Light regimes beneath closed canopies and tree-fall gaps in temperate and tropical forests
- 1 May 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Forest Research
- Vol. 20 (5) , 620-631
- https://doi.org/10.1139/x90-084
Abstract
Light regimes beneath closed canopies and tree-fall gaps are compared for five temperate and tropical forests using fish-eye photography of intact forest canopies and a model for calculating light penetration through idealized gaps. Beneath intact canopies, analyses of canopy photographs indicate that sunflecks potentially contribute 37–68% of seasonal total photosynthetically active radiation. In all of the forests, potential sunfleck duration is brief (4–6 min), but the frequency distributions of potential sunfleck duration vary because of differences in canopy geometry and recent disturbance history. Analysis of the photographs reveals that incidence angles for photosynthetically active radiation beneath closed canopies are not generally vertical for any of the forests, but there was considerable variation both among and within sites in the contribution of overhead versus low-angle lighting. Calculations of light penetration through idealized single-tree gaps in old growth Douglas-fir – hemlock forests indicate that such gaps have little effect on understory light regimes because of the high ratio of canopy height to gap diameter. However, single-tree gaps in the other four forest types produce significant overall increases in understory light levels. There is also significant spatial variation in seasonal total radiation in and around single-tree gaps. Our results demonstrate that there can be significant penetration of light into the understory adjacent to a gap, particularly at high latitudes. As gap size increases, both the mean and the range of light levels within the gap increases, but even in large gaps (ca. 1000 m2) the potential duration of direct sunlight is generally brief (<4 h). The major differences in gap light regimes of the five forests are largely a function of canopy height and latitude. The effects of latitude should also result in differences in gap light regimes across the geographic range of individual forest types.This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nitrogen and Phosphorus Availability in Treefall Gaps of a Lowland Tropical RainforestJournal of Ecology, 1986
- Light Variation and Carbon Gain in Rain Forest Understorey PalmsJournal of Ecology, 1986
- The Vertical Component of Plant Species Diversity in Temperate and Tropical ForestsThe American Naturalist, 1985
- Photosynthetic Light Environments in a Lowland Tropical Rain Forest in Costa RicaJournal of Ecology, 1984
- The light environment and growth of C3 and C4 tree species in the understory of a Hawaiian forestOecologia, 1983
- Patterns of Disturbance in Some Old‐Growth Mesic Forests of Eastern North AmericaEcology, 1982
- Reciprocal Replacement and the Maintenance of Codominance in a Beech-Maple ForestOikos, 1979
- Alternation and Coexistence of Tree SpeciesThe American Naturalist, 1977
- Global radiation beneath the canopy and in a clearing of a suburban hardwood forestAgricultural Meteorology, 1976
- An Area Survey Method of Investigating the Distribution of Light Intensity in Woodlands, with Particular Reference to SunflecksJournal of Ecology, 1956