ibclogo XVI International Botanical Congess


Abstract Number: 3589
Poster No. = 1337


QUANTITATIVE ASSESSMENT OF GAP CREATION BY A MAJOR ICE STORM


K. Arii, M.C. Hooper and M.J. Lechowicz McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada


In January 1998, a major ice storm hit parts of Quebec and Ontario in Canada, and the adjacent U.S. We surveyed the amount of gap opening due to the ice storm at one of the hardest hit locations, Mont St-Hilaire, Quebec, which is located near the northern limit of deciduous forest in eastern North America. We assessed the amount of opening by taking hemispheric photographs before and after the ice storm at 115 locations. The photographs were digitized to obtain gap fraction values, and pre- and post-values were then compared. There was a considerable spatial variation in increase of gap opening: the range of pre-ice storm gap fraction values was 8-22%, while the post-ice storm range was 12-47%. Gap opening in this old-growth forest was greater for locations that had 1) less open canopy prior to the ice storm, and 2) greater presence of Fagus grandifolia in the canopy.


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