New Zealand Journal of Botany abstracts
Episodic forest mortality in the Kaimai Ranges, North Island, New Zealand
G. T. JANE
T. G. A. GREEN
Department of Biological Science
University of Waikato
Private Bag, Hamilton, New Zealand
Abstract Investigations of the upland vegetation of the Kaimai Ranges have revealed widespread mortality affecting a wide range of species and forest types. The mortality is not caused by browsing by introduced mammals, although they can be shown to have slowed recent forest recovery. Dendro-chronological data define 2 mortality episodes closely linked with severe droughts which occurred in 1914 and 1946. Continued ill-thrift in the surviving vegetation and slow growth in the serai forests is the result of complex causes which include changes in soil water table, increased exposure of residual trees, low nutrient status of the soils, and attacks by pathogens. On steeper slopes the mortality appears to have contributed to a period of increased erosion, and for this reason further study of the return frequency of the periods of mortality may enable the frequency of the erosion episodes to be determined. The association of drought with the primary causes of the mortality suggests that it may be an under-rated ecological factor in these temperate evergreen forests.
Keywords dendrochronology; drought; erosion; serai forest; pathogens; browsing animals; Nothofagus; New Zealand flora
Received 17 May 1982; revision 11 October 1982
New Zealand Journal of Botany, 1983, Vol. 21 : 21-31
0028-825X/83/2101-0021$2.50/0 © Crown copyright 1983
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (1637K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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