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Spacing patterns of an Acacia tree in the Kalahari over a 61-year period: How clumped becomes regular and vice versa
Authors:Aristides Moustakas  Kerstin Wiegand  Stephan Getzin  David Ward  Katrin M Meyer  Matthias Guenther  Karl-Heinz Mueller
Institution:aInstitute of Ecology, Friedrich Schiller University, Dornburgerstrasse 159, 07743 Jena, Germany;bSchool of Biological and Conservation Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, P. Bag X1, Scottsville 3209, South Africa;cDepartment of Geography, Research Lab GIS and Remote Sensing, Philipps University Marburg, Deutschhausstrasse 10, 35037 Marburg, Germany
Abstract:Nearest tree neighbour distances and the tree spatial formation on a large scale over time and space replicates were examined. The study was conducted in a natural savanna ecosystem in the Southern Kalahari, South Africa. Nearest tree neighbour and point pattern analysis methods were used to investigate changes in the spatial pattern of trees in two plots. Trees larger than 2 m canopy diameter were mapped. We used aerial photographs of the study area from 1940, 1964, 1984, 1993, and a satellite image from 2001 to follow two plots over time. Field work was carried out too for classification accuracy. We were able to identify and individually follow over 2400 individual trees from 1940 until 2001. Nearest neighbour analysis results indicate that dead trees were on average closer to their nearest neighbouring trees than living trees were to their neighbours. Most dead trees were on average 6 m from their nearest neighbours, while most living trees were about 20 m apart. Point pattern analysis results show a cyclical transition from clumped to random and sequentially to regular tree spacing. These transitions were not correlated across two plots. Generally, decreases in small-scale clumping coincided with periods of high mortality. Our findings show that regular, clumped, and random tree pattern can occur, pending on time, location, and scale within the location.
Keywords:Tree mortality  Spatial patterns  Long-term study  Tree–  tree competition  Point pattern analysis  Tree size  Acacia erioloba  Savanna  Nearest neighbour analysis
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