Effect of flood regime on tree growth in the floodplain and surrounding uplands of the Wisconsin River |
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Authors: | Katharine I Predick Sarah E Gergel Monica G Turner |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Zoology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706, USA;2. Department of Forest Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z4 Canada |
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Abstract: | Flood regime and vegetation flood tolerance interact to influence tree growth in riverine landscapes. We studied tree growth in floodplain and upland forests of the Wisconsin River. About a century ago, levees set back from the river were constructed on this floodplain. The levee restricts some floodplain area from overbank flood events, but leaves a portion of active floodplain still inundated by floods. We addressed two questions: (1) how do growth rates of flood‐tolerant and flood‐intolerant tree species in the floodplain differ with flood regime? (2) At the stand level, how does growth rate differ with flood regime and between floodplain and upland areas? Annual tree growth rates from 1991 to 2000 were determined from tree increment cores for both individual species and stands. Tree growth rates of individual species varied between flood regimes. The most flood‐tolerant species (Betula nigra and Fraxinus pennsylvanica) grew faster in areas with active flooding, while the growth of less flood‐tolerant species (Quercus velutina and Q. ellipsoidalis) was depressed in swales and active floodplain. However, stand‐level tree growth did not differ between the floodplain and upland, or between flood regimes within the floodplain. Therefore, variation in the growth of individual species may not scale up to create differences in stand‐level tree growth because forest community composition varies spatially with flood regime. We suggest that growth rates are similar among sites because each community comprises of species adapted to their current flood regime. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
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Keywords: | basal area increment flood tolerance tree production levee microtopography restricted flooding radial growth riparian forest |
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