Record Details

The influence of stand structure and topography on growth, leaf area and efficiency of young Douglas-fir in the Oregon Coast Range

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title The influence of stand structure and topography on growth, leaf area and efficiency of young Douglas-fir in the Oregon Coast Range
Names Kaiser, Elisabeth H. (creator)
Perry, David A. (advisor)
Date Issued 1986-05-30 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1987
Abstract The relative influences of stand structure and topographic
variation on volume growth, photosynthetic surface area,
and stem growth efficiency were determined for six 17 to
23 year old well stocked stands in the central Oregon
Coast Range. Plots were assigned to topographic classes
(aspect, slope steepness, and slope position), by which
stand density, stand growth and efficiency, and individual
tree size and growth were compared. Plots were also
assigned to classes according to the hardwood content and
the same characteristics compared. In addition, individual
trees were assigned to and compared by crown dominance
classes. Multiple regression analyses were performed to
show correlations of growth and efficiency variables with
stand structure and topography variables.
Results showed that not only stocking levels but
also stand structure influence both stand and individual
tree volume growth and efficiency. At a given Relative Density, stands with a lower stem density of large trees
grew more volume and were more efficient than stands with
many small trees. In addition, stands with more variation
in tree size were more efficient than were more uniformly
sized stands. The effect of stand structure overrode the
effect of topography on growth and efficiency with two
exceptions: stand volume growth and efficiency were higher
on southerly than on northerly aspects and in areas of
higher rainfall. In these areas, stands of a given density
carried more leaf area, which may help to explain why
growth was better there.
In the regression analyses, stand volume growth
correlated positively with Douglas-fir stand basal area,
average annual rainfall, Relative Density, and an aspect
variable that indicated better growth on southerly
aspects. Stand volume growth correlated negatively with
stem density of Douglas-fir. Stand leaf area correlated
positively with stand basal area, average annual rainfall,
stem density, and south aspects. Stand stem growth
efficiency (volume growth per unit of leaf area)
correlated positively with Relative Density, individual
tree size variance, and southerly aspects, and correlated
negatively with stem density and leaf area.
Individual tree growth was mostly determined by
the tree basal area, although there was a small negative effect of increasing stand basal area. The more dominant a
tree was in a stand the greater was its growth, but
suppressed trees were the most efficient, whether
efficiency was calculated in terms of stem volume growth
per unit individual tree leaf area or basal area growth
per unit individual tree basal area.
The presence of hardwoods of the small size and
low densities in this study had no effect on absolute
growth, however Douglas-fir grew more efficiently in pure
stands than when mixed with hardwoods.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Douglas fir -- Oregon -- Growth
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/13253

© Western Waters Digital Library - GWLA member projects - Designed by the J. Willard Marriott Library - Hosted by Oregon State University Libraries and Press