Abstract

Elucidating the factors that structure very old forests is crucial to understanding their dynamics. We reconstructed the history of an ancient (1000-year-old) stand in the mountains of coastal British Columbia that contained four tree species (Abies amabilis (Dougl.) Forbes, Chamaecyparis nootkatensis (D. Don) Spach., Tsuga mertensiana (Bong.) Carr., and Tsuga heterophylla (Raf.) Sarg.) in the canopy and the seedling bank. Using dendrochronological procedures, we examined the growth patterns of all trees (>4.0 cm diameter at breast height) in four 0.25 ha mapped plots. We also sampled the seedling bank in the four plots. Age structures indicated variable but rather continuous recruitment for all species. Periods of increased amounts of release or rapid early growth occurred but were not pronounced. Overall, we found little evidence for stand-level disturbance or the formation of large gaps. All four tree species appear able to persist in the stand in the absence of major stand-level disturbance, but the mechanisms contributing to coexistence differ. One species, C. nootkatensis, depends primarily on vegetative reproduction for persistence. Single-tree gap dynamics have predominated in the stand for centuries, placing this stand at the far end of the gradient from forests controlled by large, severe disturbances to those where very small-scale processes predominate.

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