Author:
Cunningham Catherine,Zimmermann Niklaus E,Stoeckli Veronika,Bugmann Harald
Abstract
Black snow mold (Herpotrichia juniperi (Duby) Petr.) infection and browsing byungulates influence the growth of Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) saplings in subalpine forests in the European Alps. To isolate the impacts of artificial browsing (clipping of shoots) and snow mold infection on growth, we conducted a 2 year field experiment with planted saplings in two forest gaps in the subalpine zone of the Swiss Alps. In the first year (2003) saplings responded slightly positively to clipping and negatively to snow mold infection; sapling growth behavior was site-specific (ANOVA, r2 = 0.35). In 2004, saplings responded negatively to clipping, snow mold infection, long-lasting snow cover, and shading by ground vegetation (ANOVA, r2 = 0.59). The difference in mean annual growth rates between noninfected and infected saplings was large; long-lasting snow was found to enhance snow mold coverage. Removing these variables from general linear models strongly reduced model performance (d2 = 0.32 for the full model, d2 = 0.23 for no clipping, d2 = 0.16 for no snow cover). Sapling growth was negatively related to shading by ground vegetation, especially in 2004. We conclude that these biotic factors have a strong impact on growth, both individually and in combination, and that their effect is enhanced by interaction with environmental factors such as snow duration.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Ecology,Forestry,Global and Planetary Change
Cited by
18 articles.
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