Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6544036 | Forest Ecology and Management | 2013 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
Responses in the radial growth of trees near by uprooting disturbances were usually detectable for 20 years, and were specific to each region and tree species. Repeated tree-censuses (13,795 trees from 72.84 ha) suggested that the ratio of bole breakages to uprootings was 2-3:1, and that the treethrow rotation period approximated 1250-1380 years for some sites in Central Europe. At our European, beech-dominated sites, the maximal longevity of the treethrow microtopography was ca. 220 years on the fine-textured Haplic Cambisols and exceeded 1700 years on sandy-loam Entic Podzols. Finally, on the sand-textured Albic Podzols of northern Michigan, even greater longevities were achieved, with one mound returning a 14C age of 5260 ± 30 BP (median of calibration age 4077 BC) - by far the oldest feature reported in the literature. Sedimentation rates in treethrow pits, calculated using the 210Pb technique, were 0.05-0.28 cm yearâ1 in the beech-dominated European forests, and 0.07-1.4 cm yearâ1 in the hardwoods of Michigan. Radiocarbon dating of fungal sclerotia in treethrow pits can also help inform the disturbance history.
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Authors
P. Å amonil, R.J. Schaetzl, M. Valtera, V. GoliáÅ¡, P. Baldrian, I. VaÅ¡ÃÄková, D. Adam, D. JanÃk, L. Hort,