TY - JOUR
T1 - Effects of light and microsite conditions on tree size of 6-year-old Cryptomeria japonica planted in a group selection opening
AU - Kohama, Toru
AU - Mizoue, Nobuya
AU - Ito, Satoshi
AU - Inoue, Akio
AU - Sakuta, Kotaro
AU - Okada, Hiroyuki
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments We are grateful to Prof. S. Kai for his support and encouragement to our study and to Dr. Y. Mitsuda for his kind suggestions regarding the statistical analysis and programming. We also thank the members of the Laboratory of Forest Planning of the University of Miyazaki and Kyushu University and at the Laboratory of Forest Ecology and Environments of the University of Miyazaki for their assistance in the field work. A part of this study was supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research by JSPS (Nos. 14560122, 14360090, 14760102).
PY - 2006/8
Y1 - 2006/8
N2 - We examined the extent to which direct and indirect measures of light and microsite conditions could explain variation in tree height and diameter at the base of 6-year-old Cryptomeria japonica trees planted in a group selection opening of about 0.32 ha on a steep slope at Shiiba, Miyazaki Prefecture, southern Japan. We first used the gap light index (GLI) and soil thickness (ST) as directly measured indices. For an indirect measure of light, we used a between-cohort competition index (BCI) estimated from the position and total height of residual trees. For indirect measures of microsite, we examined topographic indices (slope, plan and profile curvature, average slope gradient, and relative elevation) derived from digital elevation models (DEMs) with different resolutions ranging from 2 to 10 m. The multiple linear regression using GLI and ST explained about 45% of variation in tree size, while simple regression using only GLI explained about 35%. The contribution of ST was about half of GLI. The multiple regressions using BCI and the topographic indices did not explain any more variation than using BCI alone (R 2 of about 0.26). We conclude that microsite conditions with shallower soil and steeper slope have negative effects on tree growth in group selection openings, although the relative importance is smaller than light conditions. More comprehensive studies considering several openings with more heterogeneous topography including different species are needed to generalize our growth prediction using the indirect measures, which are useful for practical forest management.
AB - We examined the extent to which direct and indirect measures of light and microsite conditions could explain variation in tree height and diameter at the base of 6-year-old Cryptomeria japonica trees planted in a group selection opening of about 0.32 ha on a steep slope at Shiiba, Miyazaki Prefecture, southern Japan. We first used the gap light index (GLI) and soil thickness (ST) as directly measured indices. For an indirect measure of light, we used a between-cohort competition index (BCI) estimated from the position and total height of residual trees. For indirect measures of microsite, we examined topographic indices (slope, plan and profile curvature, average slope gradient, and relative elevation) derived from digital elevation models (DEMs) with different resolutions ranging from 2 to 10 m. The multiple linear regression using GLI and ST explained about 45% of variation in tree size, while simple regression using only GLI explained about 35%. The contribution of ST was about half of GLI. The multiple regressions using BCI and the topographic indices did not explain any more variation than using BCI alone (R 2 of about 0.26). We conclude that microsite conditions with shallower soil and steeper slope have negative effects on tree growth in group selection openings, although the relative importance is smaller than light conditions. More comprehensive studies considering several openings with more heterogeneous topography including different species are needed to generalize our growth prediction using the indirect measures, which are useful for practical forest management.
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U2 - 10.1007/s10310-005-0202-7
DO - 10.1007/s10310-005-0202-7
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:33746402378
SN - 1341-6979
VL - 11
SP - 235
EP - 242
JO - Journal of Forest Research
JF - Journal of Forest Research
IS - 4
ER -