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The patch mosaic of an old-growth warm-temperate forest: patch-level descriptions of 40-year gap-forming processes and community structures
Authors:Tohru Manabe  Kenichiro Shimatani  Satoko Kawarasaki  Shin-Ichi Aikawa  Shin-Ichi Yamamoto
Affiliation:(1) Kitakyushu Museum of Natural History and Human History, Kitakyushu 805-0071, Japan;(2) The Institute of Statistical Mathematics, 4-6-7 Minami-Azabu, Minato, Tokyo 106-8569, Japan;(3) Transdisciplinary Research Integration Center, 4-6-7 Minami-Azabu, Minato, Tokyo 106-8569, Japan;(4) Department of Forest Vegetation, Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute, 1 Matsunosato, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8687, Japan;(5) Laboratory of Forest Ecology and Physiology, Graduate School of Bioagricultural Sciences, Nagoya University, Nagoya 464-8601, Japan
Abstract:Old-growth forests consist of various types of small patches that reflect their own gap-forming process, which includes changes in environmental conditions occurring over several decades. We reconstructed the gap-forming processes that had occurred during a 40-year period for eight representative patches of an old-growth evergreen broad-leaved forest in Japan, and examined the current community structure. The selected patches were based on (1) changes in canopy heights estimated from aerial photographs taken in four different years, (2) long-term ecological research (LTER) monitoring records, and (3) a recent field survey, so that they sufficiently covered characteristic gap-forming processes such as a new gap, an old gap and consistently closed canopy. Height and diameter at breast height (DBH) were measured on all living trees taller than 1.3 m. In their height distributions, currently almost closed patches that were open in 1966 show a rotated sigmoid, whereas their DBH distributions are an inverse J-shape. In contrast, patches that have been consistently under a closed canopy exhibit gentle inverse J-shapes for both distributions. For species composition, there are no clear contrasts associated with the past gap-forming processes except for the existence of fast-growing deciduous species in large currently open patches. Our results suggested that the variation in several decades of gap-forming processes played a central role in the high patch diversity and the complex patch mosaic of the forest. Diverse gap-forming processes created micro-environmental heterogeneity both vertically and horizontally, and contributed to the maintenance of the species-rich, warm-temperate old-growth forest.
Keywords:ABIC  Gap dynamics  LTER  Small-scale disturbance  Sub-canopy
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