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DOI | 10.1016/j.foreco.2020.118442 |
Long-term growth responses of three Flindersia species to different thinning intensities after selective logging of a tropical rainforest | |
Hu J.; Herbohn J.; Chazdon R.L.; Baynes J.; Vanclay J.K. | |
发表日期 | 2020 |
ISSN | 0378-1127 |
卷号 | 476 |
英文摘要 | Studies in low-diversity temperate forests clearly establish that thinning leads to increased growth of remaining trees. However, few studies have investigated the long-term impacts of thinning regimes on the growth responses of tropical timber species. In this study, we analysed data collected over a period of 46 years to assess the long-term growth responses and growth patterns of remnant trees of three key commercial species (Flindersia brayleyana F. Muell., Flindersia bourjotiana F. Muell. and Flindersia pimenteliana F. Muell.). We also examined how initial tree size, crown size and crown position within canopy, and neighbourhood competition affected growth rates of the three Flindersia species. Within these species, we assessed growth responses of trees above 10 cm diameter at breast height (DBH) in an Australian tropical rainforest, to different intensities of thinning i.e. logging only as a control and low-, medium- and high-intensity thinning (L, LT, MT and HT, respectively). Medium and high intensity treatments facilitated recruitment of all three Flindersia species into the >10 cm DBH class while medium intensity thinning resulted in the greatest average annual basal area increments (BAIs). The lower individual BAI of Flindersia species in HT was due to fewer large Flindersia trees remaining after thinning, combined with large numbers of recruits and slow growth of small remnant trees. BAI in HT increased initially, with a peak during 1981–1989 and then decreased. BAI was constant and varied little over time within the other treatments. High intensity thinning had prolonged impacts on the growth patterns of Flindersia trees over 46 years. Tree initial DBH, crown size and crown position within canopy explained most variation in individual BAIs of Flindersia trees. Both thinning intensity and measurement periods explained variation in individual BAIs of Flindersia trees. Larger remnant Flindersia trees with broad and dominant crowns tended to grow faster. BAIs of individual trees were negatively correlated with neighbourhood competition. If the goal of tropical native forest management is to improve productivity of target species, the results indicate that thinning should be sufficiently intense to reduce neighbourhood competition while maintaining large diameter commercially desirable trees with large and dominant crowns, which may consequently facilitate the timber volume and above-ground biomass recovery after selective logging. © 2020 Elsevier B.V. |
英文关键词 | Neighbourhood competition; Recruitment; Selective logging; Silviculture; Tree crown; Tree growth rate; Tree size; Tropical forest |
语种 | 英语 |
scopus关键词 | Essential oils; Productivity; Timber; Tropics; Above ground biomass; Basal area increment; Diameter-at-breast heights; Flindersia bourjotiana; Flindersia brayleyana; Long-term growth response; Thinning intensity; Tropical rain forest; Logging (forestry); aboveground biomass; basal area; commercial species; diameter; forest management; growth response; long-term change; rainforest; selective logging; temperate forest; thinning; timber; tropical forest; Flindersia; Growth; Intensity; Productivity; Selective Cutting; Thinning; Trees; Tropics; Flindersia; Flindersia bourjotiana; Flindersia brayleyana; Flindersia pimenteliana |
来源期刊 | Forest Ecology and Management |
文献类型 | 期刊论文 |
条目标识符 | http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/155008 |
作者单位 | School of Agriculture and Food Sciences, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia; Tropical Forests and People Research Centre, University of Sunshine Coast, Maroochydore, QLD 4558, Australia; School of Environment, Science and Engineering, Southern Cross University, PO Box 157, Lismore, NSW 2480, Australia |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | Hu J.,Herbohn J.,Chazdon R.L.,et al. Long-term growth responses of three Flindersia species to different thinning intensities after selective logging of a tropical rainforest[J],2020,476. |
APA | Hu J.,Herbohn J.,Chazdon R.L.,Baynes J.,&Vanclay J.K..(2020).Long-term growth responses of three Flindersia species to different thinning intensities after selective logging of a tropical rainforest.Forest Ecology and Management,476. |
MLA | Hu J.,et al."Long-term growth responses of three Flindersia species to different thinning intensities after selective logging of a tropical rainforest".Forest Ecology and Management 476(2020). |
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