
Spatial and Temporal Patterns of Natural Disturbance in Old Growth Forests of Northern Maine, USA
- Fraver, Shawn
University of Maine Graduate School
I linked methods of dendroecology with spatial analyses to investigate the patterns of natural disturbance in a ca.2000-ha old-growth landscape of Northern Maine. I randomly placed 38 plots among five community types throughout the landscape and reconstructed a history of disturbance (a chronology) for each.
I found no evidence of stand replacing disturbance during the period covered by this investigation (back to the mid 1700s). The disturbance rates were generally low (mean of 9.6% canopy destruction per decade), yet fluctuated markedly through time. Minor peaks in disturbance were synchronized among plots, albeit weakly, suggesting landscape-wide pulses of tree recruitment, canopy openness, and deadwood abundance. However, I found no evidence of spatial patterning of disturbance: no correlation between disturbance patterns and the physical distance between plots, and no evidence of disturbance patch structure. Matrix correlation indicated that species composition best explained the variability in temporal patterns of disturbance. Neither landform nor aspect influenced rates or patterns or disturbance. The disturbance dynamic appears to have two components: pulses of moderate severity disturbances caused by host-specific disturbance agents (primarily the spruce budworm) interposed upon a background of scattered small-scale canopy gaps.
You must be logged in to post a comment.