DENDROECOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF THE POPULATION-DYNAMICS OF AN OLD-GROWTHFOREST ON CLIFF-FACES OF THE NIAGARA ESCARPMENT, CANADA

Citation
Pe. Kelly et Dw. Larson, DENDROECOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF THE POPULATION-DYNAMICS OF AN OLD-GROWTHFOREST ON CLIFF-FACES OF THE NIAGARA ESCARPMENT, CANADA, Journal of Ecology, 85(4), 1997, pp. 467-478
Citations number
48
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00220477
Volume
85
Issue
4
Year of publication
1997
Pages
467 - 478
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-0477(1997)85:4<467:DAOTPO>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
1 We examined temporal fluctuations in age structure and population dy namics in an ancient forest of Thuja occidentalis on cliff-faces of th e Niagara Escarpment, Canada. Living stem density was 1003 stems ha(-1 ) and total numbers of dead stems and living trees on the cliff and in the talus were consistent along the length of the cliff-face, and sim ilar to other old-growth forests. 2 The extreme longevity of T. occide ntalis and the presence of persistent coarse woody debris provided a r are opportunity to reconstruct the palaeodemography of this forest, to determine whether the stable uneven-aged structure is indicative of a forest population free of disturbance and existing in a steady-state condition. 3 The forest had maintained a stable uneven-aged structure or reverse-J age structure with no evidence of disturbance for the 12 reconstructed years between 1770 and the present. There had been a net population reduction since 1770, with mortality rates exceeding recru itment rates over the last 140 years. While recruitment rates had vari ed, there had been continuous recruitment and survival of seedlings ov er this time. 4 Synchronous radial growth releases occurred in over 20 % of the dated trees during 11 years between 1450 and 1992. Synchronou s radial growth suppression occurred during three other years. 5 Cliff s and other rock outcrop ecosystems may, as a class of habitat types, represent systems that are locally constant, even when their neighbour ing communities experience large-scale disturbance.