Multi-aged micro-neighborhood patches challenge the forest cycle model in primeval European beech
As currently framed, the forest cycle model that underlies close-to-nature management in temperate beech forests throughout the globe specifies an orderly sequence of temporal development within even-aged patches comprising the forest mosaic. Although this model has been widely applied to European b...
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Italian Society of Silviculture and Forest Ecology (SISEF)
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doaj-81032001ea8343f98cff1e3a8edead7a2020-11-25T03:41:05ZengItalian Society of Silviculture and Forest Ecology (SISEF)iForest - Biogeosciences and Forestry1971-74581971-74582020-06-0113120921410.3832/ifor3309-0133309Multi-aged micro-neighborhood patches challenge the forest cycle model in primeval European beechZenner EK0Peck JE1Trotsiuk V2Department of Ecosystem Science and Management, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, 16802 (USA)Department of Ecosystem Science and Management, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, 16802 (USA)Faculty of Forestry and Wood Sciences, Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Kamycka 129, Prague (Czech Republic)As currently framed, the forest cycle model that underlies close-to-nature management in temperate beech forests throughout the globe specifies an orderly sequence of temporal development within even-aged patches comprising the forest mosaic. Although this model has been widely applied to European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) forests, the underlying assumptions of disturbance-induced even-agedness (i.e., within-patch age homogeneity) and competition-induced size differentiation (i.e., within-patch size heterogeneity) have not been tested in natural beech forests due to prohibitions on tree coring in primeval forest reserves. In a rare and unprecedented test dataset of spatially explicit tree ages in an old-growth European beech forest, we employed triangulated irregular networks of Delaunay triangles to objectively identify natural tree neighborhoods to determine if neighboring (i.e., within-patch) trees were even- or, at most, two-aged. Age differences among neighboring trees (summarized in 25-yr age classes) were rarely <25 yrs and mostly >50 yrs, while the few "even-aged" patches were very small (100 m2) and relatively young (<150 yrs). In this first assessment of the assumptions underlying the forest cycle model in European beech, we observed neither the even-aged cohorts expected for disturbance-induced patches in different phases of development, nor the size differentiation among similarly aged trees that should arise from the neighborhood dynamics of competition, self-thinning, and growth. The lack of patches indicating demographic turnover is fundamentally inconsistent with the forest cycle model as it is currently framed. We call for further exploration of spatially-explicit tree age datasets to determine the generality of these observations.https://iforest.sisef.org/contents/?id=ifor3309-013age reconstructioncarpathiansdendrochronologydevelopment stageforest cyclestand developmentstructuretriangulated irregular network (tin) |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Zenner EK Peck JE Trotsiuk V |
spellingShingle |
Zenner EK Peck JE Trotsiuk V Multi-aged micro-neighborhood patches challenge the forest cycle model in primeval European beech iForest - Biogeosciences and Forestry age reconstruction carpathians dendrochronology development stage forest cycle stand development structure triangulated irregular network (tin) |
author_facet |
Zenner EK Peck JE Trotsiuk V |
author_sort |
Zenner EK |
title |
Multi-aged micro-neighborhood patches challenge the forest cycle model in primeval European beech |
title_short |
Multi-aged micro-neighborhood patches challenge the forest cycle model in primeval European beech |
title_full |
Multi-aged micro-neighborhood patches challenge the forest cycle model in primeval European beech |
title_fullStr |
Multi-aged micro-neighborhood patches challenge the forest cycle model in primeval European beech |
title_full_unstemmed |
Multi-aged micro-neighborhood patches challenge the forest cycle model in primeval European beech |
title_sort |
multi-aged micro-neighborhood patches challenge the forest cycle model in primeval european beech |
publisher |
Italian Society of Silviculture and Forest Ecology (SISEF) |
series |
iForest - Biogeosciences and Forestry |
issn |
1971-7458 1971-7458 |
publishDate |
2020-06-01 |
description |
As currently framed, the forest cycle model that underlies close-to-nature management in temperate beech forests throughout the globe specifies an orderly sequence of temporal development within even-aged patches comprising the forest mosaic. Although this model has been widely applied to European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) forests, the underlying assumptions of disturbance-induced even-agedness (i.e., within-patch age homogeneity) and competition-induced size differentiation (i.e., within-patch size heterogeneity) have not been tested in natural beech forests due to prohibitions on tree coring in primeval forest reserves. In a rare and unprecedented test dataset of spatially explicit tree ages in an old-growth European beech forest, we employed triangulated irregular networks of Delaunay triangles to objectively identify natural tree neighborhoods to determine if neighboring (i.e., within-patch) trees were even- or, at most, two-aged. Age differences among neighboring trees (summarized in 25-yr age classes) were rarely <25 yrs and mostly >50 yrs, while the few "even-aged" patches were very small (100 m2) and relatively young (<150 yrs). In this first assessment of the assumptions underlying the forest cycle model in European beech, we observed neither the even-aged cohorts expected for disturbance-induced patches in different phases of development, nor the size differentiation among similarly aged trees that should arise from the neighborhood dynamics of competition, self-thinning, and growth. The lack of patches indicating demographic turnover is fundamentally inconsistent with the forest cycle model as it is currently framed. We call for further exploration of spatially-explicit tree age datasets to determine the generality of these observations. |
topic |
age reconstruction carpathians dendrochronology development stage forest cycle stand development structure triangulated irregular network (tin) |
url |
https://iforest.sisef.org/contents/?id=ifor3309-013 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT zennerek multiagedmicroneighborhoodpatcheschallengetheforestcyclemodelinprimevaleuropeanbeech AT peckje multiagedmicroneighborhoodpatcheschallengetheforestcyclemodelinprimevaleuropeanbeech AT trotsiukv multiagedmicroneighborhoodpatcheschallengetheforestcyclemodelinprimevaleuropeanbeech |
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