Uprooting and snapping of trees: structural determinants and ecological consequences
- 1 October 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Forest Research
- Vol. 13 (5) , 1011-1020
- https://doi.org/10.1139/x83-133
Abstract
The influence of mechanical and architectural properties of trees on growth rates, mortality rates, and relative probabilities of snapping and uprooting were examined on Barro Colorado Island, Republic of Panama. Of 310 fallen trees, 70% snapped, 25% uprooted, and 5% broke off at ground level. Stepwise discriminant analysis between snapped and uprooted trees indicated that of the variables measured, wood properties were the most important factors determining the type of death in trees. Uprooted trees tended to be larger, shorter for a given stem diameter, and to have denser, stiffer, and stronger wood than snapped trees. There were no significant differences between trees that snapped and trees that uprooted in the extent of buttress development or in the slope of the ground upon which they grew. Trees with low density wood grew faster in stem diameter than those with high density wood but also suffered higher mortality rates. After damage, many of the snapped trees sprouted; small trees sprouted more frequently than large trees. Sprouting is proposed as a means by which weak-wooded fast-growing trees partially compensate for being prone to snapping.This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Patterns of Disturbance in Some Old‐Growth Mesic Forests of Eastern North AmericaEcology, 1982
- Uprooted trees, their distribution and influence in the primeval forest biotopePlant Ecology, 1978
- The theory of tree bole and branch formRadiation and Environmental Biophysics, 1978
- ETUDE DE LA PERTURBATION DES HORIZONS DU SOL PAR UN ARBRE QUI SE RENVERSE ET DE SON IMPACT SUR LA PEDOGENESECanadian Journal of Soil Science, 1977
- Shedding of Shoots and BranchesPublished by Elsevier ,1973
- Ecology of a Miombo Site, Lupa North Forest Reserve, Tanzania: III. Effects on the Vegetation of Local Cultivation PracticesJournal of Ecology, 1966
- Shifting Cultivation, Fire, and Pine Forest in the Cordillera Central, Luzon, PhilippinesEcological Monographs, 1966
- Natural Restocking of Forests Following the 1938 Hurricane in Central New EnglandEcology, 1956
- Ninety Years Change in a Northern Hardwood Forest in WisconsinEcology, 1949
- Pattern and Process in the Plant CommunityJournal of Ecology, 1947