Publication:
Tree profile equations are significantly improved when adding tree age and stocking degree: an example for Larix gmelinii in the Greater Khingan Mountains of Inner Mongolia, northeast China

Date

2020

Authors

Liu, Yang
Yue, Chaofang
Wei, Xiaohua
Trancoso, Ralph

Director

Publisher

Springer Nature
Acceso abierto / Sarbide irekia
Artículo / Artikulua
Versión aceptada / Onetsi den bertsioa

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Abstract

Tree age (AGE) and stocking degree (P) strongly influence tree shape, but their effects have been neglected in most tree profile equations. In addition, data used to build traditional tree profile equations usually do not meet the statistical requirements of independence and identical distribution of observations. The main objectives were to present a method to improve taper equations with measurements easily collected in tree inventories (age, stocking degree) and also improve the statistical accuracy of those equations by selecting parameters with a more rigorous way than that is traditionally being done. We evaluated the effects of incorporating age and stocking degree as regressors in tree profile equations selected among 30 candidate foundation equations and parameterized with data from 1,858 Larix gmelinii (Rupr.) trees growing in the northern China. We used nonlinear mixed-effects models to minimize statistical problems present when building traditional tree profile equations: lack of independence and identical distribution of observations, random effects related to individual trees. Equations incorporating age and stocking degree significantly improved their accuracy. When the equation parameters were estimated with mixed- effects models containing exponential variance functions and accounting for non-independence of observations from the same tree, diameters at any height along the tree bole were more accurately estimated. We demonstrate a new methodology to build more accurate tree profile equations that could support better economic valorization of timber and improve calculations of carbon flows in forests, not only for natural L. gmelinii forest but for other species growing in dense natural stands around the globe.

Description

Keywords

Nonlinear mixed-effects model, single, segmented and variable-form taper functions, autocorrelation, heteroskedasticity

Department

Ciencias / Zientziak

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Degree

Doctorate program

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