronquequence near Thompson, Man., Canada.
Journal ArticleDOI

Generic biomass functions for Norway spruce in Central Europe - a meta-analysis approach toward prediction and uncertainty estimation

TL;DR: To facilitate future carbon and nutrient inventories, mixed-effect linear models were used to develop new generic biomass functions for Norway spruce in Central Europe and the Akaike Information Criterion was used for model selection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Patterns and Mechanisms of the Forest Carbon Cycle1

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the effect of global change on the forest carbon cycle and found that increasing concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2), nitrogen deposition, and climate warming induced by greater greenhouse gas (GHG) concentrations in the atmosphere influence C accumulation rates of forests, but their effects will likely differ in direction and magnitude among forest ecosystems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Landscape patterns of sapling density, leaf area, and aboveground net primary production in postfire lodgepole pine forests, Yellowstone National Park (USA)

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the spatial variability in postfire tree density and understory plant cover for patterns of aboveground net primary production (ANPP) and leaf area index (LAI) across the landscape of Yellowstone National Park (YNP), USA.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Variation Among Biomes in Temporal Dynamics of Aboveground Primary Production

TL;DR: In the most dynamic biomes, ANPP responded more strongly to wet than to dry years, and recognition of the fourfold range in ANPP dynamics across biomes and of the factors that constrain this variability is critical for detecting the biotic impacts of global change phenomena.
Book ChapterDOI

Age-Related Decline in Forest Productivity: Pattern and Process

TL;DR: The common patterns of a decline in stand leaf area and leaf photosynthetic capacity suggest a new model of carbon balance with stand development, and this chapter presents a framework for understanding the changes in stand productivity with age.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analyzing body size as a factor in ecology and evolution

TL;DR: Etude des methodologies employees pour les mesures d'echelle en biologie, montree par 3 exemples tires de the litterature ecologique and evolutionniste pour illustrer les problemes communs a la plupart des controverses sur ce sujet.
Book

Theory of forest types

Aimo Cajander
Journal ArticleDOI

Aboveground net primary production decline with stand age: potential causes

TL;DR: Empirical and modeling studies reveal that mechanisms (2 and 3) are largely responsible for age-related decline in ANPP for forests in cold environments and increasing respiratory costs appear to be relatively unimportant in explaining declining productivity in ageing stands.
Related Papers (5)