Canopy gap fraction and origin in second-growth forests of Washington County, Ohio

Gaps created by natural mortality of one or a small group of canopy trees are an important fine-scale disturbance event in southeastern Ohio forests. Differences in gap fraction, gap-making species, and the relative importance of several classes of gap origin were examined using transects installed...

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Veröffentlicht in:Castanea 1999-09, Vol.64 (3), p.252-258
Hauptverfasser: Keller, J.A, Hix, D.M
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description Gaps created by natural mortality of one or a small group of canopy trees are an important fine-scale disturbance event in southeastern Ohio forests. Differences in gap fraction, gap-making species, and the relative importance of several classes of gap origin were examined using transects installed on upper north- and south-facing slopes across the Marietta Unit of the Wayne National Forest. Canopy gap and expanded gap fractions were estimated at 9.37% and 12.10% of total land area, respectively, at the land-scape level. No significant differences in gap fraction between north- and south-facing slopes were detected. The most common mode of gap origin was the tip-up of an individual canopy tree. The frequency of single- and multiple-tree gaps was not found to be correlated with aspect. Oaks (Quercus) constituted the majority of gap-making trees for both north-and south-facing slopes.
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issn 0008-7475
1938-4386
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source JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Canopy gaps
Deciduous forests
Forest canopy
Forest ecology
Forest service
Forest stands
Mortality
Old growth forests
Quercus
secondary forests
Topographical aspect
Trees
title Canopy gap fraction and origin in second-growth forests of Washington County, Ohio
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