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Influence of light availability on growth, leaf morphology and plant architecture of beech ( Fagus sylvatica L.), maple ( Acer pseudoplatanus L.) and ash ( Fraxinus excelsior L.) saplings
Authors:Any Mary Petri?an   Burghard von Lüpke  Ion Catalin Petri?an
Affiliation:(1) Department of Silviculture and Forest Ecology of the Temperate Zones, Georg-August University G?ttingen, Büsgenweg 1, 37077 G?ttingen, Germany;(2) Department of Silviculture and Forest Ecology, Institute of Forest Research and Management, Closca 13, 500040 Brasov, Romania;(3) Department of Forest Management, Transilvania University Brasov, Sirul Beethoven 1, 500123 Brasov, Romania
Abstract:
In a field study, we measured saplings of beech, ash and maple growing in a fairly even-aged mixed-species thicket established by natural regeneration beneath a patchy shelterwood canopy with 3–60% of above canopy radiation reaching the saplings. Under low light conditions, maple and ash showed a slight lead in recent annual length increment compared with beech. With increasing light, ash and maple constantly gained superiority in length increment, whereas beech approached an asymptotic value above 35% light. A suite of architectural and leaf morphological attributes indicated a more pronounced ability of beech to adapt to shade than ash and maple. Beech displayed its leaves along the entire tree height (with a concentration in the middle crown), yielding a higher live crown ratio than ash and maple. It allocated biomass preferentially to radial growth which resulted in low height to diameter ratios, and expressed marked plagiotropic growth in shade indicating a horizontal light-foraging strategy. In addition, beech exhibited the highest specific leaf area, a greater total leaf area per unit tree height, a slightly greater leaf area index, and a greater plasticity to light in total leaf area. Ash and maple presented a “gap species” growth strategy, characterized by a marked and constant response in growth rates to increasing light and an inability to strongly reduce their growth rates in deep shade. In shade, they showed some plasticity in displaying most of their leaf area at the top of the crown to minimize self-shading and to enhance light interception. Through this, particularly, maple developed an “umbrella” like crown. These species-specific responses may be used for controlling the development of mixed-species regeneration in shelterwood systems.
Keywords:Shade tolerance  Juvenile growth  Mixed species broad leaf stand  Tree architecture  Leaf morphology  Light availability
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