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  • 11
    Publication Date: 1996-01-01
    Description: This study presents a new, simple, and efficient method for estimating microsite light availability in the understory of a forest. The percentage of above-canopy photosynthetic photon flux density (%PPFD) transmitted above 16 microsites in the understory of a mixed conifer–broadleaf forest was measured every minute between 07:00 and 19:00 for both a completely overcast and a cloudless day. Instantaneous measures of %PPFD were also taken at different times on 3 overcast days. The instantaneous measures of %PPFD were strongly and directly related (P 〈 0.001) among themselves and with mean daily %PPFD values. These results demonstrate the usefulness of using an instantaneous measure of %PPFD taken under overcast sky conditions for estimating the mean daily %PPFD at any microsite under a forest canopy.
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    Electronic ISSN: 1208-6037
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 1995-06-01
    Description: This study characterized the height growth and crown form of 14-year-old balsam fir regenerated naturally under a light gradient varying from 3 to 83% of photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD). After 14 years, total height growth was correlated with percent PPFD (R2 = 0.766; p 
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  • 13
    Publication Date: 2015-06-01
    Description: Studies have reported divergent results on the effect of soil fertility and canopy opening on understory density and growth of sugar maple (AS; Acer saccharum Marsh.) and American beech (FG; Fagus grandifolia Ehrh.). The main objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of a gradient of canopy opening and soil fertility on the density and growth of AS and FG saplings in southwestern Quebec, Canada. We investigated 56 stands containing both AS and FG that were subjected to different disturbance history types (DHTs) (UF, unmanaged forest; PC, partial cut; and CC, clearcut) on various soil types. AS and FG absolute and relative sapling density varied greatly among the 56 stands; however, no significant effects of DHT, soil nutrient availability, or their interaction were found. Both species responded positively in terms of radial growth to canopy openings, with FG growth being slightly better than AS growth in PC stands compared with other canopy treatments. Contrary to our hypothesis, AS did not show significantly higher growth than FG following clear-cutting. These results do not support the idea that AS abundance and growth could be promoted by increasing the intensity of the canopy opening during harvest, at least on the generally acidic and base-poor soils that were investigated.
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2000-03-01
    Description: The age structure of balsam fir (Abies balsamea (L.) Mill.) regeneration is frequently used to investigate boreal forest dynamics of North America. Tree ages are usually estimated by counting annual growth rings at the shoot-root interface located above or close to the root system. Inaccurately locating the shoot-root interface could lead to imprecise age determination. In this study, balsam fir seedlings (
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2002-10-01
    Description: Numerous researchers have suggested a causal relationship between low leaf biomass in suppressed trees and the lack of radial growth at the base of the trunk. The objective of this study was to verify this relationship with suppressed balsam fir (Abies balsamea (L.) Mill.) saplings found growing in an old-growth fir stand. A total of 29 saplings varying in height from 67 to 183 cm were uprooted. All saplings had adventitious roots. All terminal bud scars (TBS) found between the apex of the terminal leader and the trunk base (first adventitious root) as well as those found below ground were localized, and rings were counted between TBS along the aboveground trunk. Various morphological traits and the ratio of photosynthetic tissue dry mass (P, needles) to non-photosynthetic tissue dry mass (nP, aboveground stem) were used as an indicator of tree vigour. Between 3 and 33 rings counted along the aboveground trunk were missing at the trunk base. The number of missing rings at the base of the trunk was correlated with total height (r = 0.41), height growth (r = 0.51), radial growth (r = 0.44), the P/nP ratio (r = 0.73), and the proportion of live crown (r = 0.62). Moreover, from 2 to 35 additional rings, missing at the trunk base, were found in the belowground section of trunk and these missing rings were associated with the adventitious roots phenomenon. In conclusion, suppressed firs had missing rings at the base of the trunk. When all of the missing rings were added to the number of rings counted at the base of the trunk, age estimates provided a different temporal pattern of recruitment compared with that obtained by solely counting rings at the base of the trunk. Stem analysis on the entire trunk is the best aging method for suppressed balsam fir saplings.
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 1995-04-01
    Description: The growth, biomass allocation, crown architecture, and leaf morphology of 50 to 200 cm tall Betulapubescens Ehrh. and Betulapendula Roth seedlings growing under eight Scots pine (Pinussylvestris L.) stands varying in age from 7 to 105 years were studied in southern Finland. The main objective of the study was to assess the degree of morphological plasticity of birch in response to understory conditions in stands of varying structure. In each of these stands, the light, water, and nutrient availability were measured. No clear trend in nutrient and water availability was found from the 7- to 105-year-old stands. Light availability decreased from the 7-year-old stands (45% and 82% of full sunlight in nongap and gap locations, respectively) to the 20-year-old stands (5% and 12% of full sunlight), and then increased to the mature stands (21% and 26% of full sunlight). Relative branch growth rate and height increment decreased with increasing shade. The ratios of leaf area to branch length and to branch weight did not vary significantly among the eight stands. The ratios of height to diameter and fine-root biomass to leaf biomass were the highest under the most shaded stands (20-year-old). Increase in shading decreased leaf thickness and increased specific leaf weight. No major differences were found in any of the growth parameters measured between the two birch species, indicating that they do not differ in their juvenile stage. These results indicate that these two birch species have relatively little morphological plasticity in response to shade. They appear to be able to persist in shade by minimizing carbon demand for growth and by modifying leaf morphology to presumably optimize photosynthesis.
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 2002-03-01
    Description: The effects of gradients in light levels and tree height on growth and crown attributes of six conifer species were studied in eastern and western Canada. Three conifers were studied in British Columbia (Abies lasiocarpa (Hook.) Nutt., Picea glauca (Moench) Voss × Picea engelmannii Parry ex Engelm., and Pinus contorta Dougl. ex Loud. var. latifolia Engelm.), and three in Quebec (Abies balsamea (L.) Mill., Picea glauca, and Pinus banksiana Lamb.). For several growth and morphological parameters, conifers reacted strongly to both an increase in light and tree height. Significant or nearly significant interactions between light classes and height were found for height and diameter growth of most species as well as for many crown attributes for both Abies and Picea. These interactions usually indicated that growth or morphological changes occurred with increasing height from a certain light level. Within a single genus, both eastern and western tree species showed the same overall acclimation to light and height. As generally reported, Pinus species showed less variation in growth and morphological responses to light than Abies and Picea species.
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 1995-02-01
    Description: Spatial and temporal variations in photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) at 1 m above the forest floor were measured under and between dominant pines and in 21- to 52-m2 gaps under developing Scots pine (Pinussylvestris L.) stands in southern Finland. For each stand, PPFD data were collected continuously every 10-s and then averaged for every 5-min period during 4-6 days under completely clear and overcast sky conditions. Measurements were made during 102 consecutive days within two different areas in each of 10 different Scots pine stands ranging in age from 7 to 105 years. Mean daily percent PPFD in the understory varied from 7.5% in the 20-year-old stands to 38% in the 7-year-old stands, and did not differ significantly between completely clear and overcast sky conditions. Mean daily percent PPFD did not vary significantly between the different sensor locations within closed pine stands, indicating that at high latitudes mean daily percent PPFD does not vary much spatially under closed Scots pine forests. Measurements of PPFD made at different periods during the day under clear sky conditions, one of the main approaches used in the literature, were not representative of the whole-day conditions. Two different results suggest that PPFD can be better characterized under completely overcast sky conditions. First, the 5-min percent PPFD in the understory was fairly constant between 06:00 and 20:00 for all stand ages under completely overcast sky conditions. Second, there was an almost perfect 1:1 relationship of the mean daily percent PPFD measured at 40 different locations in the 10 stands between clear and overcast sky conditions. These two results suggest that an instantaneous measure of percent PPFD obtained under completely overcast sky conditions is representative of the mean daily percent PPFD for both sky conditions. These results provide the basis for a quick and efficient method of estimating the mean daily percent PPFD in the understory of closed forests.
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 2000-02-01
    Description: This study was conducted in six different forest types in Abitibi, Que., (i) to identify the factors that most influence understory light transmission in the southern boreal forest and (ii) to develop light extinction coefficients (k), which could be used to simulate light transmission in the understory. Light availability and understory vegetation (cover, composition, vertical distribution, and leaf area index) were characterized within three strata (0.05-5 m) in a total of 180 quadrats. Calculated k values were based on measured light availability and leaf area index. These values varied among forest types, strata, understory vegetation types, and cover in the upper stratum. The highest k values were generally associated with a dense stratum of Acer spicatum Lam. We developed five sets of k values based on the factors that most affected light transmission. Measured transmission (Tm) was compared with transmission predicted (Tp) from each set of k values. Light transmission predicted using a single k value (mean k = 0.54) underestimated Tm. More accurate predictions were obtained when we used the other four sets of k values. Our results indicate that, in the southern boreal forest, the understory vegetation can be quite heterogeneous and patterns of light transmission cannot be accurately simulated using a unique k value. However, the various sets of k values developed in this study could be used in prediction models of forest dynamics to obtain relatively good predictions of understory light extinction in forest types similar to the ones studied here.
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 1999-02-01
    Description: This study compared the ability of conifers (Abies balsamea (L.) Mill., Picea glauca (Moench) Voss) and deciduous trees (Populus tremuloides Michx., Betula papyrifera Marsh.) and shrubs and herbs to exploit soils in a southern boreal forest. Root samples were collected from undisturbed soil and ingrowth cores (disturbed soil) of aspen- and conifer-dominated plots. Total fine-root biomass was similar in aspen and conifer plots but length density was higher under aspen. The low root length density (0.7 cm·cm-3) of conifers suggests a dependency on mycorrhizal associations for effective nutrient uptake. Coniferous fine roots were thicker than in the other species. Root tip and internode lengths in deciduous trees showed little differences between undisturbed and disturbed soil, whereas these parameters increased substantially in conifers in disturbed soil. Root growth and architecture in disturbed soil indicated that conifers follow a conservative strategy of optimizing soil exploitation efficiency through the relatively slow development of coarse fine-root systems. In contrast, deciduous trees and understorey shrubs and herbs colonized favourable soil environments to a larger extent maintaining highly ramified thin fine roots to optimize the exploited soil volume. The different soil exploitation strategies may be as important as those differences reported for aboveground growth to explain the coexistence of these species.
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