Affiliation:
1. Lehtoi Research, 81235 Lehtoi, Finland
Abstract
A dataset collected from central South Finland was used to investigate the mortality of boreal trees. The mortality rate was found to be the order of three times that predicted by earlier Nordic mortality models, being in the upper range of international literature observations. Small subpopulations of any tree species tend to die out. The mortality of downy birch increases with stand basal area, as well as with stand age. The mortality of Norway spruce and silver birch increases after 100 years, while that of Scots pine is invariant to age. It is suspected that the high mortality of conifers is due to climatic phenomena of anthropogenic origin. As the relative loss rate of basal area is insensitive to stand basal area, the mortality of trees does not strongly regulate thinning practices, but stand-replacing damage can be avoided by retaining a larger timber stock, along with an enhanced proportion of deciduous trees.
Reference68 articles.
1. Perfection a stand-density index for even-aged forest;Reineke;J. Agric. Res.,1933
2. Self-Thinning in Overcrowded Pure Stands under Cultivated and Natural Conditions;Yoda;J. Biol.,1963
3. Functional diversity and identity influence the self-thinning process in young forest communities;Urgoiti;J. Ecol.,2023
4. Competition and tree death;Peet;BioScience,1987
5. Stand Structure and Allometry of Trees During Self-Thinning of Pure Stands;Mohler;J. Ecol.,1978