Optimizing neighborhood-based stand spatial structure: Four cases of boreal forests

被引:35
作者
Dong, Lingbo [1 ]
Bettinger, Pete [2 ]
Liu, Zhaogang [1 ]
机构
[1] Northeast Forestry Univ, Coll Forestry, Key Lab Sustainable Forest Ecosyst Management, Minist Educ, Harbin 150040, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Georgia, Warnell Sch Forestry & Nat Resources, Athens, GA 30602 USA
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Stand structure; Boreal forests; Species mingling; Combinatorial optimization; Neighborhood-based indicator; MANAGEMENT; OPTIMIZATION; INDEXES; TREES;
D O I
10.1016/j.foreco.2021.119965
中图分类号
S7 [林业];
学科分类号
0829 ; 0907 ;
摘要
Over the past fifty years, societies have placed increasing demands on forests, and their use has shifted gradually from wood production to the diversified benefits and functions of ecosystem services. The effects of neighborhood-based structural characteristics on regulating growth and promoting sustainability have therefore drawn much attention. However, direction for managing natural mixed forests using neighborhood-based indexes are still not clear. Thus, a tree-level harvest planning tool that considers four neighborhood-based structural indexes (species mingling, diametric differentiation, horizontal spatial pattern and crowdedness of trees) while concurrently recognizing other operational constraints, was developed using simulated annealing algorithm. The approach was applied to four 1-ha mapped stands in northeast China, namely a natural larch forest (NLF), a natural birch forest (NBF), a natural secondary forest (SEF), and a Korean pine broad-leaved forest (KBF). The results indicated that the tree-level harvest optimization tool improved the objective function values by approximately 78.33% of NLF, and 134.96% of NBF, and 156.70% of SEF and 252.95%, respectively. The optimal harvest intensities for partial cutting activities varied from 22.16% (SEF) to 26.07% (NBF) of the standing volume. In evaluating the four neighborhood-based structural indexes, both species mingling and crowdedness have the highest priority to be adjusted in structure-based forest management. Our results demonstrated that that the commonly used neighborhood-based structural indexes could be employed to control the spatial layout of potential harvest trees, in turn may be conducive to regulate the growth and stability of forests.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 43 条
[1]   Eight heuristic planning techniques applied to three increasingly difficult wildlife planning problems. [J].
Bettinger, P ;
Graetz, D ;
Boston, K ;
Sessions, J ;
Chung, WD .
SILVA FENNICA, 2002, 36 (02) :561-584
[2]   Tree-Level Harvest Optimization for Structure-Based Forest Management Based on the Species Mingling Index [J].
Bettinger, Pete ;
Tang, Mengping .
FORESTS, 2015, 6 (04) :1121-1144
[3]  
Bettinger P, 2009, MATH COMPUT FOR NAT-, V1, P26
[4]   Growth response to thinning in Quercus pyrenaica Willd.: coppice stands in Spanish central mountain [J].
Cañellas, I ;
Del Río, M ;
Roig, S ;
Montero, G .
ANNALS OF FOREST SCIENCE, 2004, 61 (03) :243-250
[5]   Structure and community composition in a tropical forest suggest a change of ecological processes during stand development [J].
Chanthorn, Wirong ;
Hartig, Florian ;
Brockelman, Warren Y. .
FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2017, 404 :100-107
[6]   The contribution of structural indices to the modelling of Sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis) and birch (Betula spp.) crowns [J].
Davies, O. ;
Pommerening, A. .
FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2008, 256 (1-2) :68-77
[7]   Multifunctional comparison of different management strategies in boreal forests [J].
Diaz-Yanez, O. ;
Pukkala, T. ;
Packalen, P. ;
Peltola, H. .
FORESTRY, 2020, 93 (01) :84-95
[8]   Optimizing Forest Spatial Structure with Neighborhood-Based Indices: Four Case Studies from Northeast China [J].
Dong, Lingbo ;
Wei, Hongyang ;
Liu, Zhaogang .
FORESTS, 2020, 11 (04)
[9]   Developing alternative forest spatial management plans when carbon and timber values are considered: A real case from northeastern China [J].
Dong, Lingbo ;
Lu, Wei ;
Li, Zhaogang .
ECOLOGICAL MODELLING, 2018, 385 :45-57
[10]   Tree growth-competition relationships in thinned Eucalyptus plantations vary with stand structure and site quality [J].
Forrester, David I. ;
Elms, Stephen R. ;
Baker, Thomas G. .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH, 2013, 132 (02) :241-252