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Ecology | 2008

SPATIAL ELEMENTS OF MORTALITY RISK IN OLD-GROWTH FORESTS

Adrian Das; John J. Battles; Phillip J. van Mantgem; Nathan L. Stephenson

For many species of long-lived organisms, such as trees, survival appears to be the most critical vital rate affecting population persistence. However, methods commonly used to quantify tree death, such as relating tree mortality risk solely to diameter growth, almost certainly do not account for important spatial processes. Our goal in this study was to detect and, if present, to quantify the relevance of such processes. For this purpose, we examined purely spatial aspects of mortality for four species, Abies concolor, Abies magnifica, Calocedrus decurrens, and Pinus lambertiana, in an old-growth conifer forest in the Sierra Nevada of California, USA. The analysis was performed using data from nine fully mapped long-term monitoring plots. In three cases, the results unequivocally supported the inclusion of spatial information in models used to predict mortality. For Abies concolor, our results suggested that growth rate may not always adequately capture increased mortality risk due to competition. We also found evidence of a facilitative effect for this species, with mortality risk decreasing with proximity to conspecific neighbors. For Pinus lambertiana, mortality risk increased with density of conspecific neighbors, in keeping with a mechanism of increased pathogen or insect pressure (i.e., a Janzen-Connell type effect). Finally, we found that models estimating risk of being crushed were strongly improved by the inclusion of a simple index of spatial proximity. Not only did spatial indices improve models, those improvements were relevant for mortality prediction. For P. lambertiana, spatial factors were important for estimation of mortality risk regardless of growth rate. For A. concolor, although most of the population fell within spatial conditions in which mortality risk was well described by growth, trees that died occurred outside those conditions in a disproportionate fashion. Furthermore, as stands of A. concolor become increasingly dense, such spatial factors are likely to become increasingly important. In general, models that fail to account for spatial pattern are at risk of failure as conditions change.


Canadian Journal of Forest Research | 2007

The relationship between tree growth patterns and likelihood of mortality: A study of two tree species in the Sierra Nevada

Adrian Das; John J. Battles; Nathan L. Stephenson; Phillip J. van Mantgem


Climatic Change | 2008

Climate change impacts on forest growth and tree mortality: a data-driven modeling study in the mixed-conifer forest of the Sierra Nevada, California

John J. Battles; Timothy Robards; Adrian Das; Kristen M. Waring; J. Keith Gilless; Gregory S. Biging; Frieder Schurr


Canadian Journal of Forest Research | 2012

The effect of size and competition on tree growth rate in old-growth coniferous forests

Adrian Das


Canadian Journal of Forest Research | 2014

An individual-based growth and competition model for coastal redwood forest restoration

Phillip J. van Mantgem; Adrian Das


Canadian Journal of Forest Research | 2015

Improving estimates of tree mortality probability using potential growth rate

Adrian Das; Nathan L. Stephenson


Canadian Journal of Forest Research | 2015

The influence of prefire tree growth and crown condition on postfire mortality of sugar pine following prescribed fire in Sequoia National Park

Jonathan C.B. Nesmith; Adrian Das; Kevin L. O’Hara; Phillip J. van Mantgem


Natural Resource Report | 2013

A natural resource condition assessment for Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks: Appendix 22: climatic change

Adrian Das; Nathan L. Stephenson


Fuel and Energy Abstracts | 2011

The contribution of competition to tree mortality in old-growth coniferous forests

Adrian Das; John J. Battles; Nathan L. Stephenson; Phillip J. van Mantgem


Archive | 2009

PROJECTING CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS ON FOREST GROWTH AND YIELD FOR CALIFORNIA'S SIERRAN MIXED CONIFER FORESTS

John J. Battles; Timothy Robards; Adrian Das; William Stewart

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Nathan L. Stephenson

United States Geological Survey

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Phillip J. van Mantgem

United States Geological Survey

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Timothy Robards

California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection

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Frieder Schurr

University of California

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