Height-growth and site-index curves for jack pine in north central Ontario
- 1 February 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Forest Research
- Vol. 19 (2) , 215-224
- https://doi.org/10.1139/x89-030
Abstract
Height-growth patterns for jack pine (Pinus banksiana Lamb.) were studied using stem analyses from dominant and codominant trees on 141 plots in north centrol Ontario. All plots were in natural, well-stocked, even-aged stands 50 years of age or older. Data from 32 of the 141 plots were randomly selected to confirm results, the remaining 109 plots were used for computing the curves. Height-growth curves were developed using a five-parameter Chapman-Richards nonlinear regression that expressed height as a function of age and site index. A site-index prediction equation was also computed using a similar model that expressed site index as a function of age and tree height. Estimated site index using height-growth curves based on the 109 computation plots agreed closely with site index observed from stem analyses on the 32 confirmation plots. Major results were as follows: (i) height-growth curves based on breast-height age were more accurate than curves based on total age; (ii) polymorphic height-growth patterns were related to site index, becoming more curvilinear as site index increased; (iii) average height-growth patterns were similar for jack pine growing on four glacial landforms: shallow and deep moraines, outwashed glacial sands, and lacustrine clays and silts; and (iv) height-growth patterns for ages less than 50 years were very similar to patterns of the commonly used Plonski curves for jack pine site classes in Ontario, but after 50 years, height growth was somewhat better for all sites than predicted by the Plonski curves.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
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- The potential of Weibull-type functions as flexible growth curvesCanadian Journal of Forest Research, 1978
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- A Flexible Growth Function for Empirical UseJournal of Experimental Botany, 1959