期刊
REMOTE SENSING
卷 14, 期 20, 页码 -出版社
MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs14205196
关键词
ground-based LiDAR; competition indices; growth and yield; forest management; silviculture; crown architecture
类别
资金
- Academy of Finland flagship of science UNITE ForestHuman-Machine Interplay [337127, 337655, 337656, 315079, 345166, 331711]
- Academy of Finland (AKA) [331711] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)
This study investigated the impact of different thinning treatments on stem- and crown-based competition of trees using terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) point clouds. The results showed that thinning treatments significantly affected stem- and crown-based competition indices, and thinning from below and from above had similar effects on competition.
Thinning is a forest management activity that regulates the competition between the trees within a forest. However, the effect of different thinning treatments on competition is largely unexplored, especially because of the difficulty in measuring crown characteristics. This study aimed to investigate how different type and intensity thinning treatments affect the stem- and crown-based competition of trees based on terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) point clouds. The research was conducted in three study sites in southern Finland where the Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) is the dominant tree species. Nine rectangular sample plots of varying sizes (1000 m(2) to 1200 m(2)) were established within each study site, resulting in 27 sample plots in total. The experimental design of each study site included two levels of thinning intensities and three thinning types, resulting in six different thinning treatments. To assess the competition between the trees, six distance-dependent competition indices were computed for each tree. The indices were based on diameter at breast height (DBH) (CIDBH), height (CIH), maximum crown diameter (CIMCD), crown projection area (CICA), crown volume (CICV), and crown surface area (CICS). The results showed that for both moderate and intensive intensities, the competition decrease was 45.5-82.5% for thinning from below, 15.6-73.6% for thinning from above, and 12.8-66.8% for systematic thinning when compared with control plots. In most cases, the crown- and stem-based metrics were affected by thinning treatments significantly when compared with control plots at a 95% confidence interval. Moreover, moderate from-below and from-above thinning showed no statistical difference with each other in both crown- and stem-based competition indices except for CIDBH (p-value <= 0.05). Our results confirm the great potential of TLS point clouds in quantifying stem- and crown-based competition between trees, which could be beneficial for enhancing ecological knowledge on how trees grow in response to competition.
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