Features of the Stand and Deadwood in Postfire Aspen and Birch Forests in Northern Urals


如何引用文章

全文:

开放存取 开放存取
受限制的访问 ##reader.subscriptionAccessGranted##
受限制的访问 订阅存取

详细

By now, most of the forests in the European part of Russia have been transformed by drastic fires and clear cutting. Significant areas of primary dark coniferous forests in the Northern Urals have been replaced by either birch or aspen stands. These communities pass different stages of secondary succession. They remain understudied despite their wide occurrence. We consider the composition and structure of the tree story and deadwood in two postfire communities (80- and 120-years old). Both fires were initiated from the slash-and-burn cultivation, as has been the practice up to the mid-20th century. The composition of the stands in these communities indicates the gradual replacement of early succession tree species—aspen and willow—by late succession spruce and fir. Weibull function was applied to fit the distribution of diameters of the trees. We show that these communities do not differ by most indicators of stand and deadwood structures and characterize the same successional stage.

作者简介

A. Aleinikov

Center for Forest Ecology and Productivity

编辑信件的主要联系方式.
Email: aaacastor@gmail.com
俄罗斯联邦, Moscow, 117997

A. Tyurin

Center for Forest Ecology and Productivity

Email: aaacastor@gmail.com
俄罗斯联邦, Moscow, 117997

P. Grabarnik

Institute of Physicochemical and Biological Problems of Soil Sciences

Email: aaacastor@gmail.com
俄罗斯联邦, Pushchino, Moscow oblast, 142290

A. Efimenko

Center for Forest Ecology and Productivity

Email: aaacastor@gmail.com
俄罗斯联邦, Moscow, 117997

补充文件

附件文件
动作
1. JATS XML

版权所有 © Pleiades Publishing, Ltd., 2018