Franka Huth
Dresden University of Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Franka Huth.
European Journal of Forest Research | 2011
Sven Wagner; Holger Fischer; Franka Huth
This paper reviews the primary effects of canopy on understorey vegetation to provide insight into the management of the canopy space to benefit tree regeneration. Site conditions, like nutrient and water availability, overstorey conditions, e.g. tree species, and canopy density, are important determinants of ground vegetation. An investigation of canopy effects is concerned about how the canopy trees modify site conditions. As canopy density may be deliberately modified during regeneration treatments, the effect of canopy density on individual species in the herbaceous layer and tree regeneration is important. This autecological perspective focuses on the successional traits of species to help understand species differences in fecundity, survival, density and growth. From a synecological perspective, the importance of successional traits for the outcome of competition between species arising from differences in canopy densities is highlighted. This review shows that moderately dense canopies may favour tree regeneration over aggressive shade-intolerant graminoids or forbs. This is particularly true for shade-tolerant and intermediate shade-tolerant tree species. To better understand and utilise this phenomenon, research should try to identify and isolate different canopy effects.
Ecology and Society | 2014
Sven Wagner; Susanna Nocentini; Franka Huth; Marjanke Hoogstra-Klein
The issue of rapid change in environmental conditions under which ecosystem processes and human interventions will take place in the future is relatively new to forestry, whereas the provision of ecosystem services, e.g., timber or fresh water, is at the very heart of the original concept of forest management. Forest managers have developed ambitious deterministic approaches to provide the services demanded, and thus the use of deterministic approaches for adapting to climate change seem to be a logical continuation. However, as uncertainty about the intensity of climate change is high, forest managers need to answer this uncertainty conceptually. One may envision an indeterministic approach to cope with this uncertainty; but how the services will be provided in such a concept remains unclear. This article aims to explore the fundamental aspects of both deterministic and indeterministic approaches used in forestry to cope with climate change, and thereby point out trade-offs in service provisioning and adaptability. A forest owner needs to be able to anticipate these trade-offs in order to make decisions towards sustainable forest management under climate change.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Yue Lin; Uta Berger; Volker Grimm; Franka Huth; Jacob Weiner
Metabolic scaling theory (MST) is an attempt to link physiological processes of individual organisms with macroecology. It predicts a power law relationship with an exponent of −4/3 between mean individual biomass and density during density-dependent mortality (self-thinning). Empirical tests have produced variable results, and the validity of MST is intensely debated. MST focuses on organisms’ internal physiological mechanisms but we hypothesize that ecological interactions can be more important in determining plant mass-density relationships induced by density. We employ an individual-based model of plant stand development that includes three elements: a model of individual plant growth based on MST, different modes of local competition (size-symmetric vs. -asymmetric), and different resource levels. Our model is consistent with the observed variation in the slopes of self-thinning trajectories. Slopes were significantly shallower than −4/3 if competition was size-symmetric. We conclude that when the size of survivors is influenced by strong ecological interactions, these can override predictions of MST, whereas when surviving plants are less affected by interactions, individual-level metabolic processes can scale up to the population level. MST, like thermodynamics or biomechanics, sets limits within which organisms can live and function, but there may be stronger limits determined by ecological interactions. In such cases MST will not be predictive.
European Journal of Forest Research | 2016
Peter Annighöfer; Aitor Ameztegui; Christian Ammer; Philippe Balandier; Norbert Bartsch; Andreas Bolte; Lluís Coll; Catherine Collet; Jörg Ewald; Nico Frischbier; Tsegay Gebereyesus; Josephine Haase; Tobias Hamm; Bastian Hirschfelder; Franka Huth; Gerald Kändler; Anja Kahl; Heike Kawaletz; Christian Kuehne; André Lacointe; Na Lin; Magnus Löf; Philippe Malagoli; André Marquier; Sandra Cristina Müller; Susanne Promberger; Damien Provendier; Heinz Röhle; Jate Sathornkich; Peter Schall
AbstractBiomass equations are a helpful tool to estimate the tree and stand biomass production and standing stock. Such estimations are of great interest for science but also of great importance for global reports on the carbon cycle and the global climate system. Even though there are various collections and generic meta-analyses available with biomass equations for mature trees, reports on biomass equations for juvenile trees (seedlings and saplings) are mainly missing. Against the background of an increasing amount of reforestation and afforestation projects and forests in young successional stages, such equations are required. In this study we have collected data from various studies on the aboveground woody biomass of 19 common tree species growing in Europe. The aim of this paper was to calculate species-specific biomass equations for the aboveground woody biomass of single trees in dependence of root-collar-diameter (RCD), height (H) and the combination of the two (RCD2 H). Next to calculating species-specific biomass equations for the species available in the dataset, we also calculated generic biomass equations for all broadleaved species and all conifer species. The biomass equations should be a contribution to the pool of published biomass equations, whereas the novelty is here that the equations were exclusively derived for young trees.
Forest Ecology and Management | 2006
Franka Huth; Sven Wagner
Oikos | 2014
Yue Lin; Franka Huth; Uta Berger; Volker Grimm
Schweizerische Zeitschrift Fur Forstwesen | 2013
Franka Huth; Sven Wagner
Integrative approaches as an opportunity for the conservation of forest biodiversity | 2013
Sven Wagner; Franka Huth; G.M.J. Mohren; Isabelle Herrmann
Environmental Management | 2013
Doreen Schmiedel; Franka Huth; Sven Wagner
Iforest - Biogeosciences and Forestry | 2018
K. Tiebel; Franka Huth; Sven Wagner