Morphological characteristics of tree crowns of Cunninghamia lanceolata var. Luotian

Yezhou Xu , Chaoqun Du , Guowei Huang , Zhenfang Li , Xiangyang Xu , Jingjin Zheng , Chu Wu

Journal of Forestry Research ›› 2019, Vol. 31 ›› Issue (3) : 837 -856.

PDF
Journal of Forestry Research ›› 2019, Vol. 31 ›› Issue (3) : 837 -856. DOI: 10.1007/s11676-019-00901-4
Original Paper

Morphological characteristics of tree crowns of Cunninghamia lanceolata var. Luotian

Author information +
History +
PDF

Abstract

The structural characteristics of the tree crowns of Cunninghamia lanceolata var. Luotian (herein, Luotian), a natural variety of C. lanceolata (Chinese-fir, herein Lanceolata) in China, were analyzed using trunk and branch measurements and biomass determinations. Samples from two typical cultivated varietal populations were collected, including twenty-six 15–23-year-old trees of Luotian from a plantation, and nine 16–23-year-old trees of Lanceolata. Our results show that Luotian and Lanceolata samples differed significantly in crown structure, morphological indices, and biomass: (1) the oldest live branches on Luotian trees were 5–6 years old and 8–11 years old on Lanceolata. The ages of the live branches were not affected by the ages of the Luotian trees, while live branch ages increased with ages of Lanceolata trees; (2) the maximum branching order of Luotian was level two. Compared to Lanceolata, the average number of first-order lateral branches (i.e., branches emerging from the trunk) and the number of first-order lateral branch whorls per sample tree were 12.9% and 32.2% lower, respectively, in Luotian. However, the average number of branches within a single whorl was 21.8% greater in Luotian; the average number of branch whorls at crown height was 51.1% greater. Thus, the Luotian variety has thicker branches; (3) the average lateral branch angles in Luotian and Lanceolata sample trees were 105.2° and 61.4°, respectively. The branch angles in 53.0% of lateral branches on Luotian ranged from 105° to 135°, but 30° to 90° in 96% of the lateral branches on Lanceolata. Within the same crown layer, the average branch angle was 1.6–2.2 times greater in Luotian, and the angle was directly proportional to crown thickness; (4) the average base diameter and branch length on Luotian were 1.3 cm and 75.8 cm, respectively, and 1.6 cm and 112.2 cm for Lanceolata. For individual trees, branch growth differed significantly (p < 0.01) between Luotian and Lanceolata. However, the lateral branches grew at a similar rate among Luotian trees of different ages; (5) the average height to the lowest live branch on Luotian was 128.3% greater than on Lanceolata, resulting in a significant difference (p < 0.01) in crown size. Compared to the crowns on Lanceolata, the Luotian crowns were 45.3% higher and 41.1% wider, and the surface area, volume, and growth of the crown were 27.0%, 11.4%, and 2.4 times greater than for Lanceolata, respectively; and, (6) the biomass of Luotian and Lanceolata sample trees also differed significantly. The mean crown, branch, and leaf biomass for Luotian was 40.0%, 25.2%, and 54.1% of those for Lanceolata, respectively. However, the leaf biomass in each layer of the Luotian crown was higher than that of Lanceolata, and leaf biomass increased with crown thickness.

Keywords

Cunninghamia lanceolata var. Luotian / Cunninghamia lanceolata / Tree crown / Morphological characteristics / Variation

Cite this article

Download citation ▾
Yezhou Xu, Chaoqun Du, Guowei Huang, Zhenfang Li, Xiangyang Xu, Jingjin Zheng, Chu Wu. Morphological characteristics of tree crowns of Cunninghamia lanceolata var. Luotian. Journal of Forestry Research, 2019, 31(3): 837-856 DOI:10.1007/s11676-019-00901-4

登录浏览全文

4963

注册一个新账户 忘记密码

References

[1]

Baldwin J, Peterson KD. Predicting the crown shape of loblolly pine trees. Can J For Res, 1997, 27: 102-107.

[2]

Beaulieu E, Schneider R, Berninger F, Ung C-H, Swift DE. Modeling jack pine branch characteristics in eastern Canada. For Ecol Manag, 2011, 262: 1748-1757.

[3]

Bechtold WA. Largest-crown-width prediction models for 53 species in the western United States. Western J Appl For, 2004, 19(4): 145-251.

[4]

Bongers F, Sterck FJ. Newbery DM, Brown N, Prins HHT. Architecture and development of rainforest trees: responses to light variation. Dynamics of tropical communities, 1998, Oxford: Blackwell Scientific 125 162

[5]

Brown PL, Doley D, Keenan RJ. Stem and crown dimensions as predictors of thinning responses in a crowded tropical rainforest plantation of Flindersia brayleyana F. Muell. For Ecol Manag, 2004, 196: 379-392.

[6]

Brünig EF. Tree forms in relation to environment conditions: an ecological viewpoint. Tree Physiol Yield Improv, 1976, 22: 139-156.

[7]

Cannell GR. Hollis CA, Squillace AE. Improving per hectare forest productivity. Proceedings of the 5th North American forest biology workshop, March 13–15, 1978, Gainesville: University of Florida 120 148

[8]

Claveau Y, Messier C, Comeau PG, Coates KD. Growth and crown morphological responses of boreal conifer seedlings and saplings with contrasting shade tolerance to a gradient of light and height. Can J For Res, 2002, 32: 458-468.

[9]

Claveau Y, Messier C, Comeau PG. Interacting influence of light and size on aboveground biomass distribution in sub-boreal conifer saplings with contrasting shade tolerance. Tree Physiol, 2005, 25: 373-384.

[10]

Colin F, Houllier F. Branchiness of Norway spruce in north-eastern France: modelling vertical trends in maximum nodal branch size. Ann Sci For, 1991, 48(6): 679-693.

[11]

Daniels RF. Methods for modeling individual tree growth and stand development in seeded loblolly pine stands, 1979, School of Forestry and Wildlife Resources: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2 19

[12]

Deleuze C, Colin F, Ribeyrolles L. Modelling crown shape of Picea abies: spacing effects. Can J For Res, 1996, 26: 1957-1966.

[13]

Díaz-Varela RA, de la Rosa R, León L, Zarco-Tejada PJ. High-resolution airborne UAV imagery to assess olive tree crown parameters using 3D photo reconstruction: application in breeding trials. Remote Sens, 2015, 7: 4213-4232.

[14]

Donald CM, Hamblin J. The biological yield and harvest index of cereals as agronomic and plant breeding criteria. Adv Agron, 1976, 28: 361-405.

[15]

Dong LB, Liu ZG, Li FR, Jiang LC. Primary branch size of Pinus koraiensis plantation: a prediction based on linear effect mixed effect model. Chin J Appl Ecol, 2013, 24: 2447-2456. (in Chinese with English abstract)

[16]

Du J, Fan ZX, Ye DY, Lu CT. The predicting models of crown volume and LAI for Phoebe zhennan plantation. J Zhejiang For Sci Technol, 2010, 30(4): 37-41. (in Chinese with English abstract)

[17]

Esau K (1982) Anatomy of seed plants, 2nd edn (Lee CL, trans.). Shanghai Scientific and Technical Publishers, Shanghai, pp 241–242 (in Chinese)

[18]

Fang F, Im J, Lee J, Kim K. An improved tree crown delineation method based on live crown ratios from airborne LiDAR data. Giosci Remote Sens, 2016, 53(3): 402-419.

[19]

Fu LY, Sun H. Individual crown diameter prediction for Cunninghamia lanceolata forests based on mixed effects models. Sci Silvae Sin, 2013, 49(8): 65-74. (in Chinese with English abstract)

[20]

Fu L, Sun H, Sharma RP, Lei Y, Zhang H, Tang S. Nonlinear mixed-effects crown width models for individual trees of Chinese-fir (Cunninghamia lanceolata) in south-central China. For Ecol Manag, 2013, 302: 210-220.

[21]

Gielen B, Calfapietra A, Claus A. Crown architecture of Populus spp. is differentially modified by free-air CO2 enrichment (POPFACE). New Phytol, 2002, 153: 91-99.

[22]

Halle F, Olderman RAA (1970) Essai sur L’architecture et la Dynamique de Croissance des Arbres Tropicaux Masson, Paris

[23]

Huang GW, Hu XY, Zhang YD, Du CQ, Xu XY, Xu YZ. Study on selection of superior of Cunninghamia lanceolata cv. Luotian. Hubei For Sci Technol, 2013, 1: 1-4. (in Chinese with English abstract)

[24]

Hubei Institute of Forestry, Huanggang Institute of Forestry, Luotian County Institute of Forestry. A preliminary report on a fine type of Chinese-fir. Hubei For Sci Technol, 1977, 1: 15-19.

[25]

Ishii H, Clement J, Shaw D. Branch growth and crown form in old coastal Douglas-fir. For Ecol Manag, 2000, 131(1/3): 81-91.

[26]

Jiang SL (2012) Research on canopy shape model of main coniferous tree species in Heilongjiang province. Doctoral dissertation. Northeast Forestry University, Harbin, pp 10–200

[27]

Jiang ZL, Ye JZ. Preliminary study on crown morphology and structure of Cunninghamia lanceolata. J Nanjing For Ind Acad, 1980, 4(1): 46-52. (Chinese with English abstract)

[28]

Jiang LC, Zhang R, Li FR. Modeling branch length and branch angle with linear mixed effects for Dahurian larch. Sci Silvae Sin, 2012, 48(5): 53-60. (in Chinese with English abstract)

[29]

Kawamura K, Takeda H. Light environment and crown architecture of two temperate Vaccinium species: inherent growth rules versus degree of plasticity in light response. Can J Bot, 2002, 80: 1063-1077.

[30]

King DA. Relationship between crown architecture and branch orientation in rain forest trees. Ann Bot, 1998, 82: 1-7.

[31]

Kramer PJ, Kozlowski TT. Physiology of woody plants, 1979, London: Academic Press 443 444

[32]

Lei XD, Zhang ZL, Chen XG. Crown-width prediction models for several tree species including Larix olgensis in northeastern China. J Beijing For Univ, 2007, 28(6): 75-79. (in Chinese with English abstract)

[33]

Li FR. Modeling crown profile of Larix algensis trees. Sci Silvae Sin, 2004, 40(5): 16-24. (in Chinese with English abstract)

[34]

Li Y, Kröber W, Bruelheide H, Härdtle W, von Oheimb G. Crown and leaf traits as predictors of subtropical tree sapling growth rates. J Plant Ecol, 2017, 10: 136-145.

[35]

Liao CX, Li FR. The predicting models of crown surface area and crown volume for Mongolian pine plantation. Bull Bot Res, 2007, 27(4): 478-483.

[36]

Lin YR (2013) Study on the canopy structure of young trees of Chinese-fir. Dissertation, Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, Fuzhou (in Chinese with English abstract)

[37]

Lintunen A (2013) Crown architecture and its role in species interactions in mixed boreal forests. Dissertation. University of Helsinki. https://doi.org/10.14214/df.165

[38]

Liu ZG, Guo CL. The prediction of canopy shape of Larix gmelinii plantation. J Northeast For Univ, 1996, 24(6): 14-20. (in Chinese with English abstract)

[39]

Lu KN, Zhang HQ, Liu M. Study on plant architecture of Cunninghamia lanceolata based on measured data. For Res, 2011, 24(1): 132-136. (in Chinese with English abstract)

[40]

Lu KN, Zhang HQ, Liu M Design and implementation of individual tree growth visualization system of Cunninghamia lanceolata. For Res, 2012, 25(2): 207-211. (in Chinese with English abstract)

[41]

Maguire DA, Johnston SR, Cahill J. Predicting branch diameters on second growth Douglas-fir from tree-level descriptors. Can J For Res, 1999, 29: 1829-1840.

[42]

Mäkinen H, Colin F. Predicting branch angle and branch diameter of Scots pine from usual tree measurements and stand structural information. Can J For Res, 1998, 28(11): 1686-1696.

[43]

Martin TA, Johnsen KH, White TL. Ideotype development in southern pines: rationale and strategies for overcoming scale-related obstacles. For Sci, 2001, 47: 21-28.

[44]

Miranda-Fuentes A, Llorens J, Gamarra-Diezma JL, Gil-Ribes JA, Gil E. Towards an optimized method of olive tree crown volume measurement. Sensors, 2015, 15: 3671-3687.

[45]

Mongus D, Žalik B. An efficient approach to 3D single tree-crown delineation in LiDAR data. ISPRS J Photogramm Remote Sens, 2015, 108: 219-233.

[46]

Musio M, von Wilpert K, Augustin NH. Crown condition as a function of soil, site and tree characteristics. Eur J For Res, 2007, 126: 91-100.

[47]

Niinemets Ü. A review of light interception in plant stands from leaf to canopy in different plant functional types and in species with varying shade tolerance. Ecol Res, 2010, 25: 693-714.

[48]

Noriyuki O, Hiroshi T. Branch architecture, light interception and crown development in saplings of a plagiotropically branching tropical tree, Polyalthia jenkinsii (Annonaceae). Ann Bot, 2003, 91: 55-63.

[49]

Oliver CD, Larson BC. Forest stand dynamics, 1990, New York: McGraw-Hill Pub Co. 213 258

[50]

Olivier M-D, Robert S, Fournier RA. Response of sugar maple (Acer saccharum Marsh.) tree crown structure to competition in pure versus mixed stands. For Ecol Manag, 2016, 374: 20-32.

[51]

Osada N, Tateno R, Hyodo F, Takeda H. Changes in crown architecture with tree height in two deciduous tree species: developmental constraints or plastic response to the competition for light?. For Ecol Manag, 2004, 188: 337-347.

[52]

Osada N, Tateno R, Mori A, Takeda H. Changes in crown development patterns and current-year shoot structure with light environment and tree height in Fagus crenata (Fagaceae). Am J Bot, 2004, 91: 1981-1989.

[53]

Panagiotidis D, Abdollahnejad Z, Surový P, Chiteculo V. Determining tree height and crown diameter from high-resolution UAV imagery. Int J Remote Sens, 2017, 38: 2392-2410.

[54]

Paris C, Kelbe D, van Aardt J, Bruzzone L. A novel automatic method for the fusion of ALS and TLS LiDAR data for robust assessment of tree crown structure. IEEE Trans Geosci Remote Sens, 2017, 55: 3679-3693.

[55]

Pei BH, Zheng SK. Effects of forest density on light energy distribution and canopy structure of I—69 poplar. For Res, 1990, 3(3): 201-206. (in Chinese with English abstract)

[56]

Pretzsch H. Canopy space filling and tree crown morphology in mixed-species stands compared with monocultures. For Ecol Manag, 2014, 327: 251-264.

[57]

Pretzsch H, Biber P, Uhl E, Dahlhausen J, Rötzer T, Caldentey J, Koike T, van Con T, Chavanne A, Seifert T, du Toit B, Farnden C, Pauleit S. Crown size and growing space requirement of common tree species in urban centres, parks, and forests. Urban For Urban Green, 2015, 14: 466-479.

[58]

Roloff A. Longhurst JWS. Crown structure and tree vitality. Acid deposition, 1991, Berlin: Springer 193 213

[59]

Ruan ZC. Genetic improvement of Cunninghamia lanceolata, 2003, Guangzhou: Guangdong Science and Technology Press 25 27 (in Chinese with English abstract)

[60]

Russell MB, Weiskittel AR. Maximum and largest crown width equations for 15 tree species in Maine. North J Appl For, 2011, 28(2): 84-91.

[61]

Sharma RP, Vacek Z, Vacek S. Individual tree crown width models for Norway spruce and European beech in Czech Republic. For Ecol Manag, 2016, 366: 208-220.

[62]

Sharma RP, Bílek L, Vacek Z, Vacek S. Modelling crown width–diameter relationship for Scots pine in the central Europe. Trees, 2017, 31: 1875-1889.

[63]

Sharma RP, Vacek Z, Vacek S, Podrázský V, Jansa V. Modelling individual tree depth into crown base of Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) and European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.). PLoS ONE, 2017 12 10 e0186394

[64]

Strîmbu VF, Strîmbu BM. A graph-based segmentation algorithm for tree crown cxtraction using airborne LiDAR data. ISPRS J Photogramm Remote Sens, 2015, 104: 30-43.

[65]

Suzuki M. Size structure of current-year shoots in mature crowns. Ann Bot, 2003, 92: 339-347.

[66]

Tahvanainen T, Forss E. Individual tree models for the crown biomass distribution of Scots pine, Norway spruce and birch in Finland. For Ecol Manag, 2008, 255: 455-467.

[67]

Wang ZJ, Li FY, Yan DF Study on crown width, crown length, and growth of different Populus tomentosa clones. J Henan Inst Sci Technol, 2009, 37(4): 14-18. (in Chinese with English abstract)

[68]

Wang XM, Lu J, Li FR. Crown profile simulation of major broad-leaf species of natural secondary forest in north of China. J Nanjing For Univ, 2012, 36(4): 7-12. (in Chinese with English abstract)

[69]

Wu ZL. Cunninghamia lanceolata, 1984, Beijing: China Forestry Publishing House 202 203 (in Chinese with English abstract)

[70]

Wu MQ. A study on crown structure of Cunninghamia lanceolata plantation in Fujian, 2014, Beijing: Beijing Forestry University 5 30 (in Chinese with English abstract)

[71]

Xiao R, Li FR, Liu ZG. Branching structure analysis of Mongolian plantation. Bull Bot Res, 2006, 26(4): 490-496.

[72]

Xiong LD. A preliminary study on the natural branch drooping and shedding characteristics of Cunninghamia lanceolata (Lamb.) Hk. cv. Luotian. Hubei For Sci Technol, 1984, 2: 8-12. (in Chinese with English abstract)

[73]

Xu CL, Zhang JL, Chen DL. Study on the effect of the crown-fullness ratio on the growth of tree and the form of the tree-trunk. J Agric Univ Hebei, 2005, 28(3): 45-48. (in Chinese with English abstract)

[74]

Xu H, Sun Y, Wang X, Wang J, Fu Y. Linear mixed-fffects models to describe individual tree crown width for China-fir in Fujian province, southeast China. PLoS ONE, 2015 10 4 e0122257

[75]

Ye WH, Guan WB. A review and prospect of the studies on tree architecture: a brief comment on 3 statuses of tree architecture. World For Res, 1995, 8(4): 22-27. (in Chinese with English abstract)

[76]

Yoshimura K. Irradiance and developmental stages of crown architecture affect shoot production in Rhododendron reticulatum. Am J Plant Sci, 2013, 4: 69-76.

[77]

Zeide BP. A method for estimation of fractal dimension of tree crowns. For Sci, 1991, 37(5): 1253-1265.

[78]

Zhang SY, Xu H. A preliminary study on the golden segmentation in the canopy. J Southwest For Univ, 2001, 21(1): 14-19. (in Chinese with English abstract)

[79]

Zhen Z, Quackenbush LJ, Zhang L. Trends in automatic individual tree crown detection and delineation—evolution of LiDAR data. Remote Sens, 2016, 8: 333.

[80]

Zheng WJ. Chinese trees, 1983, Beijing: China Science and Technology Press 307 310 (in Chinese)

[81]

Zhu CQ, Lei JP, Liu XD, Cheng GZ, Li BD. Crown structure of poplar trees in intensive and extensive management plantation. Sci Silvae Sin, 2000, 36(2): 60-68. (in Chinese with English abstract)

[82]

Zimmerman MH, Brown CL. Tree-structure and function, 1971, Berlin: Springer 203 238

AI Summary AI Mindmap
PDF

226

Accesses

0

Citation

Detail

Sections
Recommended

AI思维导图

/