Determinants of Stemwood Production in Pinus contorta var. Latifolia Forests: The Influence of Site Quality and Stand Structure
Document Type
Article
Journal/Book Title/Conference
Journal of Applied Ecology
Publication Date
1990
Volume
27
Issue
3
Abstract
(1) Leaf area index of mature stands of lodgepole pine was independent of stand density. Thus, stand density did not affect total leaf area, but strongly influenced leaf area per tree. (2) Leaf area index and site index were significantly but weakly related in the lodgepole pine stands in this study. (3) While the growth of stem volume was significantly (r2 = 0.45) related to leaf area index, residual variation was associated with differences in stand structure. (4) Mean tree growth increased with mean leaf area, but at a decreasing rate; this indicates the relatively low efficiency with which leaf area on large trees produces stemwood volume. (5) Reduced leaf area efficiency of large trees in low density stands was related to increased respiration requirements resulting from greater relative amounts of non-photosynthetic to photosynthetic tissue. This explanation for differences in leaf area efficiency is supported by the observation that the ratio of foliage to total crown biomass was inversely proportional to mean crown size.
First Page
847
Last Page
856
Recommended Citation
Long, J.N. & F.W. Smith (1990). Determinants of stemwood production in Pinus contorta var. latifolia forests: the influence of site quality and stand structure. Journal of Applied Ecology, 27(3): 847-856.
Comments
Originally published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of the British Ecological Society. Publisher's PDF available through remote link via JSTOR.
Note: This article appeared in the Journal of Applied Ecology.