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Response of Japanese beech (Fagus japonica Maxim.) sprouts to canopy gaps
Authors:Tatsuhiro Ohkubo  Takeo Tanimoto  Rob Peters
Affiliation:(1) Department of Forest Science, Faculty of Agriculture, Utsunomiya Univ., 350 Mine-machi, 321 Utsunomiya, Japan;(2) Department of Forestry, Wageningen Agricultural University, P.O. Box 342, 6700 AH Wageningen, The Netherlands
Abstract:The response of Japanese beech (Fagus japonica Maxim.) sprouts to canopy gaps in natural beech forest in central Japan was studied using two contrasted gaps in which tree-ring chronologies of regenerating stems were analyzed. The gaps were created by uprooting of a single Quercus mongolica var. grosseserrata stem (diameter: 50 cm; gap size: 40 m2; 23 years old) and by concurrent uprootings of four F. japonica stools (gap size: 180 m2; 30 years old). Japanese beech sprouts emerged before and after the gap formation and dominated stem populations in both gaps. In gaps, growth of F. japonica sprouts was equal or lower than growth of stems of seed origin, but most sprouts (F. japonica, Acer mono var. marmoratum) appeared a few years before emergence of seedlings. The small gap created by single stem fall was dominated by some beech sprouts from stools adjacent to the gap. The multiple gap was not closed by beech sprouts from stools surrounding the gap, but some dominant beech stems were resprouts from the uprooted beech stools. The existence of a lsquosprout bankrsquo under the canopy may play an important role in the closing process of gaps in natural Japanese beech forest.
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