Dd. Kneeshaw et Pj. Burton, CANOPY AND AGE STRUCTURES OF SOME OLD SUB-BOREAL PICEA STANDS IN BRITISH-COLUMBIA, Journal of vegetation science, 8(5), 1997, pp. 615-626
14 old, unlogged, Picea-dominated stands in the moist cool Sub-Boreal
Spruce biogeoclimatic subzone of central British Columbia, Canada, wer
e sampled to describe canopy heterogeneity, regeneration patterns and
tree population age structures. These stands are composed of Picea eng
elmannii x glauca hybrids, Abies lasiocarpa and lesser amounts of Pinu
s contorta and Populus tremuloides, and had survived 124 - 343 yr sinc
e the last stand-destroying wildfire. Canopy cover was patchy and high
ly variable (ranging from 30.5 % to 86.4 %) but was not significantly
related to stand age. Vertical canopy structure was less variable, ref
lecting the shade-tolerance and live crown ratios (length of live cano
py expressed relative to tree height) of component species: 18.8 % for
Populus, 20.2 % for Pinus, 46.7 % for Picea and 51.4 % for Abies. Ind
ividual stands Varied considerably in their population structures and
in their stand development trajectories, yet some patterns are evident
. Survivors of the initial post-disturbance cohort of trees took 51 to
118 yr (mean = 80, s.d. = 20) to establish. Some stands had ail tree
species present during stand initiation, while other stands indicated
early successional roles for Populus and Pinus, or a late successional
role for Abies. Abies recruitment, while often slow in the beginning,
occurs uniformly throughout the history of most stands, reflecting th
e high shade-tolerance of this species. Picea is often recruited in hi
gh densities early in stand development, and then (after long periods
of exclusion) may be displaced by Abies in some stands but maintains i
tself in others. Minor, single-tree disturbances (due to bark beetles,
root rot, and windthrow) were important in accelerating the reinitiat
ion of Picea in the understory. Results thus suggest that stands from
this region can be self-perpetuating in the absence of fire. Yet, post
-fire tree populations still clearly dominate these spruce-fir forests
, for only the oldest stand had greater basal area in the replacement
cohort than in the initial cohort.