Windstorm damage and forest recovery: accelerated succession, stand structure, and spatial pattern over 25 years in two Minnesota forests
- 27 October 2012
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Science and Business Media LLC in Plant Ecology
- Vol. 213 (11), 1833-1842
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s11258-012-0139-9
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Regeneration responses to gap size and coarse woody debris within natural disturbance-based silvicultural systems in northeastern Minnesota, USAForest Ecology and Management, 2011
- A test of ecological succession hypotheses using 55‐year time‐series data for 361 boreal forest standsGlobal Ecology and Biogeography, 2011
- Interspecific variation in susceptibility to windthrow as a function of tree size and storm severity for northern temperate tree speciesCanadian Journal of Forest Research, 2001
- Changes in two Minnesota forests during 14 years following catastrophic windthrowJournal of Vegetation Science, 2000
- Treefall gap characteristics and regeneration in the laurel forest of TenerifeJournal of Vegetation Science, 1998
- Wind disturbance in remnant forest stands along the prairie-forest ecotone, Minnesota, USAPlant Ecology, 1997
- Estimation of tree replacement patterns in an Appalachian Picea‐Abies forestJournal of Vegetation Science, 1996
- Recruitment Near Conspecific Adults and the Maintenance of Tree and Shrub Diversity in a Neotropical ForestThe American Naturalist, 1992
- Competition and the Coexistence of Species in a Mixed Podocarp StandJournal of Ecology, 1991
- Nature and Structure of the ClimaxJournal of Ecology, 1936