Temporal variability of deadwood volume and quality in boreal old-growth forests

Reference deadwood volumes from natural forests for forest management and restoration are often derived from one-time measurements or from repeated measurements over short time-scales. Such an approach often assumes an equilibrium state between tree mortality and decomposition, which...

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Main Author: Aakala, Tuomas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Finnish Society of Forest Science 2011-01-01
Series:Silva Fennica
Online Access:https://www.silvafennica.fi/article/81
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spelling doaj-3801d59d9e23419b95b55f7d6f4214992020-11-25T02:24:33ZengFinnish Society of Forest ScienceSilva Fennica2242-40752011-01-0145510.14214/sf.81Temporal variability of deadwood volume and quality in boreal old-growth forestsAakala, Tuomas Reference deadwood volumes from natural forests for forest management and restoration are often derived from one-time measurements or from repeated measurements over short time-scales. Such an approach often assumes an equilibrium state between tree mortality and decomposition, which is questionable in many boreal forest ecosystems due to the occurrence of allogenic disturbances. Using a simulation model based on empirical estimates of tree mortality, disturbance chronologies and models of wood decay class dynamics, this study aimed at characterizing variability in the volume and quality of deadwood for the past 200 years. The variability of deadwood volumes in old-growth forests, arising from differences in disturbance regimes and differing decay rates, was exemplified in two areas of Picea abies-dominated forests in northern Europe. The results imply that with stable deadwood input and slow decay rates the deadwood volume may be in an equilibrium state. On the contrary, if moderate-severity disturbances occur such a state seems improbable. Both study areas displayed continuity in deadwood availability, although temporary paucity in the early decay classes with shortest residence times was also observed. The results stress the importance of understanding the dynamic nature of deadwood in old-growth forests, instead of the traditional view of deadwood as a static ecosystem component.https://www.silvafennica.fi/article/81
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aakala, Tuomas
spellingShingle Aakala, Tuomas
Temporal variability of deadwood volume and quality in boreal old-growth forests
Silva Fennica
author_facet Aakala, Tuomas
author_sort Aakala, Tuomas
title Temporal variability of deadwood volume and quality in boreal old-growth forests
title_short Temporal variability of deadwood volume and quality in boreal old-growth forests
title_full Temporal variability of deadwood volume and quality in boreal old-growth forests
title_fullStr Temporal variability of deadwood volume and quality in boreal old-growth forests
title_full_unstemmed Temporal variability of deadwood volume and quality in boreal old-growth forests
title_sort temporal variability of deadwood volume and quality in boreal old-growth forests
publisher Finnish Society of Forest Science
series Silva Fennica
issn 2242-4075
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Reference deadwood volumes from natural forests for forest management and restoration are often derived from one-time measurements or from repeated measurements over short time-scales. Such an approach often assumes an equilibrium state between tree mortality and decomposition, which is questionable in many boreal forest ecosystems due to the occurrence of allogenic disturbances. Using a simulation model based on empirical estimates of tree mortality, disturbance chronologies and models of wood decay class dynamics, this study aimed at characterizing variability in the volume and quality of deadwood for the past 200 years. The variability of deadwood volumes in old-growth forests, arising from differences in disturbance regimes and differing decay rates, was exemplified in two areas of Picea abies-dominated forests in northern Europe. The results imply that with stable deadwood input and slow decay rates the deadwood volume may be in an equilibrium state. On the contrary, if moderate-severity disturbances occur such a state seems improbable. Both study areas displayed continuity in deadwood availability, although temporary paucity in the early decay classes with shortest residence times was also observed. The results stress the importance of understanding the dynamic nature of deadwood in old-growth forests, instead of the traditional view of deadwood as a static ecosystem component.
url https://www.silvafennica.fi/article/81
work_keys_str_mv AT aakalatuomas temporalvariabilityofdeadwoodvolumeandqualityinborealoldgrowthforests
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