Productivity of mixed versus pure stands of oak (Quercus petraea (Matt.) Liebl. and Quercus robur L.) and European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) along an ecological gradient

被引:0
|
作者
Hans Pretzsch
Kamil Bielak
Joachim Block
Arkadiusz Bruchwald
Jochen Dieler
Hans-Peter Ehrhart
Ulrich Kohnle
Jürgen Nagel
Hermann Spellmann
Michał Zasada
Andreas Zingg
机构
[1] Technische Universität München,Chair for Forest Growth and Yield Science
[2] Warsaw University of Life Sciences,Faculty of Forestry
[3] Research Institute for Forest Ecology and Forestry Rhineland-Palatinate,undefined
[4] Forest Research Institute Baden-Württemberg,undefined
[5] Northwest German Forest Research Station,undefined
[6] Swiss Federal Research Institute WSL,undefined
[7] Forest Research Institute,undefined
来源
European Journal of Forest Research | 2013年 / 132卷
关键词
Facilitation; Competitive reduction; Competition; Stress-gradient; Overyielding; Mixing effect; Long-term mixing experiments; Climate change;
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The mixture of beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) and oak (sessile oak, Quercus petraea (Matt.) Liebl., and pedunculate oak, Q. robur L.) is of considerable importance in Europe and will probably become even more important under climate change. Therefore, the performance of oak and beech in mixture was compared with the species’ growth in pure stands. Data from 37 long-term mixing experiments in Poland, Germany and Switzerland were pooled for analysis of mixing effects on stand productivity and possible interrelationships with mixing portions or site conditions. We found that on average, mixed stands of oak and beech exceeded biomass productivity in pure stands by 30 % or 1.7 t ha−1 year−1, as the growth of both species was benefitted by the mixture. However, that the interaction actually ranged from facilitation and overyielding on poor sites to underyielding on fertile sites triggered by competition. An empirically derived interaction model showed volume and dry mass growth changing in mixed stands from gains of 50 % to losses of 10 % depending on site conditions. It is concluded that the analysed mixture grows in accordance with the stress-gradient hypothesis and that our results suggest a site-specific relationship between species mixture and biomass productivity. As a consequence, an adequate species mix should result in increased productivity under steady state as well as climate change.
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页码:263 / 280
页数:17
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