Thinning increases tree growth by delaying drought-induced growth cessation in a Mediterranean evergreen oak coppice

•Thinning increases long-term stem growth in a Quercus ilex coppice.•Reducing stand density delays the date of drought-induced growth cessation.•The delay of growth cessation explains most of the effect of thinning on growth.•Water balance modeling could be a management tool in water-limited forests...

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Veröffentlicht in:Forest ecology and management 2018-02, Vol.409, p.333-342
Hauptverfasser: Cabon, Antoine, Mouillot, Florent, Lempereur, Morine, Ourcival, Jean-Marc, Simioni, Guillaume, Limousin, Jean-Marc
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Thinning increases long-term stem growth in a Quercus ilex coppice.•Reducing stand density delays the date of drought-induced growth cessation.•The delay of growth cessation explains most of the effect of thinning on growth.•Water balance modeling could be a management tool in water-limited forests. The Mediterranean evergreen oak coppices of Southern Europe are increasingly vulnerable to drought because of both the ongoing climate change that increases drought length and intensity, and the lack of forest management that induces a structural aging of the stands. Decreasing stand density through thinning has been widely regarded as a means to improve the resistance of evergreen oak forests to climate change by decreasing the competition for water amongst the remaining stems. Data from a 30-years thinning experiment, that includes a control and four thinning intensity treatments (from 25% to 80% of basal area removed), in a coppiced holm oak (Quercus ilex L.) forest of southern France, was used to quantify the effects of thinning on stem growth. Building on the ‘sink limitation’ paradigm, which proposes that tree growth is controlled by phenology and climatic constraints and decoupled from carbon assimilation, we investigated if the effect of thinning on stem growth was explained by a delayed drought-induced growth cessation. Using a water balance model, we simulated the date of drought-induced growth cessation, previously found to correspond to the day of the year when water potential drops below a threshold of −1.1 MPa, and used it to predict growth in the different treatments of the thinning experiment. Thinning increased long-term growth at the stem level but decreased the wood biomass at the stand level. Decreasing stem density, and hence the leaf area index, was simulated to delay the date of drought-induced growth cessation. A growth model based on the date of growth cessation explained 85% of the effect of thinning on stem growth over the 30-year period of the study, and 95% for the first five years after thinning. The canopy density for which the effect of thinning is the most beneficial was found to maximize the growth duration without lifting completely the water limitation in summer. Moderate thinning had a sustained beneficial effect on the growth of all stem size classes, whereas stronger thinning intensities increased the size asymmetry of competition and their overall effect dropped faster. Our simple predictive model based on the simulation
ISSN:0378-1127
1872-7042
DOI:10.1016/j.foreco.2017.11.030