4.7 Article

Tree basal area increment models for Cedrela, Amburana, Copaifera and Swietenia growing in the Amazon rain forests

期刊

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
卷 365, 期 -, 页码 174-183

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2015.12.031

关键词

Amazon forest; Individual tree-growth; Forest management

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资金

  1. Capes Foundation, Ministry of Education of Brazil
  2. Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, doctored project

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Little is known about sustainable forest management and tree growth in the Amazon forest. Reliable growth data from trees are very important in the context of forest management. Tree-characteristics such as architecture and competition are associated with diameter growth. Previous studies analyzing tree growth have indicated that these variables can describe these effects for temperate and boreal forests. However, the role of these effects for the growth of tropical trees needs to be enhanced for forest management practices. Here, we reconstructed the periodic annual basal area increment (BAI(i) cm(2) yr(-1)) of four long-lived timber species from the Amazon forest of Brazil: (i) Cedrela odorata, (ii) Amburana cearensis, (iii) Copaifera pauper and (iv) Swietenia macrophylla to investigate the growth development. The study focuses on (i) drivers important for individual tree growth, (ii) calibration of an individual tree basal area increment model for each of the four species, and (iii) assessing the practical implementation of our findings for enhancing sustainable forest management of these four tree species in the Amazon rainforest. The results exhibit a significant relationship between increasing basal area increment versus increasing crown length and decreasing competition expressed by Hegyi's index. Trees sampled in densities greater than 25 m(2) ha(-1) had their BAI% significantly reduced. For Cedrela an additional negative impact on basal area increment from liana load is evident. Our findings reinforce the importance of release trees to obtain better crown exposure. (C) 2016 Published by Elsevier B.V.

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