Succession after stand replacing disturbances by fire, wind throw, and insects in the dark Taiga of Central Siberia

The dark taiga of Siberia is a boreal vegetation dominated by Picea obovata, Abies sibirica, and Pinus sibirica during the late succession. This paper investigates the population and age structure of 18 stands representing different stages after fire, wind throw, and insect damage. To our knowledge,...

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Published in:Oecologia
Main Authors: Schulze, E., Wirth, C., Mollicone, D., Ziegler, W.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-000E-D390-D
http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-000E-D38F-6
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spelling ftpubman:oai:pure.mpg.de:item_1691977 2023-08-27T04:12:18+02:00 Succession after stand replacing disturbances by fire, wind throw, and insects in the dark Taiga of Central Siberia Schulze, E. Wirth, C. Mollicone, D. Ziegler, W. 2005 application/octet-stream http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-000E-D390-D http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-000E-D38F-6 unknown info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/doi/10.1007/s00442-005-0173-6 http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-000E-D390-D http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-000E-D38F-6 Oecologia info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2005 ftpubman https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-005-0173-6 2023-08-02T01:02:08Z The dark taiga of Siberia is a boreal vegetation dominated by Picea obovata, Abies sibirica, and Pinus sibirica during the late succession. This paper investigates the population and age structure of 18 stands representing different stages after fire, wind throw, and insect damage. To our knowledge, this is the first time that the forest dynamics of the Siberian dark taiga is described quantitatively in terms of succession, and age after disturbance, stand density, and basal area. The basis for the curve-linear age/diameter relation of trees is being analyzed. (1) After a stand-replacing fire Betula dominates (4,000 trees) for about 70 years. Although tree density of Betula decreases rapidly, basal area (BA) reached > 30 m(2)/ha after 40 years. (2) After fire, Abies, Picea, and Pinus establish at the same time as Betula, but grow slower, continue to gain height and eventually replace Betula. Abies has the highest seedling number (about 1,000 trees/ha) and the highest mortality. Picea establishes with 100-400 trees/ha, it has less mortality, but reached the highest age (> 350 years, DBH 51 cm). Picea is the most important indicator for successional age after disturbance. Pinus sibirica is an accompanying species. The widely distributed "mixed boreal forest" is a stage about 120 years after fire reaching a BA of > 40 m(2)/ha. (3) Wind throw and insect damage occur in old conifer stands. Betula does not establish. Abies initially dominates (2,000-6,000 trees/ha), but Picea becomes dominant after 150-200 years since Abies is shorter lived. (4) Without disturbance the forest develops into a pure coniferous canopy (BA 40-50 m(2)/ha) with a self-regenerating density of 1,000 coniferous canopy trees/ha. There is no collapse of old-growth stands. The dark taiga may serve as an example in which a limited set to tree species may gain dominance under certain disturbance conditions without ever getting monotypic. [References: 44] Article in Journal/Newspaper taiga Siberia Max Planck Society: MPG.PuRe Oecologia 146 1 77 88
institution Open Polar
collection Max Planck Society: MPG.PuRe
op_collection_id ftpubman
language unknown
description The dark taiga of Siberia is a boreal vegetation dominated by Picea obovata, Abies sibirica, and Pinus sibirica during the late succession. This paper investigates the population and age structure of 18 stands representing different stages after fire, wind throw, and insect damage. To our knowledge, this is the first time that the forest dynamics of the Siberian dark taiga is described quantitatively in terms of succession, and age after disturbance, stand density, and basal area. The basis for the curve-linear age/diameter relation of trees is being analyzed. (1) After a stand-replacing fire Betula dominates (4,000 trees) for about 70 years. Although tree density of Betula decreases rapidly, basal area (BA) reached > 30 m(2)/ha after 40 years. (2) After fire, Abies, Picea, and Pinus establish at the same time as Betula, but grow slower, continue to gain height and eventually replace Betula. Abies has the highest seedling number (about 1,000 trees/ha) and the highest mortality. Picea establishes with 100-400 trees/ha, it has less mortality, but reached the highest age (> 350 years, DBH 51 cm). Picea is the most important indicator for successional age after disturbance. Pinus sibirica is an accompanying species. The widely distributed "mixed boreal forest" is a stage about 120 years after fire reaching a BA of > 40 m(2)/ha. (3) Wind throw and insect damage occur in old conifer stands. Betula does not establish. Abies initially dominates (2,000-6,000 trees/ha), but Picea becomes dominant after 150-200 years since Abies is shorter lived. (4) Without disturbance the forest develops into a pure coniferous canopy (BA 40-50 m(2)/ha) with a self-regenerating density of 1,000 coniferous canopy trees/ha. There is no collapse of old-growth stands. The dark taiga may serve as an example in which a limited set to tree species may gain dominance under certain disturbance conditions without ever getting monotypic. [References: 44]
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Schulze, E.
Wirth, C.
Mollicone, D.
Ziegler, W.
spellingShingle Schulze, E.
Wirth, C.
Mollicone, D.
Ziegler, W.
Succession after stand replacing disturbances by fire, wind throw, and insects in the dark Taiga of Central Siberia
author_facet Schulze, E.
Wirth, C.
Mollicone, D.
Ziegler, W.
author_sort Schulze, E.
title Succession after stand replacing disturbances by fire, wind throw, and insects in the dark Taiga of Central Siberia
title_short Succession after stand replacing disturbances by fire, wind throw, and insects in the dark Taiga of Central Siberia
title_full Succession after stand replacing disturbances by fire, wind throw, and insects in the dark Taiga of Central Siberia
title_fullStr Succession after stand replacing disturbances by fire, wind throw, and insects in the dark Taiga of Central Siberia
title_full_unstemmed Succession after stand replacing disturbances by fire, wind throw, and insects in the dark Taiga of Central Siberia
title_sort succession after stand replacing disturbances by fire, wind throw, and insects in the dark taiga of central siberia
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-000E-D390-D
http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-000E-D38F-6
genre taiga
Siberia
genre_facet taiga
Siberia
op_source Oecologia
op_relation info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/doi/10.1007/s00442-005-0173-6
http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-000E-D390-D
http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-000E-D38F-6
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-005-0173-6
container_title Oecologia
container_volume 146
container_issue 1
container_start_page 77
op_container_end_page 88
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