Spatial pattern and its development in mid- to late-successional tree communities in unmanaged boreal forests in northern Finland
This study examined the development of tree communities from mid- to late-successional stages in unmanaged Hylocomium-Myrtillus (HMT) forests in northern Finland using a chronosequence approach. More specifically, this thesis adressed the following study questions: (1) What is the spatial pattern of...
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Other Authors: | , , |
Format: | Master Thesis |
Language: | English |
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Helsingfors universitet
2013
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10138/37911 |
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author | Kreutz, Andreas |
author2 | Helsingin yliopisto, Maatalous-metsätieteellinen tiedekunta, Metsätieteiden laitos University of Helsinki, Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry, Department of Forest Sciences Helsingfors universitet, Agrikultur- och forstvetenskapliga fakulteten, Institutionen för skogsvetenskaper |
author_facet | Kreutz, Andreas |
author_sort | Kreutz, Andreas |
collection | HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository |
description | This study examined the development of tree communities from mid- to late-successional stages in unmanaged Hylocomium-Myrtillus (HMT) forests in northern Finland using a chronosequence approach. More specifically, this thesis adressed the following study questions: (1) What is the spatial pattern of the overall tree community and does this overall pattern changes as the forest`s successional stage changes from mid- to late-successional? (2) What are the spatial patterns of small and large trees and how they differ from mid- to late-successional stages? (3) Is the occurrence of P. abies is related to Betula spp. in mid- to late-successional stages and does this potential relation changes as the forest`s successional stage changes from mid- to late-successional? (4) Does the tree population displays a mosaic of small patches of P. abies and Betula spp. trees over succession from mid- to late-successional stages? The study was carried out in the Värriö Strict Nature Reserve in north-eastern Finland in 2011. Living and dead trees were recorded within 3 transects (300 m long, 40 m wide) in 3 different stands representing differing midto late-succesional stages from 180 years to at least 350 years. The stands were classified according to their species composition in Betula spp. dominated, mixed P. abies-Betula spp. and P. abies dominated. Finally, spatial patterns were analysed using Ripley`s K-function. The spatial tree patterns were predominantly clustered and this pattern did not vary much over succession. Small trees were generally more clustered than larger trees and regular distributions did not occur. Saplings of both species were predominantly attracted to mature trees of the same species. This, and the repulsion between living mature P. abies and mature Betula spp. suggests clumps composed of only one species and thereby a mosaic of small patches of P. abies and Betula spp. in mid- to late-successional forest stages. At the same time, a successive dependency of P. abies on Betula spp can be rejected. The lack ... |
format | Master Thesis |
genre | Northern Finland |
genre_facet | Northern Finland |
id | ftunivhelsihelda:oai:helda.helsinki.fi:10138/37911 |
institution | Open Polar |
language | English |
op_collection_id | ftunivhelsihelda |
op_relation | URN:NBN:fi:hulib-201507211977 http://hdl.handle.net/10138/37911 |
publishDate | 2013 |
publisher | Helsingfors universitet |
record_format | openpolar |
spelling | ftunivhelsihelda:oai:helda.helsinki.fi:10138/37911 2025-01-16T23:52:21+00:00 Spatial pattern and its development in mid- to late-successional tree communities in unmanaged boreal forests in northern Finland Kreutz, Andreas Helsingin yliopisto, Maatalous-metsätieteellinen tiedekunta, Metsätieteiden laitos University of Helsinki, Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry, Department of Forest Sciences Helsingfors universitet, Agrikultur- och forstvetenskapliga fakulteten, Institutionen för skogsvetenskaper 2013 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10138/37911 eng eng Helsingfors universitet University of Helsinki Helsingin yliopisto URN:NBN:fi:hulib-201507211977 http://hdl.handle.net/10138/37911 boreal Hylocomium-Myrtillus (HMT) forest Ripley´s K-function spatial point pattern spatial structure Skogsekologi Forest Ecology Metsäekologia pro gradu-avhandlingar pro gradu -tutkielmat master's thesis 2013 ftunivhelsihelda 2023-07-28T06:16:24Z This study examined the development of tree communities from mid- to late-successional stages in unmanaged Hylocomium-Myrtillus (HMT) forests in northern Finland using a chronosequence approach. More specifically, this thesis adressed the following study questions: (1) What is the spatial pattern of the overall tree community and does this overall pattern changes as the forest`s successional stage changes from mid- to late-successional? (2) What are the spatial patterns of small and large trees and how they differ from mid- to late-successional stages? (3) Is the occurrence of P. abies is related to Betula spp. in mid- to late-successional stages and does this potential relation changes as the forest`s successional stage changes from mid- to late-successional? (4) Does the tree population displays a mosaic of small patches of P. abies and Betula spp. trees over succession from mid- to late-successional stages? The study was carried out in the Värriö Strict Nature Reserve in north-eastern Finland in 2011. Living and dead trees were recorded within 3 transects (300 m long, 40 m wide) in 3 different stands representing differing midto late-succesional stages from 180 years to at least 350 years. The stands were classified according to their species composition in Betula spp. dominated, mixed P. abies-Betula spp. and P. abies dominated. Finally, spatial patterns were analysed using Ripley`s K-function. The spatial tree patterns were predominantly clustered and this pattern did not vary much over succession. Small trees were generally more clustered than larger trees and regular distributions did not occur. Saplings of both species were predominantly attracted to mature trees of the same species. This, and the repulsion between living mature P. abies and mature Betula spp. suggests clumps composed of only one species and thereby a mosaic of small patches of P. abies and Betula spp. in mid- to late-successional forest stages. At the same time, a successive dependency of P. abies on Betula spp can be rejected. The lack ... Master Thesis Northern Finland HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository |
spellingShingle | boreal Hylocomium-Myrtillus (HMT) forest Ripley´s K-function spatial point pattern spatial structure Skogsekologi Forest Ecology Metsäekologia Kreutz, Andreas Spatial pattern and its development in mid- to late-successional tree communities in unmanaged boreal forests in northern Finland |
title | Spatial pattern and its development in mid- to late-successional tree communities in unmanaged boreal forests in northern Finland |
title_full | Spatial pattern and its development in mid- to late-successional tree communities in unmanaged boreal forests in northern Finland |
title_fullStr | Spatial pattern and its development in mid- to late-successional tree communities in unmanaged boreal forests in northern Finland |
title_full_unstemmed | Spatial pattern and its development in mid- to late-successional tree communities in unmanaged boreal forests in northern Finland |
title_short | Spatial pattern and its development in mid- to late-successional tree communities in unmanaged boreal forests in northern Finland |
title_sort | spatial pattern and its development in mid- to late-successional tree communities in unmanaged boreal forests in northern finland |
topic | boreal Hylocomium-Myrtillus (HMT) forest Ripley´s K-function spatial point pattern spatial structure Skogsekologi Forest Ecology Metsäekologia |
topic_facet | boreal Hylocomium-Myrtillus (HMT) forest Ripley´s K-function spatial point pattern spatial structure Skogsekologi Forest Ecology Metsäekologia |
url | http://hdl.handle.net/10138/37911 |