Spatial variation in forest growth after disturbances in a northern hardwood ecosystem and its relationship with underlying environmental factors
Abstract
Disturbances can change the structure and function of forest stands. Under the same
disturbances, spatial variation in forest growth can arise from interspecific differences
and spatially varying environmental factors. In this study, I analyzed the spatial
variation in the growth of two forest stands in Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest.
Either a calcium addition or a clear-cut disturbance was introduced to the forest
stands. To focus on the influence of environmental factors, I isolated the interspecific
differences by using a “Forest Change Index” to indicate the forest growth condition.
Comparing the inter-plot differences in forest growth before and after the disturbances,
I found the spatial variation patterns to be highly persistent. Only a high magnitude
disturbance like a clear-cut can disrupt the original spatial variation pattern, which
may still recover with the recovery of the forest stand. Furthermore, a linear regression
analysis on the environmental variables proves their significant influence on the
spatial variation in forest growth. But a generalized joint attributes model analysis
shows that the influence of different environmental variables varies for different
species, which implies the nearly constant resource differences determined by environmental
factors in each plot may be the main cause of the spatial variation in forest growth.
Type
Master's projectPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/14124Citation
Cen, Xiaoyu (2017). Spatial variation in forest growth after disturbances in a northern hardwood ecosystem
and its relationship with underlying environmental factors. Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/14124.Collections
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