Abstract

Tree diameter at breast height (dbh) and height are the most important variables used in forest inventory and management as well as forest carbon-stock estimation. In order to identify the key stand variables that influence the tree height-dbh relationship and to develop and validate a suit of models for predicting tree height, data from 5961 tree samples aged from 6 years to 53 years and collected from 80 Chinese-fir plantation plots were used to fit 39 models, including 33 nonlinear models and 6 linear models, were developed and evaluated into two groups. The results showed that composite models performed better in height estimate than one-independent-variable models. Nonlinear composite Model 34 and linear composite Model 6 were recommended for predicting tree height in Chinese fir plantations with a dbh range between 4 cm and 40 cm when the dbh data for each tree and the quadratic mean dbh of the stand (Dq) and mean height of the stand (Hm) were available. Moreover, Hm could be estimated by using the formula Hm=11.707×ln(Dq)-18.032. Clearly, Dq was the primary stand variable that influenced the height-dbh relationship. The parameters of the models varied according to stand age and site. The inappropriate application of provincial or regional height-dbh models for predicting small tree height at local scale may result in larger uncertainties. The method and the recommended models developed in this study were statistically reliable for applications in growth and yield estimation for even-aged Chinese-fir plantation in Huitong and Changsha. The models could be extended to other regions and to other tree species only after verification in subtropical China.

Highlights

  • Tree height and tree diameter at breast height are the principal important variables in tree growth models

  • This conclusion has been reconfirmed for Chinese-fir plantations in this study, in which height-dbh models for Chinese-fir have been assessed for practical application in subtropical China

  • Model selection was based on goodness of fit, precision and practical application

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Summary

Introduction

Tree height and tree diameter at breast height (dbh) are the principal important variables in tree growth models. Tree height and dbh are allometrically related, and the allometric relationship between them is valuable and is commonly used in stand-level planning for silviculture alternatives and effectiveness monitoring [3,4]. Accurate prediction of tree heights is critical in forest inventory compilation, yield modelling, and management decision-making [5,6,7], as well as carbon budget. Reliable estimates of tree height are essential for assessing above-ground biomass, and strongly affects both ecological and ecophysiological processed-based models of forest growth. In evenly-aged, structured monocultures, stand-based approaches are appropriate to explain and model tree growth [9]. Individual-tree growth models are fundamental components of forest growth and yield prediction frameworks [10]. Model selection and the relationship among stand variables have been less widely studied

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