Publication | Closed Access
Local competition in a naturally established jack pine stand
58
Citations
27
References
1989
Year
SilvicultureBiogeographyStand DevelopmentEvolutionary BiologyForestryGeographyTile AreasMean Tile AreaTree GrowthForest Health MonitoringLocal CompetitionForest InventoryForest BiologySocial SciencesDeforestation
The spatial pattern of 1375 jack pine individuals (459 live, 257 standing dead, and 659 stumps) in a pure, even-aged, naturally established stand was mapped. Three maps corresponding to different stages of stand development were recognized: live + dead (initial pattern, n = 1375), live (following self-thinning, n = 459), and live + standing dead (survivors plus most recent mortality, n = 716). The Dirichlet-Thiessen tessellations of these maps indicated that the distribution of tile areas (area potentially available) becomes increasingly equitable over time. A significant positive correlation between diameter at breast height of surviving trees and their area potentially available was found for each map; this correlation was highest for the live tessellation. In the live + dead and live + standing dead tessellations, the mean tile area of dead trees was significandy smaller than that of survivors. The spatial pattern of diameter at breast height values of survivors revealed a positive autocorrelation: larger trees tend to have large neighbours and smaller trees have small ones. These results suggest a model of differential mortality in which the smaller individuals in a stand, particularly those surrounded by larger individuals, are most likely to die over a given time interval.
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