Age-related decline in forest ecosystem growth: An individual-tree, stand-structure hypothesis

被引:220
作者
Binkley, D [1 ]
Stape, JL
Ryan, MG
Barnard, HR
Fownes, J
机构
[1] Colorado State Univ, Dept Forest Sci, Ft Collins, CO 80523 USA
[2] Colorado State Univ, Nat Resource Ecol Lab, Ft Collins, CO 80523 USA
[3] US Forest Serv, USDA, Rocky Mt Res Stn, Ft Collins, CO 80523 USA
[4] Univ Sao Paulo, Dept Forest Sci, CNPq, Piracicaba, SP, Brazil
[5] Univ Hawaii Manoa, Coll Trop Agr & Human Resources, Honolulu, HI 96822 USA
[6] Univ Massachusetts, Dept Nat Resources Conservat, Amherst, MA 01003 USA
关键词
forest growth; Eucalyptus plantations; ecosystem production; growth decline; resource use;
D O I
10.1007/s10021-001-0055-7
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Forest growth is important both economically (yielding billions of dollars of annual revenues) and ecologically (with respect to ecosystem health and global carbon budgets). The growth of all forests follows a predictable general trend with age. In young forests, it accelerates as canopies develop; it then declines substantially soon after full canopy leaf area is reached. The classic explanation for the decline in growth invoked the increasing respiration costs required to sustain the larger masses of wood characteristic of older forests. Direct measurements of respiration have largely refuted this hypothesis, and recent work has focused on stand-level rates of resource supply, resource use, and growth. We developed and tested a hypothesis at the scale of individual trees (in relation to stand structure) to explain this declining stand-level rate of stem growth. According to our hypothesis, changes in stand structure allow dominant trees to sustain high rates of growth by increasing their acquisition of resources and using these resources efficiently (defined as stem growth per unit of resource used); smaller, nondominant trees grow more slowly as a result of their more limited acquisition of resources and a reduced rate of growth per unit of resource acquired. In combination, these two trends reduce overall stand growth. We tested this hypothesis by comparing growth, growth per unit of leaf area, and variation among trees within plots in two series of plantations of Eucalyptus in Brazil and by estimating individual-tree rates of growth and use of light, water, and nutrients in a plantation of Eucalyptus saligna in Hawaii. Our results supported the individual-tree hypothesis. We conclude that part of the universal age-related decline in forest growth derives from competition-related changes in stand structure and the resource-use efficiencies of individual trees.
引用
收藏
页码:58 / 67
页数:10
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1996, Forest Stand Dynamics
[2]  
Assmann E., 1970, PRINCIPLES FOREST YI
[3]  
Barnard H. R., 2000, THESIS COLORADO STAT
[4]  
Barnes B.V., 1998, FOREST ECOLOGY, V4th
[5]   Rapid changes in soils following eucalyptus afforestation in Hawaii [J].
Binkley, D ;
Resh, SC .
SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA JOURNAL, 1999, 63 (01) :222-225
[6]  
Binkley D., 1992, ECOLOGY MIXED SPECIE, P99
[7]  
Cannell M.G.R., 1992, ECOLOGY MIXED SPECIE
[8]   Aboveground net primary production decline with stand age: Potential causes [J].
Gower, ST ;
McMurtrie, RE ;
Murty, D .
TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 1996, 11 (09) :378-382
[9]  
GOWER ST, 1999, ANAL AGE RELATED DEC
[10]   SAP FLOW MEASUREMENTS IN DOUGLAS-FIR TREE TRUNKS BY MEANS OF A NEW THERMAL METHOD [J].
GRANIER, A .
ANNALES DES SCIENCES FORESTIERES, 1987, 44 (01) :1-14