Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Thinning effects on jack pine and black spruce photosynthesis in eastern boreal forests of Canada
View through CrossRef
A decrease in the average diameter of commercially harvested tree species in the Eastern boreal forest of Canada has led to a decrease in availability of quality wood for the forest industry. Commercial thinning has been proposed as a means to increase stem diameter growth. However, little is known about physiological responses underlying species responses to thinning. We assessed the effect of canopy opening on the photosynthetic response of mature jack pine (Pinus banksiana Lamb.) and black spruce (Picea mariana (Mill.) BSP) trees. Two years after thinning and for each species, light response curves and the diurnal course of photosynthesis were characterized from measurements taken in a completely randomized block experiment on current-year and one-year-old needles of 12 trees from stands subjected to different levels of canopy opening. Soil water content, air and soil temperatures, and needle N concentration were not affected by thinning for either species. However, light availability increased with basal area removed and could explain the significantly positive relationship between thinning intensity and diurnal course of photosynthesis for one-year-old needles of jack pine. Black spruce photosynthesis did not respond to increases in light. Light-saturated rate of net photosynthesis (A), photosynthetic efficiency (α), light compensation point (LCP), and diurnal respiration (R) did not vary with thinning for either of the species. Jack pine and black spruce responses to thinning should be interpreted in light of species autecology.maxd
Finnish Society of Forest Science
Title: Thinning effects on jack pine and black spruce photosynthesis in eastern boreal forests of Canada
Description:
A decrease in the average diameter of commercially harvested tree species in the Eastern boreal forest of Canada has led to a decrease in availability of quality wood for the forest industry.
Commercial thinning has been proposed as a means to increase stem diameter growth.
However, little is known about physiological responses underlying species responses to thinning.
We assessed the effect of canopy opening on the photosynthetic response of mature jack pine (Pinus banksiana Lamb.
) and black spruce (Picea mariana (Mill.
) BSP) trees.
Two years after thinning and for each species, light response curves and the diurnal course of photosynthesis were characterized from measurements taken in a completely randomized block experiment on current-year and one-year-old needles of 12 trees from stands subjected to different levels of canopy opening.
Soil water content, air and soil temperatures, and needle N concentration were not affected by thinning for either species.
However, light availability increased with basal area removed and could explain the significantly positive relationship between thinning intensity and diurnal course of photosynthesis for one-year-old needles of jack pine.
Black spruce photosynthesis did not respond to increases in light.
Light-saturated rate of net photosynthesis (A), photosynthetic efficiency (α), light compensation point (LCP), and diurnal respiration (R) did not vary with thinning for either of the species.
Jack pine and black spruce responses to thinning should be interpreted in light of species autecology.
maxd.
Related Results
On Flores Island, do "ape-men" still exist? https://www.sapiens.org/biology/flores-island-ape-men/
On Flores Island, do "ape-men" still exist? https://www.sapiens.org/biology/flores-island-ape-men/
<span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><b><spa...
Ice storm impact and management implications for jack pine and pitch pine stands in New York, USA
Ice storm impact and management implications for jack pine and pitch pine stands in New York, USA
In January 1998, an ice storm caused severe damage to the rare jack pine – pitch pine barrens in northeastern New York. We quantified tree damage and recovery in seven barrens stan...
Holocene thinning history of David Glacier, Antarctica
Holocene thinning history of David Glacier, Antarctica
<p>The Antarctic Ice Sheet is a significant component of the Earth System, modulating Earth‘s sea level and climate. Present day and projected ice mass losses from Antarctica...
PINE FORESTS OF THE CLASS ERICO–PINETEA HORVAT 1959 FROM DAGESTAN (NORTHERN CAUCASUS)
PINE FORESTS OF THE CLASS ERICO–PINETEA HORVAT 1959 FROM DAGESTAN (NORTHERN CAUCASUS)
The paper represents the results of grass pine forests classification in Dagestan by the Brown-Blanquet method. A number of 68 releves of pine forests (taken from the paper by Abdu...
Temperate Coniferous Forests
Temperate Coniferous Forests
Temperate conifer forests are geographically and taxonomically diverse, occurring on five continents (North America, Europe, Asia, South America, and Africa). They contain some of ...
Seven Ways a Warming Climate Can Kill the Southern Boreal Forest
Seven Ways a Warming Climate Can Kill the Southern Boreal Forest
The southern boreal forests of North America are susceptible to large changes in composition as temperate forests or grasslands may replace them as the climate warms. A number of m...
Boreal Biome
Boreal Biome
The boreal biome, with vast forests across northern North America, Europe, and Asia, has been of interest since the science of ecology got its start in the late 1800s. Many also re...
Vegetation map of the “Lindulovskaya Roshcha” nature reserve
Vegetation map of the “Lindulovskaya Roshcha” nature reserve
The article presents the vegetation map of the “Lindulovskaya Roshcha” Nature Reserve (Fig. 1, 2), which is located in the Vyborg district, Leningrad Region (Karelian Isthmus). The...

