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Damage assessment to subtropical forests following the 2008 Chinese ice storm

  • Benzhi Zhou
  • , Xiaoming Wang
  • , Yonghui Cao
  • , Xiaogai Ge
  • , Lianhong Gu
  • , Jinliu Meng

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

18 Scopus citations

Abstract

Ice storm is a major form of extreme climatic event and may occur more frequently in the future under a changing climate. The 2008 Chinese ice storm provided a natural laboratory to study ecosystem responses and feedbacks to climate variability and extreme events. Four typical subtropical forests (Chinese fir plantation, pine plantation, moso bamboo plantation, and secondary mixed broadleaved forest) were selected to assess the damage caused by the ice storm. The ice damage rate of typical subtropical forests varied between 25% and 81%. The secondary broadleaved forest had most extensive damage while the Chinese fir plantation experienced the most severe damage. Exotic pine species (Pinus elliottii Engelm. and Pinus taeda Linn.) were more severely damaged than the native species, Pinus massoniana Lamb. Ice damage was also affected by tree/culm size, age, stand density, site altitude, and management practices. Large-sized trees/culms were more vulnerable to stem breakage, decapitation, and uprooting, while small-sized trees/culms were more vulnerable to bending and leaning. Younger trees/culms had the highest damage rate, and were more susceptible to bending damage. Ice damage rate increased linearly with the stand density, and higher altitude led to a significant increase of stem breakage. Oleoresin tapping aggravated the damage to pine trees. Resistance of trees to ice damage is an emergent consequence of tree attributes, species origin, site conditions, and human disturbance. Forest silviculture and management practices can play significant roles in controlling forest susceptibility to extreme events. Inappropriate utilization of non-timber forest products can reduce trees’ resistance to extreme events. For sustainable forest development, balance needs to be achieved between the high productivity of introduced exotic tree species and the resistance of native species to extreme climatic events.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)406-415
Number of pages10
JournalIForest
Volume10
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2017

Funding

This research was supported financially by Non-profit Industry Special Fund of State Forestry Administration of China (Grant 201204101), the Lecture and Study Program for Outstanding Scholars from Home and Abroad (Grant CAFYBB2011007), and Chinese Academy of Forestry (grants CAFYBB2008006 and RISF060701). This work is also supported by CFERN & Beijing Techno Solutions Award Funds on excellent academic achievements. The authors thank the anonymous reviewers for their insightful and detailed comments on this manuscript. The comments have helped to shape this paper and clarify ambiguous sections in the former versions.

Keywords

  • Chinese fir
  • Forest management
  • Ice damage
  • Moso bamboo
  • Pine
  • Secondary mixed broadleaved Forest

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