250 years of disturbance dynamics in a pristine old-growth Picea abies forest in Arkhangelsk region, north-western Russia : a dendrochronological reconstruction

To describe the historical patterns of natural disturbance regimes in European boreal forests we conducted a dendroecological study in a primeval old-growth spruce dominated stands and reconstructed the long-term dynamics of canopy disturbances. We treated the radial growth releases of individual su...

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Main Author: Khakimulina, Tatiana
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: SLU/Southern Swedish Forest Research Centre 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/2379/
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spelling ftsluppsalast:oai:stud.epsilon.slu.se:2379 2023-05-15T15:24:04+02:00 250 years of disturbance dynamics in a pristine old-growth Picea abies forest in Arkhangelsk region, north-western Russia : a dendrochronological reconstruction Khakimulina, Tatiana 2011 https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/2379/ eng eng SLU/Southern Swedish Forest Research Centre https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/2379/ Forest history disturbance dynamics canopy gap old-growth forest H2 2011 ftsluppsalast 2022-09-10T18:08:53Z To describe the historical patterns of natural disturbance regimes in European boreal forests we conducted a dendroecological study in a primeval old-growth spruce dominated stands and reconstructed the long-term dynamics of canopy disturbances. We treated the radial growth releases of individual sub-canopy trees as the major indicator of sudden openings in the forest canopy. Growth releases were detected by using the formal approach only (strict criteria were applied). The reconstruction of past canopy disturbances was done by GIS-based analysis of spatial information on released trees over the study period. The study area was located in the transitional vegetation zone of the middle and northern taiga, on the watershed of Northern Dvina and Pinega rivers, North-Western Russia. Spatial and temporal characteristics of canopy disturbances were studied within the area of 1.8 ha along the two transects, 20x450 m2 each. All trees with DBH > 6 cm (dead and alive) and coarse woody debris (DBH > 18 cm) within transects were mapped and described (n = 2126) and all living and recently dead trees were sampled with an increment corer (n = 1678) at the height 40 cm above the root collar. Stands were composed of Picea abies and Betula pendula, mean standing volume was 211 m3/ha. Spruce was of multiple ages with pronounced regular peaks (cohorts) in trees age distribution. At least four such cohorts were distinguished and represented peaks in spruce regeneration. No evidence of stand replacing events was found over the 250(300)-year period that the study covered. The dynamics was likely driven by small and middle-size canopy disturbances, occurring at varying frequencies. A detailed spatial disturbances reconstruction reflecting the last 170 (160) years revealed a disturbance rate of about 4% yearly mortality. Periodic increases in disturbance rate however played a major role in forest regeneration. Four such peaks were timed to decades 1850, 1890, 1930 (1920 – for transect 1) and 1980. Disturbance rates at peaking ... Other/Unknown Material Arkhangelsk dvina North-Western Russia taiga Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences: Epsilon Archive for Student Projects Pinega ENVELOPE(41.909,41.909,64.134,64.134)
institution Open Polar
collection Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences: Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
op_collection_id ftsluppsalast
language English
topic Forest history
disturbance dynamics
canopy gap
old-growth forest
spellingShingle Forest history
disturbance dynamics
canopy gap
old-growth forest
Khakimulina, Tatiana
250 years of disturbance dynamics in a pristine old-growth Picea abies forest in Arkhangelsk region, north-western Russia : a dendrochronological reconstruction
topic_facet Forest history
disturbance dynamics
canopy gap
old-growth forest
description To describe the historical patterns of natural disturbance regimes in European boreal forests we conducted a dendroecological study in a primeval old-growth spruce dominated stands and reconstructed the long-term dynamics of canopy disturbances. We treated the radial growth releases of individual sub-canopy trees as the major indicator of sudden openings in the forest canopy. Growth releases were detected by using the formal approach only (strict criteria were applied). The reconstruction of past canopy disturbances was done by GIS-based analysis of spatial information on released trees over the study period. The study area was located in the transitional vegetation zone of the middle and northern taiga, on the watershed of Northern Dvina and Pinega rivers, North-Western Russia. Spatial and temporal characteristics of canopy disturbances were studied within the area of 1.8 ha along the two transects, 20x450 m2 each. All trees with DBH > 6 cm (dead and alive) and coarse woody debris (DBH > 18 cm) within transects were mapped and described (n = 2126) and all living and recently dead trees were sampled with an increment corer (n = 1678) at the height 40 cm above the root collar. Stands were composed of Picea abies and Betula pendula, mean standing volume was 211 m3/ha. Spruce was of multiple ages with pronounced regular peaks (cohorts) in trees age distribution. At least four such cohorts were distinguished and represented peaks in spruce regeneration. No evidence of stand replacing events was found over the 250(300)-year period that the study covered. The dynamics was likely driven by small and middle-size canopy disturbances, occurring at varying frequencies. A detailed spatial disturbances reconstruction reflecting the last 170 (160) years revealed a disturbance rate of about 4% yearly mortality. Periodic increases in disturbance rate however played a major role in forest regeneration. Four such peaks were timed to decades 1850, 1890, 1930 (1920 – for transect 1) and 1980. Disturbance rates at peaking ...
format Other/Unknown Material
author Khakimulina, Tatiana
author_facet Khakimulina, Tatiana
author_sort Khakimulina, Tatiana
title 250 years of disturbance dynamics in a pristine old-growth Picea abies forest in Arkhangelsk region, north-western Russia : a dendrochronological reconstruction
title_short 250 years of disturbance dynamics in a pristine old-growth Picea abies forest in Arkhangelsk region, north-western Russia : a dendrochronological reconstruction
title_full 250 years of disturbance dynamics in a pristine old-growth Picea abies forest in Arkhangelsk region, north-western Russia : a dendrochronological reconstruction
title_fullStr 250 years of disturbance dynamics in a pristine old-growth Picea abies forest in Arkhangelsk region, north-western Russia : a dendrochronological reconstruction
title_full_unstemmed 250 years of disturbance dynamics in a pristine old-growth Picea abies forest in Arkhangelsk region, north-western Russia : a dendrochronological reconstruction
title_sort 250 years of disturbance dynamics in a pristine old-growth picea abies forest in arkhangelsk region, north-western russia : a dendrochronological reconstruction
publisher SLU/Southern Swedish Forest Research Centre
publishDate 2011
url https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/2379/
long_lat ENVELOPE(41.909,41.909,64.134,64.134)
geographic Pinega
geographic_facet Pinega
genre Arkhangelsk
dvina
North-Western Russia
taiga
genre_facet Arkhangelsk
dvina
North-Western Russia
taiga
op_relation https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/2379/
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