长叶松(Pinus palustris Mill.)

Forests Pub Date : 2024-07-19 DOI:10.3390/f15071255
Kevin M. Potter, C. Oswalt, J. Guldin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

长叶松(Pinus palustris Mill.)由于森林被改造,长叶松赖以生存的低强度火灾机制长期受到破坏,现在长叶松主要分布在孤立的片区。近几十年来,政府和私人土地所有者一直在努力恢复长叶松林。对 2009-2015 年和 2016-2021 年两个时期的国家森林资源清查数据进行的分析表明,长叶松树的估计数量、长叶松森林类型的面积、种植长叶松的数量和面积都有所增加,地块级长叶松的平均碳含量和重要价值也有所增长。与此同时,我们发现含有长叶松的总体森林面积有所减少,这表现在其他各种森林类型上。这些结果表明,长叶松占主导地位的森林正通过恢复变得更加普遍,而该物种重要性较低的森林正在向其他森林类型或土地用途过渡。我们还发现,随着时间的推移,大多数州和森林类型的长叶树苗估计数量都在减少,自然再生的长叶松也在减少。为了进一步评估长叶松的再生趋势,我们计算了整个物种和种子区亚群落的小树(幼苗和树苗)估计比例。我们发现整个物种的小树比例有所下降,从 82.1% 降至 75.1%。这一下降在物种分布的边缘地区最为明显,这可能表明某些地区的再生持续性较差。这些结果凸显了促进这一重要物种自然再生所面临的挑战。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Range-Wide Assessment of Recent Longleaf Pine (Pinus palustris Mill.) Area and Regeneration Trends
Longleaf pine (Pinus palustris Mill.) is a conifer historically associated with an open forest ecosystem that extended across much of the coastal plain of the Southeastern United States. It now exists mainly in isolated fragments following the conversion of forests and the long-term disruption of the low-intensity fire regime upon which the species depends. Recent decades have seen efforts to restore longleaf pine forests by government and private landowners. This was reflected in analyses of national forest inventory data during two time periods, ca. 2009–2015 and 2016–2021, that showed increases in the estimated number of longleaf pine trees, the area of the longleaf pine forest type, and the number and area of planted longleaf pine, along with growth in mean plot-level longleaf pine carbon and importance value. At the same time, we found a decrease in the overall forest area containing longleaf pine, manifested across a variety of other forest types. These results point to a dynamic through which forests dominated by longleaf pine are becoming more widespread via restoration, while forests in which the species is a less important component are transitioning to other forest types or land uses. We also detected a decrease over time in the estimated number of longleaf seedlings across most states and forest types and a decline in naturally regenerated longleaf pine. To further assess regeneration trends in longleaf pine, we calculated the estimated proportion of small trees (seedlings and saplings) for the entire species and for seed zone sub-populations. We found a species-wide decrease in the proportion of small trees, from 82.1 percent to 75.1 percent. This reduction was most pronounced along the edges of the species distribution and could indicate less sustainable levels of regeneration in some areas. These results underscore the challenges of facilitating natural regeneration in this important species.
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