1. Canopy and emergent white spruce in “pure” broadleaf stands: frequency, predictive models, and ecological importance.
- Author
-
Cumming, Steve, Trindade, Mariana, Greene, David, and Macdonald, S. Ellen
- Subjects
- *
WHITE spruce , *FOREST canopies , *ASPEN (Trees) , *AERIAL photographs , *TREE age , *FOREST density , *TAIGAS - Abstract
In mixedwood boreal forests of western Canada, stands classified as “pure deciduous” by forest inventories sometimes contain a few large white spruce (Picea glauca (Moench) Voss) trees among or emerging from the canopy. These trees are important as regeneration seed sources and for habitat structure. Neither their abundance nor the characteristics of stands in which they occur have previously been quantified. Of 275 “pure aspen” stands in northeastern Alberta, 19.6% contained at least one such spruce detectable in an aerial photograph. These trees were found in stands across the range of sampled canopy heights, densities, age classes, and stand sizes and were often present in the interior of stands, not just on the perimeter. The frequency of 3 ha cells containing at least one spruce was related to (i) stand shape and size, (ii) amount of mature white spruce in adjacent forest, (iii) canopy height, (iv) stand age, and (v) stand density. We conclude that such trees are relatively abundant and widely distributed within the boreal mixedwood forests of Alberta. There is presently no provision to maintain this landscape element within managed forests. More information is needed to determine if or how they should be considered in forest management planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF