Researchers Quantify Effects of Remnant Tree Abundance on Forest Landscape Recovery

Release Time:2022-04-25 Big Small

Remnant trees play an important role for post-disturbance forest landscape recovery. Due to the nucleation of remnant trees in forest recovery, their spatial configuration, e.g., location and abundance, is one of critical factors driving forest landscape recovery. Especially, the location of remnants would influence the spatial pattern of seed dispersion and locations of future newly established seedlings, further shaping forest landscape pattern. The abundance of remnants determines the number of seeds, and thereby affecting neighboring tree establishment pattern and forest recovery. However, as the key attributes of spatial configuration in remnant trees, the effects of location and abundance have rarely been investigated simultaneously.

 

Recently, a research team led by Prof. LIANG Yu from the Institute of Applied Ecology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences reconstructed the post-volcanic-eruption forest landscape in Changbai Mountain, and designed a factorial experiment for location and abundance of remnant trees to quantify their relative effects on forest recovery.

 

They found that dispersed location and increased abundance in remnant trees significantly accelerated forest recovery. Location of remnant trees had greater effects on landscape recovery than abundance. However, abundance of remnant trees played a greater role on the recovery the late-successional species.

 

This study can offer important management implications that planting individual patches in a dispersed pattern with a larger proportion of late-successional species can facilitate landscape recovery for disturbed forest ecosystems.

 

The study entitled “Remnant trees location and abundance play different roles in forest landscape recovery” was published in Forest Ecology and Management on March 11, 2022.

 

The work was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China.


Contact 

YUE Qian

Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences 

Tel: 86-24-83970324 

E-mail: yueqian@iae.ac.cn  

 

Web: http://english.iae.cas.cn