Population Dynamics of Sugar Maple (Acer Saccharum Marsh.) at the Southern Portion of Its Range

Population Dynamics of Sugar Maple (Acer Saccharum Marsh.) at the Southern Portion of Its Range
Author: Craig Marcus Turberville
Publisher:
Total Pages: 82
Release: 2011
Genre:
ISBN:

Evidence for climate change driven range migration exists for a variety of tree species in eastern North America. Northward range migration for tree species in the region requires a decrease in population density near the southern range boundary coupled with an increase in population density at the northern range boundary. Sugar maple (Acer saccharum Marsh.) is one such species that has been projected by some biogeographic models to shift north in accord with climate. However, a widespread pattern of increased sugar maple density has been reported in the forest science literature from a variety of sites throughout the species' range. This pattern is linked to a complex of interacting factors and has been hypothesized to represent a positive feedback that facilitates sugar maple regeneration. The primary goal of my study was to test which of these hypotheses (range migration or succession) was correct for the southern portion of the sugar maple range. I used Forest Inventory and Analysis program data to compare region-wide population dynamics for this species on a plot-by-plot basis. Changes in frequency, density, and dominance of sugar maple trees and seedlings were compared over multiple years for the states of Alabama, Kentucky, North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia. Plot data for all states were combined to determine changes in frequency, density, and dominance for the contiguous and non-contiguous regions of sugar maple's southern range portion. Results indicated increases in frequency, density, and dominance of sugar maple within its contiguous range coupled with decreases outside of the contiguous range. It is postulated based on these data that sugar maple's southern range boundary will remain stabilized while the northern boundary will continue to migrate with increasing global temperatures.

Effects of Defoliation and Drought on Root Food Reserves in Sugar Maple Seedlings

Effects of Defoliation and Drought on Root Food Reserves in Sugar Maple Seedlings
Author: Johnson Parker
Publisher:
Total Pages: 16
Release: 1970
Genre: Plants
ISBN:

S2The artificial defoliation of sugar maple (Acer saccharum Marsh.) can cause a marked decline in root food reserves, especially starch, and an increase in the levels of the reducing sugars, fructose and glucose. Defoliation can also bring on the dieback-decline syndrome in sugar maples (Parker and Houston 1968). Because drought, too, can bring on dieback symptoms, the question arose whether drought (or a combination of drought and defoliation) has the same effect as defoliation on root food reserves and reducing sugars. Two experiments designed to examine this question were conducted in 1968-69. In one, the effects of both drought and defoliation were examined; in the second, defoliation was eliminated as a variable. This paper is a report on those experiments. S3.

Survival, Growth, and Juvenile-mature Correlations in a West Virginia Sugar Maple Provenance Test 25 Years After Establishment

Survival, Growth, and Juvenile-mature Correlations in a West Virginia Sugar Maple Provenance Test 25 Years After Establishment
Author: Thomas M. Schuler
Publisher:
Total Pages: 12
Release: 1994
Genre: Fernow Experimental Forest (W. Va.)
ISBN:

Survival, total height, diameter at breast height (d.b.h.), and stem quality of sugar maple trees of different provenances were compared 25 years after establishment in north-central West Virginia. Provenances were from Michigan, Minnesota, West Virginia, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont, Maine, and Quebec, Canada. There were significant differences between provenances for all traits except stem quality. By provenance; total tree height ranged from about 49 to 37 feet; d.b.h. from 6.7 to 3.6 inches; and survival from 100 to 15 percent. The predictability of total tree height 25 years after establishment based on mean provenance height at age 2, 6, 10, and 15 years is discussed. Results suggest that juvenile height growth may be a good predictor of mature height performance, thus decreasing the need for rotation-length trials.