Mixed-severity natural disturbance regime dominates in an old-growth Norway spruce forest of northwest Russia

Questions: What were the long-term disturbance rates (including variability) and agents in pristine Norway spruce-dominated (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) forests? Have soil moisture conditions influenced disturbance rates across this boreal spruce-dominated forest? Were the temporal recruitment patterns...

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Main Authors: Khakimulina, Tatiana, Fraver, Shawn, Drobyshev, Igor
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/13522/
https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/13522/1/khakimulina_et_al_160714.pdf
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author Khakimulina, Tatiana
Fraver, Shawn
Drobyshev, Igor
author_facet Khakimulina, Tatiana
Fraver, Shawn
Drobyshev, Igor
author_sort Khakimulina, Tatiana
collection Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive
description Questions: What were the long-term disturbance rates (including variability) and agents in pristine Norway spruce-dominated (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) forests? Have soil moisture conditions influenced disturbance rates across this boreal spruce-dominated forest? Were the temporal recruitment patterns of canopy dominants associated with past disturbance periods? Location: Interfluvial region of Northern Dvina and Pinega rivers, Arkhangelsk, northwest Russia. Methods: We linked dendrochronological data with tree spatial data (n trees=1659) to reconstruct the temporal and spatial patterns of canopy gaps in a 1.8-ha area from 1831-2008, and to develop a growth-release chronology from 1775-2008. Results: No evidence of stand-replacing disturbances was found within selected forest stands over the studied period. Forest dynamics were driven by small- to moderate-scale canopy disturbances, which maintained a multi-cohort age structure. Disturbance peaks were observed in the 1820s, 1920s, 1970s and 2000s, with decadal rates reaching 32% of the stand area disturbed. Conclusions: The overall mean decadal rate was 8.3% canopy area disturbed, which suggests a canopy turnover time of 122yr, with a 95% confidence envelop of 91-186yr. Bark beetle outbreaks (possibly exacerbated by droughts) and wind-storms emerged as the principal disturbance agents. Recruitment of both Norway spruce and downy birch was associated with periods of increased canopy disturbance. Moisture conditions (moist vs mesic stands) were not significantly related to long-term disturbance rates. The studied spruce-dominated boreal forests of this region apparently exhibited long-term forest continuity under this mixed-severity disturbance regime. These disturbances caused considerable structural alterations to forest canopies, but apparently did not result in a pronounced successional shifts in tree species composition, rather occasional minor enrichments of birch in these heavily spruce-dominated stands.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Arkhangelsk
dvina
Northwest Russia
genre_facet Arkhangelsk
dvina
Northwest Russia
geographic Norway
Pinega
geographic_facet Norway
Pinega
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institution Open Polar
language English
long_lat ENVELOPE(41.909,41.909,64.134,64.134)
op_collection_id ftslunivuppsala
op_relation https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/13522/1/khakimulina_et_al_160714.pdf
Khakimulina, Tatiana and Fraver, Shawn and Drobyshev, Igor (2016). Mixed-severity natural disturbance regime dominates in an old-growth Norway spruce forest of northwest Russia. Journal of vegetation science. 27 :2 , 400-413 [Research article]
publishDate 2016
record_format openpolar
spelling ftslunivuppsala:oai:pub.epsilon.slu.se:13522 2025-04-27T14:25:42+00:00 Mixed-severity natural disturbance regime dominates in an old-growth Norway spruce forest of northwest Russia Khakimulina, Tatiana Fraver, Shawn Drobyshev, Igor 2016 application/pdf https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/13522/ https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/13522/1/khakimulina_et_al_160714.pdf en eng eng https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/13522/1/khakimulina_et_al_160714.pdf Khakimulina, Tatiana and Fraver, Shawn and Drobyshev, Igor (2016). Mixed-severity natural disturbance regime dominates in an old-growth Norway spruce forest of northwest Russia. Journal of vegetation science. 27 :2 , 400-413 [Research article] Ecology Other Biological Topics Forest Science Research article PeerReviewed info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2016 ftslunivuppsala 2025-03-28T11:17:58Z Questions: What were the long-term disturbance rates (including variability) and agents in pristine Norway spruce-dominated (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) forests? Have soil moisture conditions influenced disturbance rates across this boreal spruce-dominated forest? Were the temporal recruitment patterns of canopy dominants associated with past disturbance periods? Location: Interfluvial region of Northern Dvina and Pinega rivers, Arkhangelsk, northwest Russia. Methods: We linked dendrochronological data with tree spatial data (n trees=1659) to reconstruct the temporal and spatial patterns of canopy gaps in a 1.8-ha area from 1831-2008, and to develop a growth-release chronology from 1775-2008. Results: No evidence of stand-replacing disturbances was found within selected forest stands over the studied period. Forest dynamics were driven by small- to moderate-scale canopy disturbances, which maintained a multi-cohort age structure. Disturbance peaks were observed in the 1820s, 1920s, 1970s and 2000s, with decadal rates reaching 32% of the stand area disturbed. Conclusions: The overall mean decadal rate was 8.3% canopy area disturbed, which suggests a canopy turnover time of 122yr, with a 95% confidence envelop of 91-186yr. Bark beetle outbreaks (possibly exacerbated by droughts) and wind-storms emerged as the principal disturbance agents. Recruitment of both Norway spruce and downy birch was associated with periods of increased canopy disturbance. Moisture conditions (moist vs mesic stands) were not significantly related to long-term disturbance rates. The studied spruce-dominated boreal forests of this region apparently exhibited long-term forest continuity under this mixed-severity disturbance regime. These disturbances caused considerable structural alterations to forest canopies, but apparently did not result in a pronounced successional shifts in tree species composition, rather occasional minor enrichments of birch in these heavily spruce-dominated stands. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arkhangelsk dvina Northwest Russia Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive Norway Pinega ENVELOPE(41.909,41.909,64.134,64.134)
spellingShingle Ecology
Other Biological Topics
Forest Science
Khakimulina, Tatiana
Fraver, Shawn
Drobyshev, Igor
Mixed-severity natural disturbance regime dominates in an old-growth Norway spruce forest of northwest Russia
title Mixed-severity natural disturbance regime dominates in an old-growth Norway spruce forest of northwest Russia
title_full Mixed-severity natural disturbance regime dominates in an old-growth Norway spruce forest of northwest Russia
title_fullStr Mixed-severity natural disturbance regime dominates in an old-growth Norway spruce forest of northwest Russia
title_full_unstemmed Mixed-severity natural disturbance regime dominates in an old-growth Norway spruce forest of northwest Russia
title_short Mixed-severity natural disturbance regime dominates in an old-growth Norway spruce forest of northwest Russia
title_sort mixed-severity natural disturbance regime dominates in an old-growth norway spruce forest of northwest russia
topic Ecology
Other Biological Topics
Forest Science
topic_facet Ecology
Other Biological Topics
Forest Science
url https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/13522/
https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/13522/1/khakimulina_et_al_160714.pdf