957 resultados para Schreuder, Hans T.: Sampling methods for multiresource forest inventory
Resumo:
In recent years, challenged by the climate scenarios put forward by the IPCC and its potential impact on plant distribution, numerous predictive techniques -including the so called habitat suitability models (HSM)- have been developed. Yet, as the output of the different methods produces different distribution areas, developing validation tools are strong needs to reduce uncertainties. Focused in the Iberian Peninsula, we propose a palaeo-based method to increase the robustness of the HSM, by developing an ecological approach to understand the mismatches between the palaeoecological information and the projections of the HSMs. Here, we present the result of (1) investigating causal relationships between environmental variables and presence of Pinus sylvestris L. and P. nigra Arn. available from the 3rd Spanish Forest Inventory, (2) developing present and past presence-predictions through the MaxEnt model for 6 and 21 kyr BP, and (3) assessing these models through comparisons with biomized palaeoecological data available from the European Pollen Database for the Iberian Peninsula.
Resumo:
Old-growth trees play a very important role in the maintenance of biodiversity in forests. However, no clear definition is yet available to help identify them since tree age is usually not recorded in National Forest Inventories. To develop and test a new method to identify old-growth trees using a species-specific threshold for tree diameter in National Forest Inventories. Different nonlinear mixed models for diameter ? age were generated using data from the Spanish Forest Inventory in order to identify the most appropriate one for Aleppo pine in its South-western distribution area. The asymptote of the optimal model indicates the threshold diameter for defining an old-growth tree. Additionally, five site index curves were examined to analyze the influence of site quality on these models.
Resumo:
When the fresh fruit reaches the final markets from the suppliers, its quality is not always as good as it should, either because it has been mishandled during transportation or because it lacks an adequate quality control at the producer level, before being shipped. This is why it is necessary for the final markets to establish their own quality assessment system if they want to ensure to their customers the quality they want to sell. In this work, a system to control fruit quality at the last level of the distribution channel has been designed. The system combines rapid control techniques with laboratory equipment and statistical sampling protocols, to obtain a dynamic, objective process, which can substitute advantageously the quality control inspections carried out visually by human experts at the reception platform of most hypermarkets. Portable measuring equipment have been chosen (firmness tester, temperature and humidity sensors...) as well as easy-to-use laboratory equipment (texturometer, colorimeter, refractometer..,) combining them to control the most important fruit quality parameters (firmness, colour, sugars, acids). A complete computer network has been designed to control all the processes and store the collected data in real time, and to perform the computations. The sampling methods have been also defined to guarantee the confidence of the results. Some of the advantages of a quality assessment system as the proposed one are: the minimisation of human subjectivity, the ability to use modern measuring techniques, and the possibility of using it also as a supplier's quality control system. It can be also a way to clarify the quality limits of fruits among members of the commercial channel, as well as the first step in the standardisation of quality control procedures.
Resumo:
Este estudio profundiza en la estimación de variables forestales a partir de información LiDAR en el Valle de la Fuenfría (Cercedilla, Madrid). Para ello se dispone de dos vuelos realizados con sensor LiDAR en los años 2002 y 2011 y en el invierno de 2013 se ha realizado un inventario de 60 parcelas de campo. En primer lugar se han estimado seis variables dasométricas (volumen, área basimétrica, biomasa total, altura dominante, densidad y diámetro medio cuadrático) para 2013, tanto a nivel de píxel como a nivel de rodal y monte. Se construyeron modelos de regresión lineal múltiple que permitieron estimar con precisión dichas variables. En segundo lugar, se probaron diferentes métodos para la estimación de la distribución diamétrica. Por un lado, el método de predicción de percentiles y, por otro lado, el método de predicción de parámetros. Este segundo método se probó para una función Weibull simple, una función Weibull doble y una combinación de ambas según la distribución que mejor se ajustaba a cada parcela. Sin embargo, ninguno de los métodos ha resultado suficientemente válido para predecir la distribución diamétrica. Por último se estimaron el crecimiento en volumen y área basimétrica a partir de la comparación de los vuelos del 2002 y 2011. A pesar de que la tecnología LiDAR era diferente y solo se disponía de un inventario completo, realizado en 2013, los modelos construidos presentan buenas bondades de ajuste. Asimismo, el crecimiento a nivel de pixel se ha mostrado estar relacionado de forma estadísticamente significativa con la pendiente, orientación y altitud media del píxel. ABSTRACT This project goes in depth on the estimation of forest attributes by means of LiDAR data in Fuenfria’s Valley (Cercedilla, Madrid). The available information was two LiDAR flights (2002 and 2011) and a forest inventory consisting of 60 plots (2013). First, six different dasometric attributes (volume, basal area, total aboveground biomass, top height, density and quadratic mean diameter) were estimated in 2013 both at a pixel, stand and forest level. The models were developed using multiple linear regression and were good enough to predict these attributes with great accuracy. Second, the measured diameter distribution at each plot was fitted to a simple and a double Weibull distribution and different methods for its estimation were tested. Neither parameter prediction method nor percentile prediction method were able to account for the diameter distribution. Finally, volume and top height growths were estimated comparing 2011 LiDAR flight with 2002 LiDAR flight. Even though the LiDAR technology was not the same and there was just one forest inventory with sample plots, the models properly explain the growth. Besides, growth at each pixel is significantly related to its average slope, orientation and altitude.
Resumo:
Disturbances shape forest ecosystems by influencing their composition, structure, and processes. In the Mediterranean Basin, changes in the disturbance regimes have been predicted to occur in the next future with a higher occurrence of extreme events of drought, wildfire, and – to a lesser extent – windstorm. Woody species are the main elements defining the structure and functioning of forest ecosystems. Recently, response-type diversity has been pointed out as an appropriate indicator of ecosystems resilience. For this, we have elaborated a complete response-trait database for the tree and shrubby species considered in the Third Spanish National Forest Inventory (3SNFI). In the database, the presence or absence of nine response traits associated to drought, fire, and wind were assigned to each species. The database reflected the lack of information about some important traits (in particular for shrubby species) and allowed to determine those traits most widely distributed. The information contained in the database was then used to assess a relative index of forest resilience to these disturbances calculated from the abundance of response traits and the species redundancy for each plot of the 3SNFI; considering both tree and shrubby species. In general, few plots showed high values of the resilience index, probably because some traits were scarcely presented in the species and also because most plots presented very few species. The cartographic representation of the index showed low values for the stands located in mountainous ranges, which are mostly composed by species typical from central Europe. In the other side, Eucalyptus plantations in Galicia appeared as one thee the most resilient ecosystems, due to its higher adaptive capacity to persist after the occurrence of drought, fire, and windstorm events. We conclude that the response traits database can constitute a useful tool for forest management and planning and for future research to enhance the forest resilience.
Resumo:
In mixed stands, inter-specific competition can be lower than intra-specific competition when niche complementarity and/or facilitation between species prevail. These positive interactions can take place at belowground and/or aboveground levels. Belowground competition tends to be size symmetric while the aboveground competition is usually for light and almost always size-asymmetric. Interactions between forest tree species can be explored analyzing growth at tree level by comparing intra and inter-specific competition. At the same time, possible causes of niche complementarity can be inferred relating intra and inter-specific competition with the mode of competition, i.e. size-symmetric or sizeasymmetric. The aim of this paper is to further our understanding of the interactions between species and to detect possible causes of competition reduction in mixed stands of beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) with other species: pine?beech, oak?beech and fir?beech. To test whether species growth is better explained by size-symmetric and/or size-asymmetric competition, five different competition structures where included in basal area growth models fitted using data from the Spanish National Forest Inventory for the Pyrenees. These models considered either size-symmetry only (Reineke?s stand density index, SDI), size-asymmetry only (SDI of large trees or SDI of small trees), or both combined. In order to assess the influence of the admixture, these indices were introduced in two different ways, one of which was to consider that trees of all species compete in a similar way, and the other was to split the stand density indices into intra- and inter-specific competition components. The results showed that in pine?beech mixtures, there is a slightly negative effect of beech on pine basal area growth while beech benefitted from the admixture of Scots pine; this positive effect being greater as the proportion of pine trees in larger size classes increases. In oak?beech mixtures, beech growth was also positively influenced by the presence of oaks that were larger than the beech trees. The growth of oak, however, decreased when the proportion of beech in SDI increased, although the presence of beech in larger size classes promoted oak growth. Finally, in fir?beech mixtures, neither fir nor beech basal area growth were influenced by the presence of the other species. The results indicate that size-asymmetric is stronger than size-symmetric competition in these mixtures, highlighting the importance of light in competition. Positive species interactions in size-asymmetric competition involved a reduction of asymmetry in tree size-growth relationships.