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Exploring the influence of tree species richness on vertical structure variability in young plantations using terrestrial laser scanning

Mengxi Wang (UGent) , Kim Calders (UGent) , Hans Verbeeck (UGent) , Kris Verheyen (UGent) , Lander Baeten (UGent) , Haben Blondeel (UGent) , Bart Muys (UGent) , Quentin Ponette, John Armston and Frieke Vancoillie (UGent)
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Abstract
Forest structure spatially varies at the landscape-scale (between-plot) but also local-scale (within-plot). Both scales of structural variability have significant impacts on forest ecosystem functioning and stability. However, we still have a limited understanding of how tree species richness affects the spatial structural variability. In this study, we disentangled within- and between-plot variability in stand structural variables depending on tree species richness level. Terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) technology, capable of developing forest vertical structure in 3D detail, was applied in the FORBIO tree diversity experiment at three sites in Belgium. One site was 9-year old (Hechtel-Eksel) and other two sites were 11-year old (Zedelgem and Gedinne). Each site included five different sets of one, two, three, and four tree species mixtures with one replica. At each plot, four single scan locations were used. Six stand structural variables were quantified based on TLS vertical plant profiles. We hypothesized that within-plot structural variability would increase with species richness, but that the betweenplot structural variability would decrease with species richness. Our study revealed notable differences in structural variability between monocultures and mixtures across all sites examined. However, the relationship between tree species richness and structural variability patterns is site-dependent. Specifically, at the Zedelgem site, we observed increased within-plot variability and decreased between-plot variability with species richness, supporting the hypothesis that species richness drives stand structural variability. However, the hypothesized pattern was not as strong at the Hechtel-Eksel and Gedinne sites. Moreover, the various structural variables displayed contrasting responses to changes in species richness. These findings indicated the potential influence of tree species richness on within- and between-plot structural variability in young plantations, particularly in favorable site conditions with well-adapted species pools. Hence, afforestation measures would benefit from planting multiple tree species to initiate structurally complex stands by considering species richness level.
Keywords
TreeDivNet, FORBIO, Stand structural variability, Terrestrial laser scanning, Vertical plant material, Tree diversity, Forest plantations, ABOVEGROUND BIOMASS, FOREST, DIVERSITY, COMPLEMENTARITY, PRODUCTIVITY, COMPLEXITY, PROFILES, DRIVEN, STANDS, cavelab

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Citation

Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:

MLA
Wang, Mengxi, et al. “Exploring the Influence of Tree Species Richness on Vertical Structure Variability in Young Plantations Using Terrestrial Laser Scanning.” FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, vol. 554, 2024, doi:10.1016/j.foreco.2023.121662.
APA
Wang, M., Calders, K., Verbeeck, H., Verheyen, K., Baeten, L., Blondeel, H., … Vancoillie, F. (2024). Exploring the influence of tree species richness on vertical structure variability in young plantations using terrestrial laser scanning. FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 554. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2023.121662
Chicago author-date
Wang, Mengxi, Kim Calders, Hans Verbeeck, Kris Verheyen, Lander Baeten, Haben Blondeel, Bart Muys, Quentin Ponette, John Armston, and Frieke Vancoillie. 2024. “Exploring the Influence of Tree Species Richness on Vertical Structure Variability in Young Plantations Using Terrestrial Laser Scanning.” FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT 554. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2023.121662.
Chicago author-date (all authors)
Wang, Mengxi, Kim Calders, Hans Verbeeck, Kris Verheyen, Lander Baeten, Haben Blondeel, Bart Muys, Quentin Ponette, John Armston, and Frieke Vancoillie. 2024. “Exploring the Influence of Tree Species Richness on Vertical Structure Variability in Young Plantations Using Terrestrial Laser Scanning.” FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT 554. doi:10.1016/j.foreco.2023.121662.
Vancouver
1.
Wang M, Calders K, Verbeeck H, Verheyen K, Baeten L, Blondeel H, et al. Exploring the influence of tree species richness on vertical structure variability in young plantations using terrestrial laser scanning. FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT. 2024;554.
IEEE
[1]
M. Wang et al., “Exploring the influence of tree species richness on vertical structure variability in young plantations using terrestrial laser scanning,” FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, vol. 554, 2024.
@article{01HNZGFEX46X51BS690Z91C4YA,
  abstract     = {{Forest structure spatially varies at the landscape-scale (between-plot) but also local-scale (within-plot). Both scales of structural variability have significant impacts on forest ecosystem functioning and stability. However, we still have a limited understanding of how tree species richness affects the spatial structural variability. In this study, we disentangled within- and between-plot variability in stand structural variables depending on tree species richness level. Terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) technology, capable of developing forest vertical structure in 3D detail, was applied in the FORBIO tree diversity experiment at three sites in Belgium. One site was 9-year old (Hechtel-Eksel) and other two sites were 11-year old (Zedelgem and Gedinne). Each site included five different sets of one, two, three, and four tree species mixtures with one replica. At each plot, four single scan locations were used. Six stand structural variables were quantified based on TLS vertical plant profiles. We hypothesized that within-plot structural variability would increase with species richness, but that the betweenplot structural variability would decrease with species richness. Our study revealed notable differences in structural variability between monocultures and mixtures across all sites examined. However, the relationship between tree species richness and structural variability patterns is site-dependent. Specifically, at the Zedelgem site, we observed increased within-plot variability and decreased between-plot variability with species richness, supporting the hypothesis that species richness drives stand structural variability. However, the hypothesized pattern was not as strong at the Hechtel-Eksel and Gedinne sites. Moreover, the various structural variables displayed contrasting responses to changes in species richness. These findings indicated the potential influence of tree species richness on within- and between-plot structural variability in young plantations, particularly in favorable site conditions with well-adapted species pools. Hence, afforestation measures would benefit from planting multiple tree species to initiate structurally complex stands by considering species richness level.}},
  articleno    = {{121662}},
  author       = {{Wang, Mengxi and Calders, Kim and Verbeeck, Hans and Verheyen, Kris and Baeten, Lander and Blondeel, Haben and Muys, Bart and Ponette, Quentin and Armston, John and Vancoillie, Frieke}},
  issn         = {{0378-1127}},
  journal      = {{FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT}},
  keywords     = {{TreeDivNet,FORBIO,Stand structural variability,Terrestrial laser scanning,Vertical plant material,Tree diversity,Forest plantations,ABOVEGROUND BIOMASS,FOREST,DIVERSITY,COMPLEMENTARITY,PRODUCTIVITY,COMPLEXITY,PROFILES,DRIVEN,STANDS,cavelab}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{9}},
  title        = {{Exploring the influence of tree species richness on vertical structure variability in young plantations using terrestrial laser scanning}},
  url          = {{http://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2023.121662}},
  volume       = {{554}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}

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