Natural development of stand structure in peatland Scots pine following drainage: results based on long-term monitoring of permanent sample plots

We studied the dynamics of stand structure on drained peatland sites in Scots pine dominated stands untreated with thinnings. The data consisted of consecutive stand measurements in 10 permanent sample plots where the monitoring periods varied from 29 to 66 years. We assumed that the standâs structu...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Silva Fennica
Main Authors: Sarkkola, Sakari, Hökkä, Hannu, Penttilä, Timo
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Finnish Society of Forest Science 2004
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.408
https://doaj.org/article/98698aa41f3a4ae6a17482f7b16cc17f
Description
Summary:We studied the dynamics of stand structure on drained peatland sites in Scots pine dominated stands untreated with thinnings. The data consisted of consecutive stand measurements in 10 permanent sample plots where the monitoring periods varied from 29 to 66 years. We assumed that the standâs structural development was driven by the natural processes of regeneration, growth, and mortality, all related to inter-tree competition within the stand. The DBH distributions of live and dead trees at different times of post-drainage stand development â smoothed by Weibull function â were analysed to characterise the change in stand structure. The initial uneven-sized structure of the natural, widely-spaced stands became more uneven during the first decades following drainage due to enhanced regeneration. Later, as stand density and mean tree size continuously increased, the DBH distributions approached bell-shaped distributions. Accordingly, the suppressed trees showed their highest mortality rate during the first decades, but the peak of the mortality distribution shifted to larger trees along stand succession. The change in structure was faster in southern Finland than in northern Finland. We assumed the changes in stand dynamics reflected increased inter-tree competition, initiated by enhanced site productivity and increased stand stocking resulting from the ditching operation.