New Zealand Journal of Botany abstracts
Population dynamics of the emergent conifer
Agathis australis (D. Don) Lindl. (kauri) in New Zealand
II. Seedling population sizes and gap-phase regeneration
JOHN OGDEN
GLENDA M. WARDLE
MOINUDDIN AHMED
Department of Botany, University of Auckland
Private Bag, Auckland, New Zealand
AbstractThe view that kauri {Agathis aus-
tralis) is a successional species which does not
regenerate in mature forest is entrenched in the New
Zealand literature. However, seedling and sapling
populations ranging from c. 200 to >2000 stems
ha"1 were recorded in 25 mature kauri stands
throughout the species' range in the North Island.
Higher densities were recorded in gap-phase and
successional communities. Gaps created by the fall
of mature kauri trees at Trounson Kauri Park aver-
aged 0.04 ha, and a few contained abundant kauri
seedling and sapling populations. Denser seedling
aggregates were sometimes associated with rotting
stumps or logs on the forest floor. Trays placed in
gaps showed kauri germination and survivorship
rates greater than those placed beneath adjacent
canopies.
Our data support a "cohort regeneration model"
in which dense regeneration occurs in successional
communities following large-scale disturbance. This
leads to self-thinning "ricker" stands in which
seedling recruitment is rare, producing a localised
"regeneration gap". Continued mortality, increas-
ing as the initial survivors begin to senesce, creates
a higher frequency of canopy gaps, allowing a
second less synchronous wave of recruitment to
occur. However, many gaps may be lost to hard-
wood species so that succeeding cohorts are less
dense. Despite a low efficiency of gap capture, the
great longevity of kauri (^ 600 years) implies that
the species will survive on any site for 1500 to 2000
years, long enough for large scale stochastic dis-
turbance by landslip, storm, or fire to reinitiate the
process.
KeywordsAgathis australis; cohort regenera-
tion; gap-phase regeneration; half-life; kauri; seed-
ling populations; seedling survivorship; Trounson
Kauri Park
Received 2 April 1986; accepted 12 September 1986
New Zealand Journal of Botany, 1987, Vol. 25: 231-242
0028-825X/87/2502-0231 $2.50/0 © Crown copyright 1987
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (1053K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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