Under the intensifying cyclonic activity, the wind resistance of European forests could be increased through science-based adaptive forest management, which requires the quantification of tree stability. In this regard, the dimensions of the soil-root plate can be directly attributed to tree wind resistance; however, naturally uprooted trees might be a biased source of information for the evaluation of adaptive measures due to uncontrolled conditions and uneven sample size. Therefore, the dimensions of the soil-root plates of naturally windthrown silver birch trees ( Roth.) are compared to artificially overturned trees under a static tree-pulling test in Eastern Baltic region. The application of static tree-pulling overestimated the dimensions of the soil-root plates of silver birch compared to windthrown trees. The overestimation of soil-root plate dimensions was consistent spatially and across soil types, which is likely a regional adaptation to local wind climate. This implies that static tree-pulling is representative of the assessment of the effects of adaptive management on tree stability via the dimensions of the soil-root plates.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants11111509 | DOI Listing |
Plants (Basel)
June 2022
Latvian State Forest Research Institute 'Silava', 111 Rigas Str., LV-2169 Salaspils, Latvia.
Under the intensifying cyclonic activity, the wind resistance of European forests could be increased through science-based adaptive forest management, which requires the quantification of tree stability. In this regard, the dimensions of the soil-root plate can be directly attributed to tree wind resistance; however, naturally uprooted trees might be a biased source of information for the evaluation of adaptive measures due to uncontrolled conditions and uneven sample size. Therefore, the dimensions of the soil-root plates of naturally windthrown silver birch trees ( Roth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlants (Basel)
April 2022
Latvian State Forest Research Institute 'Silava', 111 Rigas Street, LV-2169 Salaspils, Latvia.
In Northern Europe, the ongoing winter warming along with increasing precipitation shortens the periods for which soil is frozen, which aggravates the susceptibility of forest stands to wind damage under an increasing frequency of severe wind events via the reduction in soil-root anchorage. Such processes are recognized to be explicit in moist and loose soils, such as deep peat, while stands on dry mineral soils are considered more stable. In the hemiboreal forest zone in the Eastern Baltics, silver birch ( Roth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Bot
October 2006
University of Joensuu, Faculty of Forestry, P.O. Box 111, FI-80101 Joensuu, Finland.
Wind affects the structure and functioning of a forest ecosystem continuously and may cause significant economic loss in managed forests by reducing the yield of recoverable timber, increasing the cost of unscheduled thinning and clear-cuttings, and creating problems in forestry planning. Furthermore, broken and uprooted trees within the forest are subject to insect attack and may provide a suitable breeding substrate, endangering the remaining trees. Therefore, an improved understanding of the processes behind the occurrence of wind-induced damage is of interest to many forest ecologists, but may also help managers of forest resources to make appropriate management decisions related to risk management.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTree Physiol
January 2006
Cemagref Grenoble, St. Martin d'Hères, France.
The capacity of individual trees to dissipate the energy released by rockfalls has previously only been quantified based on data obtained from static tree-pulling tests or from dynamic impact tests on wood samples. We predicted that these data are not representative of the maximum amount of energy that can be dissipated by living trees during rockfall impacts. To test this prediction, we carried out rockfall experiments on a forested slope in the French Alps.
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