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Bose, Arun K. ; Weiskittel, Aaron ; Wagner, Robert G. ; Kuehne, Christian ; Michalet, ed., Richard ( , Journal of Vegetation Science)
Abstract Questions What are the primary biotic and abiotic factors driving composition and abundance of naturally regenerated tree seedlings across forest landscapes of Maine? Do seedling species richness (
SR ) and density (SD ) decrease with improved growing conditions (climate and soil), but increase with increased diversity of overstorey composition and structure? Does partial harvesting disproportionately favour relative dominance of shade‐intolerant hardwoods (PIHD ) over shade‐tolerant softwoods (PTSD )?Location Forest landscapes across the diverse eco‐regions and forest types of Maine,
USA .Methods This study used
USDA Forest Service Forest Inventory Analysis permanent plots (n = 10 842), measured every 5 yr since 1999. The best models for each response variable (SR ,SD ,PIHD andPTSD ) were developed based onAIC and biological interpretability, while considering 35 potential explanatory variables incorporating climate, soil, site productivity, overstorey structure and composition, and past harvesting.Results Mean annual temperature was the most important abiotic factor, whereas overstorey tree size diversity was the most important biotic factor for
SR andSD . Both mean annual temperature and overstorey tree size diversity had a curvilinear relationship withSR andSD . Average overstorey shade tolerance and percentage tolerant softwood basal area in the overstorey were the top predictor variables ofPIHD andPTSD , respectively. Partial harvesting favouredPIHD but notPTSD .Conclusions This is one of the first studies to comprehensively evaluate a number of factors influencing naturally established tree seedlings at a broad landscape scale in the Northern Forest region of the eastern
USA and Canada. Despite limitations associated with relatively small plot size, large seedling size class and lack of direct measurements of light, water and nutrients, this study documents the influence of these factors amid high variability associated with patterns of natural regeneration. The curvilinear relationship between mean annual temperature withSR andSD supports the argument that species richness and abundance usually have unimodal relationships with productivity indicators, whereas the curvilinear relationship between overstorey tree size diversity andSR andSD suggest that moderate overstorey diversity incorporates multiple species as well as higher seedling individuals.