1. Survival and development of Liaodong oak stump sprouts in the Huanglong Mountains of China six years after three partial harvests.
- Author
-
Rong, Li, Wenhui, Zhang, Jingfeng, He, and Jianyun, Zhou
- Subjects
SPROUTS ,SHELTERWOODS ,GERMINATION - Abstract
The survival and development of Liaodong oak ( Quercus liaotungensis Koidz) stump sprouts were studied for 6 years under leave-tree, as well as 60 and 75% crown closure uniform shelterwood in the Huanglong Mountains of China. Stump sprout survival rate, number of sprouts, and sprout height under the three partial harvests during the first year post-harvest did not differ. Six years post-harvest, 78.32% of the stumps had living sprouts. No variation in sprout survival was found among the treatments throughout the study period. The number of living sprouts per stump was 13.77 ± 0.50 in the first growing season after harvest, and dropped to 6.49 ± 0.22 after 6 years. This result indicated the occurrence of self-thinning within the sprout clumps. Moreover, the height of dominant sprout increased from 52.88 ± 1.62 cm (in the first year) to 132.82 ± 2.35 cm (in the sixth year) post-harvest. Sprout height in the leave-tree harvest type was higher than those in the two shelterwoods in the fifth and sixth years after logging. Annual height growth was approximately 8-96 cm during the first growing season, and then decreased at a rate of 1-44 cm per year in the following years. A negative relationship was found between sprout height and the number of sprouts per stump. This result indicated a trade-off between the number of sprouts and height growth. The number of sprouts per stump decreased by about 0.2 stem for each 1 m/ha increased in residual basal area. Therefore, sprouting may play an important role in the restoration of the secondary forest after harvesting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF