Skip to main content
Advertisement
Browse Subject Areas
?

Click through the PLOS taxonomy to find articles in your field.

For more information about PLOS Subject Areas, click here.

  • Loading metrics

Ecological Importance of Large-Diameter Trees in a Temperate Mixed-Conifer Forest

  • James A. Lutz ,

    jlutz@uw.edu

    Affiliation College of the Environment, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States of America

  • Andrew J. Larson,

    Affiliation Department of Forest Management, University of Montana, Missoula, Montana, United States of America

  • Mark E. Swanson,

    Affiliation School of the Environment, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington, United States of America

  • James A. Freund

    Affiliation School of Environmental and Forest Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States of America

Abstract

Large-diameter trees dominate the structure, dynamics and function of many temperate and tropical forests. Although both scaling theory and competition theory make predictions about the relative composition and spatial patterns of large-diameter trees compared to smaller diameter trees, these predictions are rarely tested. We established a 25.6 ha permanent plot within which we tagged and mapped all trees ≥1 cm dbh, all snags ≥10 cm dbh, and all shrub patches ≥2 m2. We sampled downed woody debris, litter, and duff with line intercept transects. Aboveground live biomass of the 23 woody species was 507.9 Mg/ha, of which 503.8 Mg/ha was trees (SD = 114.3 Mg/ha) and 4.1 Mg/ha was shrubs. Aboveground live and dead biomass was 652.0 Mg/ha. Large-diameter trees comprised 1.4% of individuals but 49.4% of biomass, with biomass dominated by Abies concolor and Pinus lambertiana (93.0% of tree biomass). The large-diameter component dominated the biomass of snags (59.5%) and contributed significantly to that of woody debris (36.6%). Traditional scaling theory was not a good model for either the relationship between tree radii and tree abundance or tree biomass. Spatial patterning of large-diameter trees of the three most abundant species differed from that of small-diameter conspecifics. For A. concolor and P. lambertiana, as well as all trees pooled, large-diameter and small-diameter trees were spatially segregated through inter-tree distances <10 m. Competition alone was insufficient to explain the spatial patterns of large-diameter trees and spatial relationships between large-diameter and small-diameter trees. Long-term observations may reveal regulation of forest biomass and spatial structure by fire, wind, pathogens, and insects in Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forests. Sustaining ecosystem functions such as carbon storage or provision of specialist species habitat will likely require different management strategies when the functions are performed primarily by a few large trees as opposed to many smaller trees.

Introduction

Large-diameter trees dominate the structure, dynamics, and function of many temperate and tropical forest ecosystems and are of considerable scientific and social interest. They comprise a large fraction of forest wood volume, biomass and carbon stocks [1], [2], and modulate stand-level leaf area, transpiration, and microclimates [3], [4]. Large-diameter trees contribute disproportionately to reproduction [5], influence the rate and pattern of tree regeneration and forest succession [6], and originate further disturbance by crushing or injuring neighboring trees when they fall to the ground [7], [8]. Arboreal wildlife species preferentially occupy large trees as habitat (e.g. [9]), and the greater structural complexity of large tree crowns [10] supports habitat for obligate wildlife species (e.g. [11]), unique epiphyte communities [12], and soil development and water storage within the forest canopy [13].

Large-diameter trees continue to contribute disproportionately to forest ecosystem structure and function after they die. Dead large-diameter trees persist as standing snags for many years, providing additional wildlife habitat. In temperate forests large-diameter logs may persist on the forest floor for centuries, where they continue to provide habitat for diverse assemblages of vertebrates and invertebrates and microorganisms, store carbon and other nutrients, serve as substrates for tree regeneration, and play numerous other functional roles [14], [15].

Human societies derive many non-timber values from large-diameter trees. Tree ring chronologies from large trees provide long records of past forest development and disturbance [16], as well as proxy records of annual climatic variation [17]: they are an important source of the data required to test and refine ecological theories and models. Large trees are culturally [18] and spiritually important [19] in many societies; individuals and organizations maintain large tree registries (e.g., [20]), and government agencies manage parks and preserves dedicated to the conservation of exceptionally large trees, such as Redwood and Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks in California, USA.

Populations of large-diameter trees can be intractable study subjects. Large-diameter trees occur at low densities and estimates of their abundance, spatial patterns, and contributions to ecosystem function (e.g. biomass) are subject to high rates of sampling error [21], [22]. Consequently, descriptive statistics and hypothesis tests for large-diameter trees require very large sample plots [22]. The combination of low abundance and low mortality rates [8], [23], [24] make detecting changes in demographic rates or spatial patterns of large-diameter trees even more difficult, further underscoring the requirement for large sample plots. Conventional studies based on small (1 ha to 4 ha) plots often do not contain enough large-diameter trees to conduct even community-level (i.e., pooled across species) analyses (e.g., [24]). Consequently, despite their ecological and cultural significance, relatively less is known – and with greater uncertainty – about the abundance, distribution, and dynamics of large-diameter trees.

Predictions for large-diameter trees

Scaling theory and competition theory both provide frameworks for predictions about the relative contributions of large-diameter structures to aboveground biomass, the spatial distribution of large-diameter trees, and the spatial relationships between large-diameter and small-diameter trees. Scaling theory predicts that a relatively few trees in the largest diameter classes will dominate stand-level aboveground biomass [25], [26], and that there are continuous relationships between tree diameter and density, and total forest biomass. However, scaling theory has been repeatedly shown to underpredict large tree densities and mortality rates [27], [28]. This discrepancy likely arises because trees rarely die from competition once they reach large sizes but rather succumb to biological agents, physical disturbances, and combinations thereof [8], [29]. Although scaling theory predicts dominance of biomass pools by a few large individuals, the simplifying assumptions about tree mortality embedded in the theory may render it inadequate to predict accurately either the aggregate large tree contributions to stand biomass or the local-scale variation. We were interested in quantifying the actual contribution of large-diameter pieces to aboveground biomass pools—which should be substantial [14]—because predictions from scaling theory alone may not be accurate enough to serve as inputs into ecosystem models or to support sound natural resource policies and management.

Tree spatial patterns integrate past tree-tree interactions. Competition theory predicts that distance and density-dependent growth and mortality during forest development will lead to increasingly uniform spatial patterns in larger diameter classes [30], [31]. Therefore, the arrangement of large-diameter trees should be more uniform than small-diameter trees, and the largest trees should exhibit spatial regularity at the tree neighborhood scale. Competition theory also predicts spatial relationships between large and small-diameter trees. When large trees compete asymmetrically with small trees their respective spatial locations become segregated because seedlings preferentially survive and grow into understory trees where they are not suppressed by larger competitors [30], [32], [33].

Our study was motivated by three purposes: (1) determine the degree to which predictions from ecological theory hold for contemporary populations of large-diameter trees; (2) establish a permanent forest research plot of sufficient size to detect and attribute forest ecosystem change, including for the large-diameter component, in order to test future predictions against longitudinal data; and (3) support current management efforts to restore large-diameter tree populations in Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forest, which were dramatically reduced by widespread logging throughout the range of this important forest type during the 19th and 20th centuries [34], [35]. We established the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot (YFDP) in an old-growth Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forest and within the plot quantified the relative contribution of large-diameter trees, snags, and down woody debris to the aboveground biomass pools, the comparative spatial patterns of large-diameter and small-diameter trees, and spatial relationships between them.

Results

Species composition

In the 25.6 ha of the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot (YFDP), there were 34,458 live stems ≥1 cm dbh of 11 tree species (Table 1) and 3.87 ha (15.1%) of continuous shrub cover comprising 12 shrub species that reach 1 cm in diameter at 1.37 m height (Table 2). Eleven plant families were represented. All woody stems were native plants. Live tree basal area was 64.3 m2/ha and biomass was 503.8 Mg/ha (SD = 114.3 Mg/ha) (Table 3). Of the three principal species by biomass (Pinus lambertiana, Abies concolor, and Calocedrus decurrens), P. lambertiana had a much higher average biomass (Fig. 1) and exhibited a rotated-sigmoid diameter distribution, possibly reflecting lower mortality of middle-aged individuals (Fig. 2). Diameter distributions of A. concolor and C. decurrens followed negative exponential distributions (Fig. 2). Relative dominance of Abies concolor declines at diameters above ∼90 cm (Fig. 2). Calocedrus decurrens exhibits almost an order of magnitude less biomass than either P. lambertiana or A. concolor (Fig. 2). However, some individuals do persist into large diameter classes (Fig. 2). Live shrub biomass was 4.1 Mg/ha (Table 2). There were 2,697 snags (19.9% of living trees of this diameter). Biomass of snags ≥10 cm dbh was 43.0 Mg/ha (Table 3). Biomass of the forest floor components (Table 3, Fig. 3) was 53.1 Mg/ha for down woody debris (SD = 102.9 Mg/ha) and 48.0 Mg/ha (SD = 22.5) for fine fuels (Table 3). Litter and duff averaged 1.05 cm (SD = 0.38) and 1.20 cm (SD = 0.68) in depth, respectively. A correlogram analysis of woody debris volumes as estimated by the 20 m line intercept segments showed no spatial correlation in fuel loads at any distance. Total above-ground biomass of living and dead components was 652.0 Mg/ha.

thumbnail
Figure 1. Heterogeneity in biomass and density of the principal tree species of the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot.

Each boxplot represents values from the 640, 20 m×20 m quadrats of the plot.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036131.g001

thumbnail
Figure 2. Diameter distribution of the number of trees and the biomass of trees in the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot.

Each point represents a 5 cm diameter class (first bin; 1 cm≤dbh<5 cm) of the trees from the entire 25.6 ha plot (34,458 live stems ≥1 cm dbh totaling 12,897 Mg); identical data are shown with linear diameter bins (left) and log diameter (right). Solid lines represent the best fitting equation of the form specified by scaling theory, (r2 = 0.84) and (r2 = 0.00), where r is tree radius.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036131.g002

thumbnail
Figure 3. Biomass of forest floor components of the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot.

Each boxplot represents values from 112 transects of 20 m (2.24 km of line transects). Outliers represent intercepted pieces of large-diameter debris.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036131.g003

thumbnail
Table 1. Tree species within the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot in 2010.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036131.t001

thumbnail
Table 2. Shrub species occurring in patches of continuous cover ≥2 m2 within the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot in 2010.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036131.t002

thumbnail
Table 3. Biomass within the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot in 2010.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036131.t003

Large-diameter composition

The large diameter component dominated most biomass pools (Table 3). For living trees, 1.4% of individuals had dbh ≥100 cm dbh (19.1 large-diameter trees ha−1), but these individuals comprised 49.4% of tree biomass. For snags, 12.4% were large-diameter, comprising 59.5% of snag biomass. Snags ≥100 cm dbh were about half as numerous (42.9%) as live trees ≥100 cm dbh. There were 10 pieces of woody debris ≥100 cm (3.8%) measured on the line intercepts, and the large debris component comprised 36.6% of down woody debris biomass. There is, by definition, no large-diameter component to shrubs, fine fuels, litter or duff. Overall, large-diameter structures constituted 44.9% of above-ground live and dead biomass.

Scaling theory was informative for the relationship between tree density and diameter class (r2 = 0.84); the theoretical relationship under-predicted the density of medium and large trees, but over-predicted the density of trees ≥170 cm dbh (Fig. 2). Although informative, the relationship between tree density and diameter class was better explained by a negative exponential distribution (r2 = 0.99). The theoretical relationship between tree radii and biomass was not informative (r2 = 0.00) (Fig. 2).

Spatial patterns

Small-diameter subpopulations of A. concolor, C. decurrens, P. lambertiana, as well as all tree species combined, exhibited significant aggregation relative to the null model of complete spatial randomness (CSR) from 0–9 m (Monte Carlo goodness-of-fit tests; A. concolor: P = 0.004; C. decurrens: P = 0.001; P. lambertiana: P = 0.001, all trees: P = 0.004). In other words, when averaged across all points in a given pattern, small-diameter trees of these species have more neighbors of the same type located within a circle with a radius of 9 m than would be expected if tree locations were completely independent of each other. values for small-diameter stems of both P. lambertiana and A. concolor rose steeply at small scales (Fig. 4), reaching a plateau at about 20 m, indicating that the strong spatial aggregation in these respective subpopulations primarily manifests at scales <20 m. The curves for small-diameter C. decurrens stems rose steadily from 0–80 m, indicating moderate but consistent clustering across the entire range of scales analyzed (Fig. 4).

thumbnail
Figure 4. Univariate tree spatial patterns in the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot.

Solid black lines show the statistic for the actual patterns, where r is the intertree distance; thin gray lines show curves for 999 simulations of complete spatial randomness. Positive values indicate spatial clumping and negative values indicate spatial regularity. Large-diameter trees are ≥100 cm dbh; small-diameter trees are <100 cm dbh.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036131.g004

The spatial arrangement of large-diameter A. concolor, C. decurrens and P. lambertiana individually, and for all species combined, were not different from complete spatial randomness from 0–9 m (Monte Carlo goodness-of-fit tests; A. concolor: P = 0.012; C. decurrens: P = 0.074; P. lambertiana: P = 0.132; all trees: P = 0.057). However, the behavior of the individual curves from 0–80 m reveals spatial structure within large-diameter A. concolor and P. lambertiana subpopulations at other interpoint distances (Fig. 4). The empirical curve (Fig. 4) for large-diameter P. lambertiana was negative and steadily decreased from 0–2 m, tracking the lower boundary of the simulation envelope, indicating spatial inhibition at these scales. From 2–4 m the large-diameter P. lambertiana curve sharply increased, providing evidence of spatial clustering at these scales, with continued evidence for clustering occurring out to 22 m, where the empirical value reached the upper bound of the simulation envelope. Large-diameter A. concolor also exhibited rapid changes in spatial pattern at small scales, with steadily decreasing values from 0–3 m (evidence of spatial inhibition) then increasing sharply from 3–5.5 m, indicating strong spatial clustering over this short range of scales. A sustained increase in the curve for large-diameter A. concolor from 13–38 m provided further evidence for spatial aggregation at larger scales. The curves for large-diameter C. decurrens stems rose steadily from 0–80 m, reaching the upper bound of the simulation envelope at 30 m, indicating moderate but consistent clustering across these scales.

The relative spatial patterns of large- and small-diameter trees differed for all species combined, as well as for P. lambertiana and A. concolor, but not for C. decurrens. Small-diameter P. lambertiana were always more aggregated than large conspecifics at the same scale. Large-diameter A. concolor were less aggregated than conspecific small-diameter trees at scales of 0–3 m, then rapidly became more aggregated than small trees from 3–6 m, and remained so up to 80 m (Fig. 4). The spatial pattern of large and small C. decurrens subpopulations was similar from 0–80 m (Fig. 4).

We found evidence for negative associations between large-diameter and small-diameter P. lambertiana and A. concolor, and for all tree species combined, relative to the population independence hypothesis when evaluated from 0–9 m (Monte Carlo goodness-of-fit tests; A. concolor: P = 0.001; P. lambertiana: P = 0.001; all trees: P = 0.001). Spatial locations of large-diameter and small-diameter C. decurrens were independent at the 9 m neighborhood scale (Monte Carlo goodness-of-fit test; P = 0.378). The curve for P. lambertiana (Fig. 5) indicates spatial repulsion between large and small from 0–10 m, and modest attraction from 10–40 m. The curve for A. concolor decreased steadily from 0–80 m, but was only outside the simulation envelope at scales less than 10 m. Large and small stems of C. decurrens were spatially attracted from 15–80 m, with the empirical curve at or beyond the upper boundary of the simulation envelope (Fig. 5).

thumbnail
Figure 5. Spatial interactions between large-diameter and small-diameter trees.

Solid black lines show the statistic for the actual pattern, where r is the intertree distance; thin gray lines show curves for 999 patterns simulated by synchronous random torodial shifts of large and small tree subpopulations. Positive values indicate spatial attraction and negative values indicate spatial repulsion. Large-diameter trees are ≥100 cm dbh; small-diameter trees are <100 cm dbh.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036131.g005

Discussion

The relative proportion of large trees varies in old-growth forests worldwide [28], and at 49.4%, the contribution that large-diameter trees make to the total biomass of the YFDP is higher than in most other forests. Although some forests have almost all of their biomass concentrated in large-diameter trees (most notably Sequoia sempervirens; [13], [36]), the biomass of most forest types is concentrated in trees <100 cm dbh. In a 1 ha plot in tropical moist forests of Rondônia, Brazil, Brown et al. [1] found that three trees ≥100 cm dbh had biomass of 64.3 Mg compared to a total aboveground biomass of 285 Mg (22.6%). In 5.15 ha of neotropical lowland rain forest in Costa Rica, Clark & Clark [2] found that trees ≥70 cm dbh comprised 27% of the biomass of 241 Mg/ha (∼18% for trees ≥100 cm dbh; [2], Fig. 1). In semi-evergreen forests of northeast India, Baishya et al. [37] found ∼12% of biomass in trees ≥100 cm dbh, and plantation forests or forests that are recovering from disturbance may have few or no large-diameter trees, even when stem density and diversity are high [37], [38].

Within the Smithsonian Center for Tropical Forest Science network (http://www.ctfs.si.edu/plots/), only the Gilbertiodendron dewevrei (mbau) forest of the Congo has a higher live biomass, with the dipterocarp forests of Malaysia having equivalent live biomass (Table 4, [39], [40]). Other old-growth forest types have a biomass of ∼60% of the YFDP [39]. When the live and dead biomass are considered together, the biomass of the YFDP is 652.0 Mg/ha, currently the highest in the CTFS network. Unlike either of the high-biomass tropical plots, live biomass in the YFDP is dominated by two tree species (both Pinaceae), Pinus lambertiana (50.4% biomass) and Abies concolor (42.6% biomass), while down woody debris biomass is similarly dominated by these two species (57% and 32%, respectively). Scaling theory did not describe the distribution of biomass in this system (Fig. 2). Differences between theory and this forest are likely driven by the reoccurrence of fire throughout the period of stand development, and because of mortality rates that vary with diameter class. However, the very high levels of heterogeneity in density and biomass at 20 m scales (Fig. 1) would make scaling theory even less informative in study areas smaller than the YFDP.

thumbnail
Table 4. Comparison of the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot with other Smithsonian CTFS-affiliated forest plots.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036131.t004

Although the YFDP has high biomass, the diversity of woody plants ≥1 cm dbh is the lowest among the CTFS plots ≥25 ha. The combination of summer drought and winter snow may reduce the species pool. Other temperate plots (Changbaishan, Wabikon, and the Smithsonian Ecological Research Center, SERC) have higher species diversity [41], [42]. However, those plots either receive precipitation evenly distributed throughout the year (Wabikon and SERC), or the wet season coincides with the growing season (Changbaishan).

One almost ubiquitous difficulty in biomass analyses of large-diameter trees is the uncertainty of allometric equations. The use of previously published equations to predict biomass of large trees from ground-level measurement of DBH assumes that these equations were based on adequate sampling of large trees. However, most allometric equations for tree biomass have been developed from dissection of 10–50 trees [43], and the number of large trees used in formulating equations is very low. Some of the large-diameter P. lambertiana, A. concolor, and C. decurrens exceeded the maximum diameter of any that have been dissected, and for these individual trees, substitute species were used [see Appendix S1]. Moreover, DBH is often a poor predictor of whole-tree biomass as large tree DBH is a poor reflection of tree size [10]. Nonetheless, many comparative studies of primary forest biomass use allometric equations that probably predict large-diameter tree biomass poorly (i.e. [39], [40]). Our calculations (Table 3) have been presented to a level of 1 kg/ha to enable comparison of forest dominants with less common and smaller tree species and likely represent an underestimation of whole tree biomass. However, the SD of biomass for principal species in the YFDP is 17% to 32% of the calculated value (Table 3), so the uncertainty of the large-diameter biomass could be larger than the smaller biomass pools. Biomass calculations for shrubs, snags, and woody debris also embody several simplifying assumptions (i.e. uniform stem density per unit area, single measures of diameter, simple geometry, no hollows in snags) that could lead to imprecise biomass totals.

Unlike the tropical forests where decomposition of snags and woody debris is rapid, the YFDP features considerable biomass of standing and down woody debris, also a characteristic of temperate broadleaf forests [44]. The combination of snowy winters and dry summers contributes to slow decomposition, and even the fastest decomposing tree species (A. concolor) has a half-life of 14 years [14]. Large-diameter snags account for a relatively high proportion of total snag biomass, while large-diameter down woody debris accounted for a lower proportion of the woody debris. This may be due to low-severity fires in the historical period that might have consumed large-diameter woody debris via glowing combustion, decreasing the proportion relative to snag representation [45], or because small snags tend to fall over relatively quickly, thus being better represented in the woody debris pool. The lack of spatial correlation of the woody debris at any scale suggests that, while mortality may be non-random, tree and snag-fall events may result in loss of spatial pattern between standing individuals and the patterns of down wood they produce.

The observed univariate spatial patterns of large and small trees provide modest support for the inference that past competition contributed to the present spatial distribution of large-diameter trees. In particular, the increasing spatial uniformity from small to large size classes is consistent with competition theory [30], [31]. However, the observed random arrangement of large trees at neighborhood scales differs from spatial uniformity expected when competition is the dominant process affecting tree spatial patterns. Previous studies of large-diameter tree spatial patterns in Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forests agree with our findings (N.B., with large-diameter thresholds differing somewhat from 100 cm). Van Pelt and Franklin [32] found that main canopy trees at Giant Forest in Sequoia National Park were not different from spatial randomness at scales <9 m. In addition, their empirical curve [32] was similar to those for P. lambertiana and A. concolor in the YFDP: inhibited from 0–1.5 m. The observed small-scale (0–3 m) inhibition is most likely due to physical requirements for minimum hard core spacing due to the large size of the boles and limits to crown plasticity, although resource competition may contribute as well. At Teakettle Experimental Forest (an old-growth, mixed-conifer forest 100 km south of the YFDP), stems ≥76 cm dbh were randomly arranged from 0–60 m [46]. However, Bonnicksen and Stone [47] found that main canopy P. lambertiana and A. concolor trees were uniformly spaced in a giant sequoia mixed-conifer forest in Kings Canyon National Park. Past competition and competitive mortality undoubtedly influenced the development of spatial patterning in large-diameter tree populations in some Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forests [48], [49]. However, it appears that the cumulative effects of any past self-thinning in the YFDP were not sufficient to completely override the effects of clustered or random tree regeneration [50], non-random mortality or other potential sources of heterogeneity in the distribution of large-diameter trees.

We must thus consider processes other than competition to explain spatial patterns of large-diameter trees in the YFDP. For the fire-tolerant and modestly shade-tolerant P. lambertiana, meso-scale aggregation (2–22 m) in the large-diameter subpopulation is most readily explained by clustered establishment, consistent with a disturbance-centric model of forest dynamics and spatial pattern formation in low and mixed severity fire regimes [51]. For A. concolor (fire intolerant when small) the strong clustering of large-diameter trees at local (3–5.5 m) and intermediate (13–38 m) scales may originate from fire refugia that allowed groups of A. concolor to survive and reach large diameters. Clustered establishment alone (e.g., in gaps or in moisture-receiving microtopographic features) could explain the aggregation of large A. concolor stems, but given the historical regime of frequent fire [51] it is likely that heterogeneous fire effects leading to patchy A. concolor survival also contributed.

The observed spatial segregation of large and small trees is consistent with inference that competitive interactions between these size classes influence their spatial relationships and overall forest structure. Spatial segregation of large and small trees has been documented in many other forest types (i.e. [33] and the studies reviewed therein), including Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forests [32]. Spatial segregation between large and small trees may arise from asymmetrical competition for light and gap-phase regeneration [33]. However, we acknowledge that other mechanisms acting at the tree neighborhood scale potentially contribute to the observed spatial segregation between large and small A. concolor and P. lambertiana, including crushing mortality by falling limbs and bole fragments from live large-diameter trees [8], [52], and the spatially heterogeneous buildup and subsequent burning of surface fuels. Additionally, in the absence of fire large-diameter P. lambertiana accumulate a deep mound of debris (bark and needles) at their base [53], a substrate not suitable for seedling establishment, which would also give rise to repulsion between large and small stems. Prior to fire exclusion, Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forests had low densities of small-diameter trees [35], [51]; the observed repulsion between tree diameter classes may also be due to preferential tree establishment in fire-maintained openings following disruption of the historical fire regime [54].

Conclusions

We assessed the degree to which scaling theory and competition theory explain variation of accumulated biomass and spatial patterns across the tree size spectrum. These respective bodies of theory were not sufficient to explain our empirical results. However, our results do not indicate the rejection of these theories. Scaling theory is clearly a powerful framework for developing novel ecological insights, but our results and those of others [21], [27], [28] show that the requisite simplifying assumptions render predictions from scaling theory inappropriate as inputs in to ecosystem models or as a basis for natural resource decision making. A vast body of accumulated scientific literature details mechanisms and outcomes of plant competition; our results do not contradict this theory. Rather, competition theory alone was insufficient to explain our empirical measurements of tree spatial patterns, strengthening the conclusion that competition is not the dominant control of tree population dynamics and forest development in old-growth Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forests [24].

We predict that long-term observations at our study site and other sites throughout the range of Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forests will reveal strong top-down regulation of forest biomass and spatial structure by pathogens, insects and physical disturbances, especially in old-growth forests. We also suggest that, in forests with high functional inequality across the tree size spectrum, ecosystem function may be more sensitive to natural perturbations, environmental change or management actions – at least those affecting the large-diameter trees – than in forests where ecosystem function is distributed more equitably across the tree size spectrum. Sustaining ecological functions and services, such as carbon storage or provision of habitat for specialist species, will likely require different forest management strategies when the ecosystem services are provided primarily by a few large trees as opposed to many smaller trees.

Materials and Methods

Study area

The Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot (YFDP) is located in the mixed-conifer forest of the western portion of Yosemite National Park (Fig. 6). The plot is approximately oriented to the cardinal directions with dimensions of 800 m east to west and 320 m north to south (25.6 ha) centered at 37.77°N, 119.82°W. Elevation ranges between 1774.1 m and 1911.3 m for a vertical relief of 137.2 m (Fig. S1). The YFDP is comprised of vegetation types within the Abies concolor – Pinus lambertiana Forest Alliance [55], including Abies concolor-Pinus lambertiana/Ceanothus cordulatus Forest, Abies concolor-Pinus lambertiana/Maianthemum racemosum (Smilacina racemosa, Hickman [56])-Disporum hookeri Forest, Abies concolor-Calocedrus decurrens-Pinus lambertiana/Cornus nuttallii/Corylus cornuta var. californica Forest, Abies concolor-Calocedrus decurrens-Pinus lambertiana/Adenocaulon bicolor Forest, and Abies concolor-Pinus lambertiana- Calocedrus decurrens/Chrysolepis sempervirens Forest, classified according to the U.S. National Vegetation Classification [57](Fig. 7). Overall demographic rates in Sierra Nevada conifer forests between 1500 m and 2000 m elevation are approximately 1.5% [58], [59]. Canopy emergents, principally P. lambertiana and A. concolor, reach 60 m to 67 m in height. The soils of the YFDP are derived from metamorphic parent material. Approximately 85% of the soils of the YFDP are metasedimentary soils of the Clarkslodge-Ultic Palexeralfs complex with a water-holding capacity of 160 mm in the top 150 cm of the soil profile [60]. The soils of the northwest 15% of the YFDP are Humic Dystroxerepts-Typic Haploxerults-Inceptic soils of the Haploxeralfs complex with a water-holding capacity of 70 mm in the top 150 cm of the soil profile [60]. Plant nomenclature follows Hickman [56].

thumbnail
Figure 6. Location of the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot (YFDP).

The YFDP is located near the western boundary of Yosemite National Park (left, green) in the lower montane, mixed-conifer zone of the Sierra Nevada, California, USA. The plot is located in relatively uniform, late-successional forest near Crane Flat (right). The area immediately north of the YFDP was logged in the early 1930s, as was the area comprising the western 1/3 of the image.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036131.g006

thumbnail
Figure 7. Structure and composition of the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot (YFDP).

Four images from different parts of the YFDP illustrate defining characteristics of the ecosystem. Most precipitation falls in the winter as snow yielding a spring snowpack of approximately 1 m (upper left image, April 11, 2011). The forest is composed of an overstory of large-diameter trees with abundant but heterogeneous shrub and herbaceous layers (upper right image, June 22, 2009). Shrubs can be locally dense enough to reduce tree recruitment (lower left image, June 22, 2009). Although most trees and shrubs are evergreen, the presence of the deciduous species Cornus nuttallii and Quercus kelloggii results in seasonal openings in the canopy (lower right image, November 11, 2010). All photos by J. A. Lutz.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036131.g007

The climate at the YFDP is Mediterranean, with cool moist winters and long dry summers. Between 1971 and 2000, the modeled mean temperature range at the YFDP was from 12.2°C to 26.1°C in July and −2.7°C to 9.4°C in February; annual precipitation was 1061 mm, with most precipitation falling in the winter months as snow [61], [62]. Snow depth on April 1st is generally 100 cm to 150 cm. The seasonality of precipitation yields a summer drought with a mean annual climatic water deficit of 200 mm [63] (Fig. S2).

Disturbance processes: fire, wind, insects, pathogens, vertebrates, and human use

Fire is the dominant natural disturbance process in Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forests [64]. The fire regime is of mixed severity with fires burning in a mosaic of high, moderate, and low severities. The pre-Euro-American fire return interval for the YFDP was 10–13 years [51]. The combination of repeated fire and other disturbances gives rise to a fine-grained mosaic structure [50], [65]. During the Landsat TM period of record (1984–2011), most fires in this forest type have been either low severity management-ignited prescribed fires or moderate and high severity wildfires [66][68]. The YFDP has not burned since comprehensive park fire records were initiated in 1930. Mechanical damage, whether from wind, snow, or crushing of smaller individuals by falling trees or tree parts contributes to stand structural development [8], [69]. Many of the larger trees in the YFDP have broken tops, or reiterated tops that have regrown following damage.

Insects are important agents of mortality, with most common conifer tree species having coevolved bark beetles (family Scolytidae) that are always present at low levels [70], [71]. In particular, Dendroctonous ponderosa (mountain pine beetle) attacks Pinus lambertiana and P. ponderosa and Scolytus ventralis attacks Abies concolor and A. magnifica. Other bark beetles such as S. subscaber, D. valens (red turpentine beetle) and Ips spp. have been less abundant in the recent past but contribute to tree mortality. Quercus kelloggii (California black oak) also has associated bark beetles (Pseudopityophthorus spp.). Conophthorus ponderosae (ponderosa pine cone beetle) is present and can reduce the reproductive output of P. lambertiana.

Pathogens include the structural root rots Armillaria spp. [72], Heterobasidion annosum [73] and Phaeolus schweinitzii [71]. The root rots spread through roots and root contacts at rates of approximately 30 cm per year, and hence tend to occur in patches. Armillaria spp. are somewhat generalist pathogens and attack Abies spp., Prunus spp., and Cornus nuttallii. Phaeolus schweinitzii infects Pinus lambertiana and Abies spp., but tends to progress much more slowly than Heterobasidion and Armillaria. Pinus lambertiana is also affected by the introduced pathogen Cronartium ribicola [74]. Calocedrus decurrens, Abies concolor, and Quercus kelloggii are hosts to mistletoes: Phoradendron libocedri on C. decurrens, Phoradendron pauciflorum and Arceuthobium abietinum on A. concolor, and Phoradendron villosum on Q. kelloggii [75]. These mistletoes are distributed both by birds, and in the case of Arceuthobium abietinum, also by explosive discharge that can carry seeds up to 16 m (typically 10 m; [75]).

The YFDP has a rich fauna, with most species of herbivores and their predators present since prior to Euro-American settlement. Large mammals include Ursus americanus (black bear), Felis concolor (mountain lion), Canis latrans (coyote), and Odocoileus hemionus (mule deer). Altogether, vertebrate species observed within similar forest types within 5 km of the YFDP include 16 rodent species, 12 bat species, 7 carnivore species, one hooved mammal, 7 raptor species, 38 passerine species, 5 amphibian species, and 7 reptile species Table S1, [76][79]).

Yosemite has been inhabited at least since 100 AD [80]. Immediately prior to Euro-American discovery of the region in 1833 [81] and the subsequent entry of Euro-Americans into Yosemite Valley in 1851 [82], the area was occupied by the Central Sierra Miwok and the Southern Sierra Miwok [83]. Because the YFDP contains only intermittent streams and seeps, Native American use of the site was probably low, and modification of the fire regime at this site by Native Americans appears unlikely [84]. The YFDP is near the transit route from Hazel Green to Crane Flat used by sheepherders in the late 19th century. John Muir may have passed through or near the YFDP on July 9th, 1869 – the topography and vegetation are consistent with his journal entry [85].

The original Yosemite Grant (1864) placed Yosemite Valley and the Mariposa Grove of giant sequoia in protected status. The YFDP lies within what was a single parcel of land prior to its inclusion into Yosemite National Park in 1930. The parcel of land immediately to the north of the YFDP (∼20 m from the plot boundary) was in different ownership and was logged in the early 1930s. The northwest corner of the YFDP contains four large stumps that appear to be associated with the logging of the parcel to the north. Logging outside the YFDP continued throughout the 1920s until the area was purchased by the National Park Service and John D. Rockefeller. The area of unlogged sugar pine containing the YFDP is today termed the Rockefeller Grove in honor of J.D. Rockefeller's role in protecting this part of the park.

Surveying

We established a sampling grid using Total Stations with accuracies of at least 5 seconds of arc (Leica models 1100, Builder R200M Power, Builder 505, and TC 2003). We set permanent markers on nominal 20 m centers, offset for tree boles, coarse woody debris, or large rocks. Survey closure across the plot was 0.18 m northing, 0.05 m easting, and 0.03 m elevation (∼1/5000). In addition to the sampling grid, we established control points in open areas near the plot where marginal Global Positioning System (GPS) reception was possible. Three survey-grade GPS receivers (Magellan Z-Extremes) were used to establish control to and across the plot, using a reference station approximately 2 km from the plot (MGROVE, PID DF8617 on the California State Plane Coordinate System and being described in the National Geodetic Survey Datasheets). The GPS receivers collected data at 10 second intervals for 2–6 hours. The static GPS measurements were post-processed with GNSS Solutions software (Magellan Navigation, Inc., pro.magellangps.com), with final accuracies in the range of 0.01 m horizontally and 0.02 m vertically. We transformed the plot grid to Universal Transverse Mercator coordinates with Lewis and Lewis Coordinated Geometry software (Lewis and Lewis Land Surveying Equipment, Inc., www.lewis-lewis.net). We augmented the ground survey with LiDAR-derived elevation data at 1 m horizontal resolution. Aerial LiDAR data were acquired on 22 July 2010 by Watershed Sciences Inc., Corvallis, Oregon with a density of 40 returns per square meter. Ground survey data and the LiDAR-derived ground model coincided with a root-mean-squared error of 0.15 m.

Field sampling of trees, shrubs, snags, and woody debris

In the summers of 2009 and 2010 we tagged and mapped all live trees ≥1 cm at breast height (1.37 m; dbh), following the methods of Condit [86], with some alterations. We measured tree diameter at 1.37 m (instead of 1.30 m), and trees large enough to accept a nail were nailed at the point of measurement, both in keeping with research methods of the western United States. We used stainless steel tags, nails and wire to increase tag longevity in this fire-dominated ecosystem. We measured tree locations from the surveyed grid points with a combination of hand-held lasers (Laser Technologies Impulse 200 LR), mirror compasses, and tapes. Tapes were laid south to north between adjacent grid points, and a perpendicular angle determined by sighting a target bole with a mirror compass. The distance from the tape to each tree was then measured with the hand-held lasers. We calculated the location of the tree center from the horizontal and perpendicular references to the surveyed grid points and dbh with the assumptions of cylindrical boles and linear interpolation of elevation between adjacent grid points. All measurements were slope corrected.

We mapped continuous patches of shrub cover ≥2 m2 relative to the 20 m sampling grid with a combination of tapes, mirror compasses, and lasers. For each shrub patch we recorded the shape of the patch as a polygon, as well as average and maximum shrub heights. To convert between shrub cover and the number of stems and biomass in the YFDP, we established 25 shrub demography plots for nine species (Arctostaphylos patula, Ceanothus cordulatus, Ceanothus integerrimus, Ceanothus parvifolius, Chrysolepis sempervirens, Corylus cornuta var. californica, Cornus sericia, Leucothoe davisiae, and Vaccinium uliginosum). We tagged every woody stem in each of these 2 m×2 m plots. We measured basal diameter for every woody stem. If stems were 1.37 m tall (or long), we made an additional measurement at 1.37 m.

We tagged and mapped dead trees ≥10 cm dbh and ≥1.8 m in height. For each snag, we collected height, top diameter (with a laser), and snag decomposition class data (following [87]; class 1 = least decayed, class 5 = most decayed). We did not collect data on trees <10 cm dbh at the original census because of the difficulty in finding small stems a few years after they die.

To measure down woody debris, litter, and duff, we established four interior fuel transects totaling 2.24 km (112 transects of 20 m). We used the National Park Service fuel monitoring protocols [88], in turn based on Brown transects [89]. Litter included freshly fallen leaves, needles, bark, flakes, acorns, cones, cone scales, and miscellaneous vegetative parts [88]. Duff included the fermentation and humus layers, not the fresh material of the litter layer. Down woody material included branches, trunks of trees, and shrubs that had fallen on or within 2 m above the ground [88]. Intercept diameter and decay class were recorded for all intercepted woody debris ≥10 cm in intercept diameter (measured perpendicular to the orientation of the piece of debris). To sample fine woody debris we used portions of the 112 line intercept transects −2 m for material 0 cm–2.5 cm in diameter (1-hour and 10-hour fuels), and 4 m for material 2.5 cm–7.6 cm (100-hour fuels). We calculated biomass according to Brown's method [89].

Biomass calculations

We reviewed all allometric equations from the two compendia of equations for North America [43], [90] and selected those that best matched the species, geographic location, diameter ranges, and tree densities of the YFDP [44], [90][93]. Where no allometric equation existed, we substituted a species (or diameter class within a species) that was a close match for morphology and wood density (see Appendix S1 for details). Because no whole tree biomass equations exist for the largest individuals of the species in the YFDP, we used proxy species. For the largest Abies concolor (n = 112) we used bole equations for A. procera. For Pinus lambertiana, we used branch and foliage equations for Pseudotsuga menziesii, and for the Pinus lambertiana >179.6 cm dbh (n = 7), we used a bole equation for Pseudotsuga menziesii. Additionally, no biomass equations exist for branches and foliage of Abies >110 cm dbh or Pseudotsuga >162 cm dbh. For those trees we capped the branch and foliage biomass at the values associated with trees of diameter 110 cm and 162 cm, respectively. All biomass calculations were made within the data ranges of the selected allometric equations (See Appendix S1 for full details of allometric equations). We calculated an error term for tree biomass from the underlying allometric equations. The root mean square error (standard error of estimate) of the allometric equations was transformed from log units to arithmetic units of standard deviation (i.e. Mg/ha) [92]. We defined large diameter structures as pieces ≥100 cm in diameter to facilitate comparisons with earlier studies of large-diameter trees in old-growth conifer forests on the Pacific Slope of western North America.

We calculated the biomass of the stems within each 4 m2 shrub demography plot based on allometric equations using basal diameter [90]. We used the biomass of the stems within the demography plots and the total area of shrub patches ≥2 m2 within the YFDP to calculate total shrub biomass. We used the demography plot data for sampled species as proxies for the four species without demography plots (Corylus cornuta var. californica for Sambucus racemosa, Vaccinium uliginosum for Rhododendron occidentale and Ribes nevadense, and one-half the value of Vaccinium uliginosum for Ribes roezlii). To calculate a stem density equivalent to the standard Smithsonian CTFS protocol [86], we tallied the number of stems that were ≥1 cm dbh in each shrub demography plot and multiplied by the area of each shrub patch ≥2 m2. Details of allometric equations are in Appendix S1.

We calculated snag biomass using the wood density values of Harmon et al. [15] and a bole volume calculated as a frustum of a cone. We calculated the biomass of litter and duff using the methods of Stephens et al. [94]. For down woody debris larger than 1000-hour fuels (4 inches; ∼10 cm), we used the large transect protocols of Harmon et al. [15], and we calculated the mass of woody debris using the methods of Harmon and Sexton [87].

To compare actual density and biomass values with the predictions of scaling theory, we used the equations from West et al. [26]. Specifically, we compared the actual diameter (radius) distribution with their predicted distribution, , where r is tree radius at breast height. We then reconfigured their radius-mass relationship, , to , where r is tree radius and m is tree biomass, and combined the mass and frequency equations to develop a relationship for total biomass in terms of tree radius: or . We used 5 cm diameter bins (2.5 cm radius bins) to regress curves of these forms to the data.

Quantifying spatial pattern

We quantified global spatial patterns with the univariate and bivariate forms of Ripley's K function, using the square root (L function) transformation in all cases. For a given fully mapped pattern, an estimate of the L(r) function, the statistic , is based on the count of neighboring points occurring within a circle of radius r centered on the ith point, summed over all points in the pattern [95], [96]. The bivariate form is a straightforward extension of the univariate case: it is the count of type 2 points occurring within a circle of radius r of the ith type 1 point, summed over all type 1 points in the pattern. We characterized patterns at interpoint distances from 0 m to 80 m (one quarter the minimum plot dimension) and used isotropic edge correction to account for points located closer than r to a plot edge [96]. Our study area included enough large-diameter trees to analyze spatial patterns of three tree species: Abies concolor, Calocedrus decurrens and Pinus lambertiana.

Inferential framework for spatial analyses

Univariate tree patterns were compared against a null distribution generated by a completely spatially random (CSR) process. Under CSR the location of each point in the pattern is completely independent of the locations of other points in the pattern. Positive values of indicate spatial clustering (trees have more neighbors than expected under CSR) while negative values of indicate spatial inhibition or uniformity (trees have fewer neighbors than expected under CSR).

Bivariate tree patterns were evaluated against the hypothesis of no interaction between the large-diameter and small-diameter subpopulations. We evaluated this hypothesis using the null model of population independence based on the guidelines of Goreaud & Pélissier [97]. Population independence is evaluated by holding the relative intratype spatial configuration constant (i.e., the relative tree locations within a diameter class are fixed) while subjecting the populations to random toroidal shifts. Under population independence significantly positive values of indicate a spatial attraction between the two types (e.g., originating from a parent-offspring relationship or facilitation) while significantly negative values indicate spatial repulsion between the two types (e.g., Janzen-Connell effects or intraspecific competition). Large-diameter trees were ≥100 cm dbh; small-diameter trees were <100 cm dbh.

We used the 9 m radius neighborhood size estimated by Das et al. [24], [98] for Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forests and tested the respective empirical patterns against the corresponding null models over 0 m≤r≤9 m using the goodness-of-fit test developed by Loosmore and Ford [99]. We set α = 0.05 and used n = 999 simulated patterns in each test (n = 250 simulated patterns were used for univariate analyses of small-diameter A. concolor and all species pooled, respectively, to mitigate excessively long computation times). To control for multiple tests (n = 12) we used the Bonferroni correction, resulting in a threshold P-value of 0.004. Because we had no a priori hypotheses about tree patterns at spatial scales >9 m we investigated patterns at larger scales in an exploratory framework by comparing the empirical curves to the full distribution of curves calculated for the simulated patterns. All analyses were implemented in the statistical program R version 2.14.1 [100]. Spatial analyses were conducted using the spatstat package version 1.25-1 [101].

Supporting Information

Figure S1.

Topography of the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot. LiDAR-derived ground model at 1 m resolution (5 m contours; 137.2 m vertical relief). Dots indicate corners of each 20 m×20 m quadrat of the 800 m×320 m plot. Elevation ranges from 1774.1 m in the northeast corner to 1911.3 m along the southern boundary for a vertical relief of 137.2 m. Drainages contain vernal streams.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036131.s001

(TIF)

Figure S2.

Climatology and water balance of the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot. The combination of temperature and precipitation (A) give rise to a pronounced summer drought (B). Potential evapotranspiration (PET) exceeds available water supply from May through September, decreasing actual evapotranspiration (AET) and producing a climatic water deficit (Deficit) of 197 mm of water.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036131.s002

(TIF)

Table S1.

Vertebrate species reported in similar forest types within 5 km of the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot between 1980 and 2011.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036131.s003

(PDF)

Appendix S1.

Allometric equations for total aboveground biomass for trees ≥1 cm dbh and shrubs in patches of continuous cover ≥2 m2 in the Yosemite Forest Dynamics Plot.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036131.s004

(PDF)

Acknowledgments

This research was performed under National Park Service research permits YOSE-2008-SCI-0098, YOSE-2010-SCI-0003, and YOSE-2011-SCI-0015. We thank B. Blake of Blake Land Surveys, Buellton, California, for assistance with surveying, GPS location, and geospatial consulting, and J. Knox, K. Blake, J. Bratt, R. Moore, M. Alvarez, R. McMillan, and G. Rice for surveying assistance. We thank S. Roberts for vertebrate data. We thank J. Meyer and the Yosemite National Park Divisions of Resources and Science, Fire and Aviation, Campground Management, and Law Enforcement for logistical support. We thank two anonymous reviewers who helped improve previous versions of this manuscript. This project was made possible by the 115 students and volunteers listed individually at http://www.yfdp.org.

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: JAL AJL MES JAF. Performed the experiments: JAL AJL MES JAF. Analyzed the data: JAL AJL MES JAF. Wrote the paper: JAL AJL MES.

References

  1. 1. Brown IF, Martinelli LA, Thomas WW, Moreira MZ, Ferreira CAC, et al. (1995) Uncertainty in the biomass of Amazonian forests: An example from Rondônia, Brazil. Forest Ecology and Management 75: 175–189.
  2. 2. Clark DB, Clark DA (1996) Abundance, growth and mortality of very large trees in Neotropical lowland rain forest. Forest Ecology and Management 80: 235–244.
  3. 3. Martin TA, Brown KJ, Kučera J, Meinzer FC, Sprugel DG, et al. (2001) Control of transpiration in a 220-year old Abies amabilis forest. Forest Ecology and Management 152: 211–224.
  4. 4. Rambo T, North M (2009) Canopy microclimate response to pattern and density of thinning in a Sierra Nevada forest. Forest Ecology and Management 257: 435–442.
  5. 5. van Wagtendonk JW, Moore PE (2010) Fuel deposition rates of montane and subalpine conifers in the central Sierra Nevada, California, USA. Forest Ecology and Management 259: 2122–2132.
  6. 6. Keeton WS, Franklin JF (2005) Do remnant old-growth trees accelerate rates of succession in mature Douglas-fir forests? Ecological Monographs 75: 103–118.
  7. 7. Chao K-J, Phillips OL, Monteagudo A, Torres-Lezama A, Vásquez Martínez R (2009) How do trees die? Mode of death in northern Amazonia. Journal of Vegetation Science 20: 260–268.
  8. 8. Larson AJ, Franklin JF (2010) The tree mortality regime in temperate old-growth coniferous forests: the role of physical damage. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 40: 2091–2103.
  9. 9. Meyer MD, Kelt DA, North MP (2005) Nest trees of northern flying squirrels in the Sierra Nevada. Journal of Mammalogy 86: 275–280.
  10. 10. Van Pelt R, Sillett SC (2008) Crown development of coastal Pseudotsuga menziesii, including a conceptual model for tall conifers. Ecological Monographs 78: 283–311.
  11. 11. Hammer TE, Nelson SK (1995) Characteristics of marbled murrelet nest trees and nesting stands. In: Ralph CJ, Hunt GL Jr, Raphael MG, Piatt JF, editors. Ecology and conservation of the marbled murrelet. General Technical Report PSW-152. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Research Station, Albany, California.
  12. 12. Nadkarni NM, Matelson TJ (1989) Bird use of epiphyte resources in Neotropical trees. Condor 91: 891–907.
  13. 13. Sillett SC, Van Pelt R (2007) Trunk reiteration promotes epiphytes and water storage in an old-growth redwood forest canopy. Ecological Monographs 77: 335–359.
  14. 14. Harmon ME, Cromack K, Smith BG (1987) Coarse woody debris in mixed-conifer forests, Sequoia National Park, California. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 17: 1265–1272.
  15. 15. Harmon ME, Woodall CW, Fasth B, Sexton J (2008) Woody detritus density and density reduction factors for tree species in the United States: a synthesis. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report NRS-29. Northern Research Station, Newtown Square, Pennsylvania.
  16. 16. Winter LE, Brubaker LB, Franklin JF, Miller EA, DeWitt DQ (2002) Canopy disturbance over the five-century lifetime of an old-growth Douglas-fir stand in the Pacific Northwest. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 32: 1057–1070.
  17. 17. Swetnam TW (1993) Fire history and climate change in giant sequoia groves. Science 262: 885–889.
  18. 18. Hall CM, James M, Baird T (2011) Forests and trees as charismatic mega-flora: implications for heritage tourism and conservation. Journal of Heritage Tourism 6: 309–323.
  19. 19. Omura H (2004) Trees, forests and religion in Japan. Mountain Research and Development 24: 179–182.
  20. 20. Van Pelt R (2001) Forest giants of the Pacific coast. Seattle: University of Washington Press.
  21. 21. Enquist BJ, West GB, Brown JH (2009) Extensions and evaluations of a general quantitative theory of forest structure and dynamics. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 106: 7046–7051.
  22. 22. Knight FR (2003) Stem mapping methodologies and analyses of stem density, plot size, sample size and spatial patterns of large trees in old-growth mixed-conifer and pine forests ofthe Sierra Nevada and Oregon. Dissertation. University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
  23. 23. Busing RT (2005) Tree mortality, canopy turnover, and woody detritus in old cove forests of the southern Appalachians. Ecology 86: 73–84.
  24. 24. Das A, Battles J, Stephenson NL, van Mantgem PJ (2011) The contribution of competition to tree mortality in old-growth coniferous forests. Forest Ecology and Management 261: 1203–1213.
  25. 25. Enquist BJ, Niklas KJ (2001) Invariant scaling relations across tree-dominated communities. Nature 410: 655–660.
  26. 26. West GB, Enquist BJ, Brown JH (2009) A general quantitative theory of forest structure and dynamics. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 106: 7040–7045.
  27. 27. Coomes DA, Duncan RP, Allen RB, Truscott J (2003) Disturbances prevent stem size-density distributions in natural forests from following scaling relationships. Ecology Letters 6: 980–989.
  28. 28. Muller-Landau HC, Condit RS, Harms KE, Marks CO, Thomas SC, et al. (2006) Comparing tropical forest tree size distributions with the predictions of metabolic ecology and equilibrium models. Ecology Letters 9: 589–602.
  29. 29. Franklin JF, Shugart HH, Harmon ME (1987) Tree death as an ecological process. BioScience 37: 550–556.
  30. 30. Pielou EC (1962) The use of plant-to-neighbor distances for the detection of competition. Journal of Ecology 50: 357–367.
  31. 31. Getzin S, Dean C, He F, Trofymow JA, Wiegand K, et al. (2006) Spatial patterns and competition of tree species in a Douglas-fir chronosequence on Vancouver Island. Ecography 29: 671–682.
  32. 32. Van Pelt R, Franklin JF (2000) Influence of canopy structure on the understory environment in tall, old-growth, conifer forests. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 30: 1231–1245.
  33. 33. Larson AJ, Franklin JF (2006) Structural segregation and scales of spatial dependency in Abies amabilis forests. Journal of Vegetation Science 17: 489–498.
  34. 34. Taylor AH (2004) Identifying forest reference conditions on early cut-over lands, Lake Tahoe Basin, USA. Ecological Applications 14: 1903–1920.
  35. 35. North M, Chen J, Oakley B, Song B, Rudnicki M, et al. (2004) Forest stand structure and pattern of old-growth western hemlock/Douglas-fir and mixed-conifer forests. Forest Science 50: 299–311.
  36. 36. Busing RT, Fujimori T (2002) Dynamics and composition and structure in an old Sequoia sempervirens forest. Journal of Vegetation Science 13: 785–792.
  37. 37. Baishya R, Barik SJ, Upadhaya K (2009) Distribution pattern of aboveground biomass in natural and plantation forests of humid tropics in northeast India. Tropical Ecology 50: 295–304.
  38. 38. Gilbert GS, Howard E, Ayala-Orozco B, Bonilla-Moheno M, Cummings J, et al. (2010) Beyond the tropics: forest structure in a temperate forest mapped plot. Journal of Vegetation Science 21: 388–405.
  39. 39. Chave J, Condit R, Muller-Landau HC, Thomas SC, Ashton PS, et al. (2008) Assessing evidence for a pervasive alteration in tropical tree communities. PLoS Biology 6: e45.
  40. 40. Makana J-R, Ewango CN, McMahon SM, Thomas SC, Hart TB, et al. (2011) Demography and biomass change in monodominant and mixed old-growth forest of the Congo. Journal of Tropical Ecology 27: 447–461.
  41. 41. Hao ZQ, Li BH, Zhang J, Wang XG, Ye J, et al. (2008) Broad-leaved Korean pine (Pinus koraiensis) mixed forest plot in Changbaishan (CBS) of China: Community composition and structure. Acta Phytoecologica Sinica 32: 238–250. [In Chinese.].
  42. 42. Wang X, Wiegand T, Wolf A, Howe R, Davies SJ, et al. (2011) Spatial patterns of tree species richness in two temperate forests. Journal of Ecology 99: 1382–1393.
  43. 43. Jenkins JC, Chojnacky DC, Heath LS, Birdsey RA (2004) Comprehensive database of diameter-based biomass regressions for North American tree species. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report NE-319. Northeastern Research Station, Newtown Square, Pennsylvania.
  44. 44. Keeton WS, Whitman AA, McGee GC, Goodale CL (2011) Late-successional biomass development in northern hardwood-conifer forests of the northeastern United States. Forest Science 57: 489–505.
  45. 45. Morrison ML, Raphael MG (1993) Modeling the dynamics of snags. Ecological Applications 3: 322–330.
  46. 46. North M, Innes J, Zald H (2007) Comparison of thinning and prescribed fire restoration treatments to Sierran mixed-conifer historic conditions. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 37: 331–342.
  47. 47. Bonnicksen TM, Stone EC (1980) The giant sequoia-mixed conifer forest community characterized through pattern analysis as a mosaic of aggregations. Forest Ecology and Management 3: 307–328.
  48. 48. Das A, Battles J, van Mantgem PJ, Stephenson NL (2008) Spatial elements of mortality risk in old-growth forests. Ecology 89: 1744–1756.
  49. 49. Lutz JA, van Wagtendonk JW, Franklin JF (2009) Twentieth-century decline of large-diameter trees in Yosemite National Park, California, USA. Forest Ecology and Management 257: 2296–2307.
  50. 50. Larson AJ, Churchill D (2012) Tree spatial patterns in fire-frequent forests of western North America, including mechanisms of pattern formation and implications for designing fuel reduction and restoration treatments. Forest Ecology and Management 267: 74–92.
  51. 51. Scholl AE, Taylor AH (2010) Fire regimes, forest change, and self-organization in an old-growth mixed-conifer forest, Yosemite National Park, USA. Ecological Applications 20: 362–380.
  52. 52. Clark DB, Clark DA (1991) The impact of physical damage on canopy tree regeneration in tropical rain forest. Journal of Ecology 72: 447–457.
  53. 53. Nesmith JCB, O'Hara KL, van Mantgem PJ, de Valpine P (2010) The effects of raking on sugar pine mortality following prescribed fire in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, California, USA. Fire Ecology 6(3): 97–116.
  54. 54. Sánchez Meador AJ, Moore MM, Bakker JD, Parysow PF (2009) 108 years of change in spatial pattern following selective harvest of a Pinus ponderosa stand in northern Arizona, USA. Journal of Vegetation Science 20: 79–90.
  55. 55. Keeler-Wolf T, Moore PE, Reyes ET, Menke JM, Johnson DN, et al. (In press) Yosemite National Park Vegetation Classification and Mapping Project Report. Natural Resource Report NPS/XXXX/NRR-20XX/XXX. National Park Service, Fort Collins, Colorado.
  56. 56. Hickman JC, editor. (1993) The Jepson Manual: Higher Plants of California. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  57. 57. Jennings MD, Faber-Langendoen D, Loucks OL, Peet RK, Roberts D (2009) Standards for associations and alliances of the U.S. National Vegetation Classification. Ecological Monographs 79: 173–199.
  58. 58. Stephenson NL, van Mantgem PJ (2005) Forest turnover rates follow global and regional patterns of productivity. Ecology Letters 8: 524–531.
  59. 59. Stephenson NL, van Mantgem PJ, Bunn AG, Bruner H, Harmon ME, et al. (2011) Causes and implications of the correlation between forest productivity and tree mortality rates. Ecological Monographs 81: 527–555.
  60. 60. Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) (2007) Soil survey geographic (SSURGO) database for Yosemite National Park, California, USA (Soil survey area symbol CA790). http://soildatamart.nrcs.usda.gov USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, Fort Worth, Texas, USA.
  61. 61. PRISM (2004) 800-m Climate Normals (1971–2000). PRISM Climate Group, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, USA.
  62. 62. Daly C, Halbleib M, Smith JI, Gibson WP, Dogett MK, et al. (2008) Physiographically-sensitive mapping of temperature and precipitation across the conterminous United State. International Journal of Climatology 28: 2031–2064.
  63. 63. Lutz JA, van Wagtendonk JW, Franklin JF (2010) Climatic water deficit, tree species ranges, and climate change in Yosemite National Park. Journal of Biogeography 37: 936–950.
  64. 64. van Wagtendonk JW, Fites-Kaufman J (2006) Sierra Nevada bioregion. In: Sugihara NG, van Wagtendonk JW, Shaffer KE, Fites-Kaufman J, Thode AE, editors. Fire in California's Ecosystems. pp. 264–294. University of California Press, Berkeley, California, USA.
  65. 65. Tarnay LW, Lutz JA (2011) Sustainable fire: Preserving carbon stocks and protecting air quality as the Sierra Nevada warm. Park Science 28(1): 48–55.
  66. 66. van Wagtendonk JW, Lutz JA (2007) Fire regime attributes of wildland fires in Yosemite National Park, USA. Fire Ecology 3(2): 34–52.
  67. 67. Lutz JA, Key CH, Kolden CA, Kane JT, van Wagtendonk JW (2011) Fire frequency, area burned, and severity: a quantitative approach to defining a normal fire year. Fire Ecology 7(2): 51–65.
  68. 68. Thode AE, van Wagtendonk JW, Miller JD, Quinn JF (2011) Quantifying the fire regime distributions for severity in Yosemite National Park, California, USA. International Journal of Wildland Fire 20: 223–239.
  69. 69. Lutz JA, Halpern CB (2006) Tree mortality during early forest development: a long-term study of rates, causes, and consequences. Ecological Monographs 76: 257–275.
  70. 70. Furniss RL, Carolin VM (1977) Western Forest Insects. USDA Forest Service Miscellaneous Publication 1339, Washington DC.
  71. 71. Edmonds RL, Agee JK, Gara RI (2000) Forest health and protection. Boston: McGraw-Hill.
  72. 72. Baumgartner K, Rizzo DM (2001) Distribution of Armillaria species in California. Mycologia 93: 821–830.
  73. 73. Rizzo DM, Slaughter GW (2001) Root disease and canopy gaps in developed areas of Yosemite Valley, California. Forest Ecology and Management 146: 159–167.
  74. 74. van Mantgem PJ, Stephenson NL, Keifer MB, Keeley J (2004) Effects of an introduced pathogen and fire exclusion on the demography of sugar pine. Ecological Applications 14: 1590–1602.
  75. 75. Hawksworth FG, Wiens D (1996) Dwarf mistletoes: biology, pathology, and systematics. USDA Agriculture Handbook 709, USDS Forest Service, Washington DC.
  76. 76. Pierson ED, Rainey WE, Chow LS (2006) Bat use of the giant sequoia groves in Yosemite National Park. Yosemite Fund Report, Yosemite National, California.
  77. 77. Meyer MD, North MP, Kelt DA (2007) Nest trees of northern flying squirrel in Yosemite National Park, California. Southwestern Naturalist 52: 157–161.
  78. 78. Roberts SL, van Wagtendonk JW, Kelt DA, Miles AK, Lutz JA (2008) Modeling the effects of fire severity and spatial complexity on small mammals in Yosemite National Park, California. Fire Ecology 4(2): 83–104.
  79. 79. Roberts SL, van Wagtendonk JW, Miles AK, Kelt DA (2011) Effects of fire on California spotted owl occupancy in a late-successional forest. Biological Conservation 144: 610–619.
  80. 80. Elsasser AB, Heizer RF, volume editor (1978) Development of regional prehistoric cultures. Handbook of North American Indians, Volume 8, California. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution. pp. 37–57.
  81. 81. Hiskes G, Hiskes J (2009) The discovery of Yosemite 1833: route of the Walker Expedition through the Yosemite region. Red Fox Press.
  82. 82. Bunnel LH (1880) Discovery of the Yosemite and the Indian War of 1851. Chicago: Flemmin H Revell.
  83. 83. Levy R, Heizer RF, volume editor (1978) Eastern Miwok. Handbook of North American Indians, Volume 8, California. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution. pp. 398–413.
  84. 84. Parker AJ (2002) Fire in Sierra Nevada forests: evaluating the ecological impact of burning by Native Americans. In: Vale TR, editor. Fire, native peoples, and the natural landscape. Washington DC: Island Press. pp. 233–267.
  85. 85. Muir J (1911) My first summer in the Sierra. In: Cronon W, editor. John Muir: nature writings. New York: The Library of America. pp. 147–310.
  86. 86. Condit R (1998) Tropical forest census plots. Berlin: Springer-Verlag, Georgetown: R.G. Landes Company. 211 p.
  87. 87. Harmon ME, Sexton J (1996) Guidelines for measurements of woody detritus in forest ecosystems. 73 p. U.S. LTER Network Office: University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
  88. 88. USDI National Park Service (2003) Fire Monitoring Handbook. Fire Management Program Center, National Interagency Fire Center, Boise, Idaho, USA.
  89. 89. Brown JK (1974) Handbook for inventorying downed material. USDA Forest Service Gen Tech Report INT-16. Ogden, Utah, USA.
  90. 90. Means JE, Hansen HA, Koerper GJ, Alaback PB, Klopsch MW (1994) Software for computing plant biomass – BIOPAK users guide. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report PNW-GTR-340. Pacific Northwest Research Station, Portland, Oregon, USA.
  91. 91. Gholz HL, Grier CC, Campbell AG, Brown AT (1979) Equations for estimating biomass and leaf area of plants of the Pacific Northwest. Research Paper 41. Forest Research Lab, Oregon State University. Corvallis.
  92. 92. Westman WE (1998) Aboveground biomass, surface area, and production relations of red fir (Abies magnifica) and white fir (A. concolor). Canadian Journal of Forest Research 17: 311–319.
  93. 93. Jenkins JC, Chojnacky DC, Heath LS, Birdsey RA (2003) National-scale biomass estimators for United States tree species. Forest Science 49: 12–35.
  94. 94. Stephens SL, Finney MA, Schantz H (2004) Bulk density and fuel loads of ponderosa pine and white fir forest floors: impacts of leaf morphology. Northwest Science 78: 93–100.
  95. 95. Fortin MJ, Dale M (2005) Spatial analysis: a guide for ecologists. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.
  96. 96. Diggle P (2003) Statistical analysis of spatial point patterns. Arnold, London, UK.
  97. 97. Goreaud F, Pélissier R (2003) Avoiding misinterpretation of biotic interactions with the intertype K12-function: population independence vs. random labeling hypotheses. Journal of Vegetation Science 14: 681–692.
  98. 98. Larson AJ, Churchill D (2008) Spatial patterns of overstory trees in late-successional conifer forests. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 38: 2814–2825.
  99. 99. Loosmore NL, Ford ED (2006) Statistical inference using the G or K point pattern spatial statistics. Ecology 87: 1925–1931.
  100. 100. R Development Core Team (2011) R: A language and environment for statistical computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria. http://www.R-project.org/.
  101. 101. Baddeley A, Turner R (2005) Spatstat: an R package for analyzing spatial point patterns. Journal of Statistical Software 12(6): 1–42.