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disturbance ecology of high-elevation five-needle pine ecosystems in western north america(822.26kb)
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disturbance ecology of high-elevation five-needle pine ecosystems in western north america(822.26kb)
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3秒自动关闭窗口Regeneration in Gap Models: Priority Issues for Studying Forest Responses to Climate Change
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Regeneration in Gap Models: Priority Issues for Studying Forest Responses to Climate ChangeDavid T. PriceNiklaus E. ZimmermannPeter J. van der MeerManfred J. LexerPaul LeadleyIrma T. M. JorritsmaJ?rg SchaberDonald F. ClarkPetra LaschSteve McNultyJianguo WuBenjamin SmithArticleDOI:
10.1023/A:9Cite this article as: Price, D.T., Zimmermann, N.E., van der Meer, P.J. et al. Climatic Change (5. doi:10.1023/A:9
Recruitment algorithms in forest gap models are examined withparticular regard to their suitability for simulating forestecosystem responses to a changing climate. The traditional formulation of recruitment is found limiting in three areas. First, the aggregation of different regeneration stages (seedproduction, dispersal, storage, germination and seedling establishment) is likely to result in less accurate predictionsof responses as compared to treating each stage separately. Second, the related assumptions that seeds of all species are uniformly available and that environmental conditions arehomogeneous, are likely to cause overestimates of future speciesdiversity and forest migration rates. Third, interactions between herbivores (ungulates and insect pests) and forest vegetation are a big unknown with potentially serious impactsin many regions. Possible strategies for developing better gapmodel representations for the climate-sensitive aspects of eachof these key areas are discussed. A working example of a relatively new model that addresses some of these limitations is also presented for each case. We conclude that better modelsof regeneration processes are desirable for predicting effectsof climate change, but that it is presently impossible to determine what improvements can be expected without carrying outrigorous tests for each new formulation.Beatty, S.W.: 1984, ‘Influence of Microtopography and Canopy Species on Spatial Patterns of Forest Understorey Plants’, Ecology
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