Abstract

In the eastern hardwood forests of North America ice storms are an important disturbance event. Ice storms strongly influence community dynamics as well as urban infrastructure via catastrophic branch failure; further, the severity and frequency of ice storms are likely to increase with climate change. However, despite a long-standing interest into the effects of freezing rain on forests, the process of ice accretion and thus ice loading on branches remains poorly understood. This is because a number of challenges have prevented in situ measurements of ice on branches, including: 1) accessing and measuring branches in tall canopies, 2) limitations to travel during and immediately after events, and 3) the unpredictability of ice storms. Here, utilizing a novel combination of outdoor experimental icing, manual measurements and terrestrial laser scanning (TLS), we perform the first in situ measurements of ice accretion on branches at differing heights in a tree crown and with increasing duration of exposure. We found that TLS can reproduce both branch and iced branch diameters with high fidelity, but some TLS instruments do not detect ice. Contrary to the expectations of ice accretion models, radial accretion varied sharply within tree crowns. Initially, radial ice accretion was similar throughout the crown, but after 6.5 hours of irrigation (second scanning) radial ice accretion was much greater on upper branches than on lower (∼factor of 3). The slope of the change in radial ice accretion along branches increased with duration of exposure and was significantly greater at the second scanning compared to the first. We conclude that outdoor icing experiments coupled with the use of TLS provide a robust basis for evaluation of models of ice accretion and breakage in tree crowns, facilitating estimation of the limiting breaking stress of branches by accurate measurements of ice loads.

Highlights

  • Ice storms are one of the most frequent and severe natural disturbances in the deciduous forests of northeastern North America and play a central role in forest dynamics

  • Despite the long-standing interest in ice storms, the process of ice accretion and ice loading on branches remains poorly understood. This is likely because empirical measurements from ice and snow monitoring systems are difficult to extrapolate to branching systems, as well as difficulties hindering in situ measurements of ice on branches, including: 1) measuring branches in tall canopies, 2) limitations to travel during and immediately after events 3) the unpredictability of ice storm events, and (4) the fact that the advancing warm front quickly arrives at the local ground level and melts the ice

  • Our goals were to: 1) evaluate the feasibility of experimental icing, 2) test the method of using terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) to capture ice accretion and structural changes in tree crowns, and 3) test the hypothesis that radial ice accretion on branches varies with diameter and with crown position

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Summary

Introduction

Ice storms are one of the most frequent and severe natural disturbances in the deciduous forests of northeastern North America and play a central role in forest dynamics. Despite the long-standing interest in ice storms, the process of ice accretion and ice loading on branches remains poorly understood This is likely because empirical measurements from ice and snow monitoring systems are difficult to extrapolate to branching systems, as well as difficulties hindering in situ measurements of ice on branches, including: 1) measuring branches in tall canopies, 2) limitations to travel during and immediately after events 3) the unpredictability of ice storm events, and (4) the fact that the advancing warm front quickly arrives at the local ground level and melts the ice

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