Salt-wind induced wave regeneration in coastal pine forests in New Zealand Journal Paper
- Author
- Campbell, D.J.
- Year
- 1998
- Pages
- 953-960
- Summary
- Strong onshore winds and airborne sea salt can gradually defoliate trees at the exposed margin of temperate pine stands in New Zealand and induce a slowly moving front of dieback and regeneration. Overcrowded mature stands are vulnerable to crown abrasion: abrasion affects trees 20 m ahead of the dieback front; suppressed trees 12 m ahead die before the front reaches them. At the stand margin, trees die from abrasion and salt wind induced dieback. The dieback zone lets sunlight enter the stand; light-demanding pine seedlings establish, but a gradient of increasing litter depth from the dieback front and summer dryness restrict successful seedling establishment to a narrow zone that moves parallel with the dieback front and 11-13 m ahead of it. Further seedlings establish for 4-10 years before the juveniles form a closed canopy; competing vegetation is partly suppressed by infrequent cattle browsing. Regenerating juvenile maritime pine (Pinus pinaster