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Forest canopy recovery from the 1938 hurricane and subsequent salvage damage measured with airborne LiDAR
Authors:John F Weishampel  Jason B Drake  Amanda Cooper  Michelle Hofton
Affiliation:a Department of Biology, University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL 32816-2368, USA
b Laboratory for Terrestrial Physics, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MA, USA
c Department of Geography, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA
d USDA Forest Service, Tallahassee, FL, USA
Abstract:The structure of a forest canopy often reflects its disturbance history. Such signatures of past disturbances or legacies can influence how the ecosystem functions across broad spatio-temporal scales. The 1938 hurricane and ensuing salvage operations which swept through New England represent the most recent large, infrequent disturbance (LID) in this region. Though devastating (downing ∼ 70% of the timber at Harvard Forest), the disturbance was not indiscriminate; it left behind a heterogeneous landscape comprised of different levels of canopy damage. We analyzed large-footprint LiDAR, from the Prospect Hill tract at Harvard Forest in central Massachusetts, to assess whether damage to the forest structure from the hurricane and subsequent timber extraction could be discerned after ∼ 65 years. Differences in LiDAR-derived measures of canopy height and vertical diversity were a function of the degree of damage from the 1938 hurricane and the predominant tree species which is, in part, a function of land use history. Higher levels of damage corresponded to slightly shorter canopies with a less even vertical distribution of return from the ground to the top. In addition, differences in canopy topography as revealed by spatial autocorrelation of canopy top heights were found among the damage classes. Less disturbed stands were characterized by lower levels of local autocorrelation for canopy height and higher levels of vertical diversity of LiDAR returns. These differences in canopy structure reveal that the forest tract has not completely recovered from the 1938 LID and salvage regime, which may have implications on arboreal and understory habitat and other ecosystem functions.
Keywords:Disturbance  Ecosystem recovery  Forest canopy  Harvard Forest  Hurricane  Land use  Legacy  LiDAR  LISA  Spatial autocorrelation  Vertical structure
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