The effects of ring width, stem position, and stand density on the relationship between foliage biomass and sapwood area in Scots pine (Pinussylvestris)

1995 ◽  
Vol 25 (6) ◽  
pp. 970-977 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annikki Mäkelä ◽  
Katri Virtanen ◽  
Eero Nikinmaa

The effects of the average ring width of sapwood, bole length, and stand density on the relationship between foliage biomass and sapwood area at four different stem positions were studied in a data set comprising 20 ca. 35-year-old Scots pine (Pinussylvestris L.) trees in southern Finland. The average ring width within sapwood had no effect on the foliagersapwood ratio inside the crown, but a correlation was found when sapwood was measured at breast height or 20% relative height. The distance of the measuring point from the crown base provided a bigger improvement of foliage biomass prediction from sapwood, a finding emphasizing the significance of the taper of sapwood along the bole. After accounting for the sapwood taper, no differences could be detected between thinned and unthinned stands, nor between breast height and 20% relative height.

1989 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 392-396 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan C. Thompson

The relationship of sapwood area to leaf area in lodgepole pine was examined across a variety of habitat types and stand densities in northwest Montana. No statistical differences were found between plots with regard to either habitat type or stand density. A nonlinear relationship was found between leaf area and sapwood area. Increasing amounts of sapwood were associated with a decrease in the leaf area–sapwood area ratio. A large amount of within-plot variation in the sapwood area–leaf area relationship was explained by differences between dominant trees and trees of other crown classes. Leaf area (LA) was best estimated by the equation LA = 0.12 × S − 0.0003 × S2 + 0.06 × S × D, where LA is leaf area, S is sapwood area, and D is the crown class (dominant). Differences between dominant and subdominant trees appear to be related to ring width and its associated permeability. Differences in sapwood area–leaf area equations among different studies may be due in part to differences in stand structure.


1987 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 174-180 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. A. Espinosa Bancalari ◽  
D. A. Perry ◽  
John D. Marshall

The relationship between foliage area and sapwood basal area was studied in three adjacent 22-year-old Douglas-fir (Pseudotsugamenziesii (Mirb.) Franco) stands that differed in early growth rates. Sapwood width was fairly constant for most of the stem above the stump, but the number of annual rings in the sapwood decreased gradually with height. Sapwood area also decreased with increasing height in the tree, the stands differing significantly only at breast height. The proportion of heartwood from stump to near the base of the crown was significantly higher for the stand of fastest early growth. Ratios of leaf area to sapwood area were significantly higher for that stand and varied in every stem section, the ratio lower at breast height than at the base of the live crown. At the base of the crown, the ratio of leaf area to sapwood area was 1.33 and 1.57 times greater in the fast-growing stand than in the intermediate- and slow-growing stands, respectively. Leaf area was as closely related to dbh as to sapwood area at breast height. Sapwood area at the crown base was more accurate than sapwood area at breast height for predicting leaf area in the fast stand and was equally accurate in the other two stands. Ratios of leaf area to sapwood area correlated positively with sapwood ring width. However, because sapwood ring width also correlated closely with sapwood area, it did not improve predictive equations. The results suggest that the "pipe model" theory must be modified to account for the internal structure of the "pipe" and that caution should be exercised when using published leaf area to sapwood area ratios.


2004 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 874-887 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurent Misson

Ecophysiological and dendroecological data from a temperate sessile oak (Quercus petraea (Matt.) Liebl.) stand in Belgium were used to develop and parameterize a dendroecological process-based model. The purpose of this model is to serve as a tool for exploring the relationship between climate variability and tree growth based on dendro ecological data. When parameterized, the model was able to correctly simulate measurements of bud-burst date, through fall (r2 = 0.95), soil water content (r2 = 0.81), transpiration (r2 = 0.80), and ring-width series from 1960 to 1999 (r2 = 0.46). Model sensitivity analysis showed that atmospheric vapor pressure deficit is the major controlling factor of transpiration in this type of ecosystem. The model shows that bole increment is principally controlled by temperature because it affects the phenological process of bud burst and thus the growing season length. Precipitation variability does not affect variation of transpiration rate and bole increment because calculated soil water stress is negligible during the simulation period. Discrepancies between observed and simulated bole increment may be a consequence of stand density variations and worm defoliation in the spring. The MAIDEN model is particularly suited for dendreocological analysis because it takes simple species, site condition, and climatic variables as input.


2005 ◽  
Vol 35 (6) ◽  
pp. 1294-1304 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank Berninger ◽  
Lluis Coll ◽  
Petteri Vanninen ◽  
Annikki Mäkelä ◽  
Sari Palmroth ◽  
...  

We investigate how the foliage mass to wood area ratios depend on tree and stand characteristics of previously collected data from Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.). Our analysis allowed a separation of the relationship between stem and branch cross-sectional areas and the relationship between the branch cross-sectional area and foliage mass. We studied how these relationships varied within and between stands. The lowest site fertility class had a higher foliage mass to stem area ratio than better sites. The relative height of a tree in the stand (Φ) was the major factor that determined the variation in the relationship between the branch cross-sectional area and the stem cross-sectional area. Models based on absolute height or tree diameter were usually weaker. Models based on Φ were simpler, since no other variables were able to explain between-stand variation in the presence of Φ. We were able to predict changes in the branchiness of the tree but not in the foliage mass supported per unit of branch area.


Author(s):  
М.О. Гурьянов ◽  
Д.Э. Раупова

Взаимосвязи между высотами деревьев и диаметрами на высоте груди широко применяются при определении запасов и сортиментной структуры древостоев. Для их описания применяются многочисленные математические модели. Сравнительный анализ точности шести моделей на примере древостоев сосны обыкновенной Учебно-опытного лесничества Ленинградской области показал близкую точность каждой из них. При этом для разных пробных площадей наибольшую точность показывали разные модели. Это обуславливает необходимость дальнейших исследований по данной тематике с целью выявления наиболее применимых для различных древесных пород, возрастов и условий местопроизрастаний математических моделей. В практической деятельности часто используются таблицы, составленные с учетом соотношений высот и диаметров на высоте груди в древостоях, основными из которых являются таблицы объемов стволов по разрядам высот и сортиментные таблицы. В рамках исследования было установлено, что фактические зависимости высот деревьев от диаметров на высоте груди отличаются от приведенных в таблицах, что обусловлено индивидуальными особенностями структуры и условий местопроизрастания древостоев. По этой причине разряды высот, определенные для отдельных ступеней толщины, зачастую отличаются от найденных по средним для древостоя высоте и диаметру на высоте груди. Это приводит к расхождениям в найденных с учетом данных двух подходов запасах древостоев, а также выхода и стоимости сортиментов в них. Несмотря на незначительность различий, их наличие свидетельствует о необходимости дальнейших исследований с целью повышения точности определения таксационных показателей древостоев. The relationships between heights and diameters at breast height of trees are widely used in determining of growing stock and assortment structure of stands. Numerous mathematical models are used to describe them. A comparative analysis of the accuracy of six models on the example of tree stands of Scots pine in the Training and Experimental Forestry of the Leningrad region showed the close accuracy of each of them. For different sample plots, however, the highest accuracy was showed by different models. This necessitates further research on this topic in order to identify the most applicable mathematical models for different tree species, ages and habitat conditions. In practice are often used the tables, compiled taking into account the ratios of heights and diameters at breast height in tree stands, the main of which are tables of volumes of trees by height ranks and assortment tables. Within the framework of the study, it was found that the actual relationships between tree heights and diameters at breast height differ from those given in the tables, which is due to the individual features of the stand structure and habitat conditions. For this reason, the height ranks, determined for individual diameter classes often differ from those found for the average tree stand height and diameter at breast height. This leads to discrepancies in the growing stocks of tree stands, found taking into account these two approaches, as well as the yield and cost of assortments in them. Although the differences are insignificant, they highlight the need for further research in order to improve the accuracy of determining the inventory parameters of tree stands


1985 ◽  
Vol 15 (6) ◽  
pp. 1181-1184 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. A. Blanche ◽  
J. D. Hodges ◽  
T. E. Nebeker

Stem cross-sectional sapwood area was linearly related to leaf area in loblolly pine. A better relationship was obtained using cross-sectional sapwood area taken at crown base than at breast height. The relationship was affected by time of sampling, with time of maximum needle biomass giving the best correlation. Specific leaf area (area in square centimetres per gram dry weight) was variable, but the mean of 95.32 cm2/g is comparable to reported values for other species. The leaf area – sapwood area ratio at breast height varies only slightly among individual trees so that a mean ratio of 0.29 can be utilized to accurately predict leaf area. The ratio between curent-year or previous-year sapwood production and leaf area (grams per square metre of foliage) was used as an indicator of tree vigor. Tree vigor values varied greatly (21 – 180 g/m2), but were normally distributed within this range.


BioResources ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 7492-7508
Author(s):  
Ewa Fabisiak ◽  
Beata Fabisiak

This study investigated the relationship between the length of the tracheids, the width of annual rings, and the wood density of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) obtained from the dominant, intermediate, and suppressed classes of a 60-year-old stand. Measurement of tracheid length was performed on the material macerated from the following annual rings: 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, and thence every 5 annual rings. Basic density was determined on samples that included five annual rings from the core to bark. Tree position in the stand had a significant impact on the examined properties of wood. In a given biosocial class, tracheid length decreased as the width of annual rings increased. As the biosocial position of a tree in the stand improved, the length of the tracheids increased, and wood density decreased. In wood of the same density range, the increment in tracheid length was the greatest in wood of dominant trees and the lowest in wood of suppressed trees.


1995 ◽  
Vol 25 (12) ◽  
pp. 1928-1943 ◽  
Author(s):  
Risto Ojansuu ◽  
Matti Maltamo

The heartwood and sapwood of Pinussylvestris L. were analysed using simultaneous taper models for stem without bark and for heartwood. Sapwood area tapered monotonically from the base to the top of the stem. Below crown base the stem tapered more slowly than in the crown. The proportion of heartwood in the tree stem was higher in dense sample plots than in sparse ones and also decreased significantly with increasing relative size of a tree in a plot. Height at crown base correlated significantly with the proportion of heartwood, stand density, and relative size. Height at crown base was the most effective additional independent variable for predicting sapwood basal area at crown base when diameter at breast height and tree height were measured. Connected with diameter at breast height and tree height measurements, width of the sapwood at breast height explained significantly better sapwood and heartwood volumes than height at crown base.


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