4.7 Article

Tree growth at gap edges. Insights from long term research plots in mixed mountain forests

Journal

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 520, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2022.120383

Keywords

Canopy gaps; Tree growth; Mixed mountain forests; Tree growth models

Categories

Funding

  1. European Union [778322]
  2. Bavarian Ministry of Nutrition, Agriculture and Forestry [kliffw006, 7831-26625-2017]

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This study used long-term experimental data from mixed mountain forests in Southern Germany and found that tree growth near canopy gaps was influenced, with growth rates exceeding the range covered by the classic spatial competition index. The study also revealed that the effects of gap exposure on tree growth lasted for a longer period of time.
The structure and dynamics of Central Europe's forests are increasingly characterized by canopy gaps which either result from disturbances or from planned silvicultural actions. It remains, however, unclear, whether the neighborhood to a gap has effects on tree growth which cannot be sufficiently covered by existing standard models so far. In order to test for such effects, we used data from a series of long term experiments in Southern German mixed mountain forests. In parallel, we developed a method for an automatized detection of canopy gaps and gap edge trees given such data. We found that the basal area growth of such trees amounted to about 15-30% more compared to what could be covered by a classic spatial competition index, with a plausible ranking of the main species. Our results suggest, in addition, that an exposition to a gap has a longer lasting effect on tree growth, even after the gap has closed again. With regard to such long-term effects, we found that tree size at the first exposition matters, with strong species-specific differentiation. We concluded that gap exposition effects on tree growth, given their order of magnitude, require being included in tree growth models which are used for planning purposes.

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