Graduate School of Geography, Clark University, 950 Main Street, Worcester, Massachusetts, 01610, USA.
Department of Geography, University of Colorado-Boulder, Boulder, Colorado, 80309, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2018 Mar;28(2):457-472. doi: 10.1002/eap.1661. Epub 2018 Feb 5.
Over the past 30 years, forest disturbances have increased in size, intensity, and frequency globally, and are predicted to continue increasing due to climate change, potentially relaxing the constraints of vegetation properties on disturbance regimes. However, the consequences of the potentially declining importance of vegetation in determining future disturbance regimes are not well understood. Historically, bark beetles preferentially attack older trees and stands in later stages of development. However, as climate warming intensifies outbreaks by promoting growth of beetle populations and compromising tree defenses, smaller diameter trees and stands in early stages of development now are being affected by outbreaks. To date, no study has considered how stand age and other pre-outbreak forest conditions mediate the effects of outbreaks on surface and aerial fuel arrangements. We collected fuels data across a chronosequence of post-outbreak sites affected by spruce beetle (SB) between the 1940s and the 2010s, stratified by young (<130 yr) and old (>130 yr) post-fire stands. Canopy and surface fuel loads were calculated for each tree and stand, and available crown fuel load, crown bulk density, and canopy bulk densities were estimated. Canopy bulk density and density of live canopy individuals were reduced in all stands affected by SB, though foliage loss was proportionally greater in old stands as compared to young stands. Fine surface fuel loads in young stands were three times greater shortly (<30 yr) following outbreak as compared to young stands not affected by outbreak, after which the abundance of fine surface fuels decreased to below endemic (i.e., non-outbreak) levels. In both young and old stands, the net effect of SB outbreaks during the 20th and 21st centuries reduced total canopy fuels and increased stand-scale spatial heterogeneity of canopy fuels following outbreak. Importantly, the decrease in canopy fuels following outbreaks was greater in young post-fire stands than in older stands, suggesting that SB outbreaks may more substantially reduce risk of active crown fire when they affect stands in earlier stages of development. The current study shows that the effects of SB outbreaks on forest structure and on fuel profiles are strongly contingent on pre-outbreak conditions as determined by pre-outbreak disturbance history.
在过去的 30 年中,森林干扰在全球范围内的规模、强度和频率都有所增加,并预计由于气候变化将继续增加,这可能会降低植被特性对干扰模式的限制。然而,植被在确定未来干扰模式中的重要性可能下降的后果尚未得到很好的理解。历史上,树皮甲虫优先攻击较老的树木和处于发育后期的林分。然而,随着气候变暖的加剧,通过促进甲虫种群的生长和损害树木的防御能力,使较小直径的树木和处于早期发育阶段的林分更容易受到甲虫的侵害。迄今为止,还没有研究考虑林分年龄和其他爆发前的森林条件如何调节爆发对地表和空中燃料配置的影响。我们在 20 世纪 40 年代至 21 世纪 10 年代之间的斯普鲁斯甲虫(SB)爆发后,收集了一系列不同年龄(<130 年)和较老(>130 年)林分中受 SB 影响的后火灾林分的燃料数据。为每棵树和林分计算了冠层和地表燃料负荷,并估计了可用树冠燃料负荷、冠层体积密度和树冠密度。受 SB 影响的所有林分的树冠密度和活树冠个体密度都降低了,不过与年轻林分相比,老树分的叶片损失比例更大。在 SB 爆发后不到 30 年(<30 年),年轻林分的细地表燃料负荷是未受 SB 影响的年轻林分的三倍,之后细地表燃料的丰度下降到低于地方水平(即非爆发水平)。在年轻和老树分中,20 世纪和 21 世纪 SB 爆发的净效应降低了总树冠燃料,并增加了爆发后林分尺度的树冠燃料空间异质性。重要的是,与老树分相比,年轻林分在爆发后树冠燃料的减少幅度更大,这表明当 SB 爆发影响到处于早期发育阶段的林分时,它们可能会更大程度地降低活跃树冠火灾的风险。本研究表明,SB 爆发对森林结构和燃料分布的影响强烈取决于爆发前的条件,这是由爆发前的干扰历史决定的。