Data and analysis code for "Forest recovery following extreme drought in California, USA: natural patterns and effects of pre-drought management"
This repository contains data and code for the paper "Forest recovery following extreme drought in California, USA: natural patterns and effects of pre-drought management" by Young et al., published in Ecological Applications. The abstract of the paper is as follows. Rising temperatures an...
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Zusammenfassung: | This repository contains data and code for the paper "Forest recovery
following extreme drought in California, USA: natural patterns and effects
of pre-drought management" by Young et al., published in Ecological
Applications. The abstract of the paper is as follows. Rising temperatures
and more frequent and severe droughts are driving increases in tree
mortality in forests around the globe. However, in many cases, the likely
trajectories of forest recovery following drought-related mortality are
poorly understood. In many fire-suppressed western U.S. forests,
management is applied to reverse densification and restore natural forest
structure and composition, but it is unclear how such management affects
post-mortality recovery. We addressed these uncertainties by examining
forest stands that experienced mortality during the severe drought of
2012-2016 in California, USA. We surveyed post-drought vegetation along a
gradient of overstory mortality severity in paired treated (mechanically
thinned or prescribed-burned) and untreated areas in the Sierra Nevada.
Treatment substantially reduced tree density, particularly in smaller tree
size classes, and these effects persisted through severe drought-related
overstory mortality. However, even in treated areas with severe mortality
(> 67% basal area mortality), the combined density of residual
(surviving) trees (mean 44 trees ha-1) and saplings (mean 189 saplings
ha-1) frequently (86% of plots) fell within or exceeded the natural range
of variation (NRV) of tree density, suggesting little need for
reforestation intervention to increase density. Residual tree densities in
untreated high-mortality plots were significantly higher (mean 192 trees
ha-1 and 506 saplings ha-1), and 96% of these plots met or exceeded the
NRV. Treatment disproportionately removed shade-tolerant conifer species,
while mortality in the drought event was concentrated in pines (Pinus
ponderosa and P. lambertiana); as a consequence, the residual trees,
saplings, and seedlings in treated areas, particularly those that had
experienced moderate or high drought-related mortality, were more heavily
dominated by broadleaf (“hardwood”) trees (particularly Quercus kelloggii
and Q. chrysolepis). In contrast, residual trees and regeneration in
untreated stands were heavily dominated by shade-tolerant conifer species
(Abies concolor and Calocedrus decurrens), suggesting a need for future
treatment. Because increased dominance of hardwoods brings benefits |
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DOI: | 10.25338/b8tk5p |