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Growth determinants of timber species Triplochiton scleroxylon and implications for forest management in central Africa

Author

Listed:
  • Gauthier Ligot
  • Adeline Fayolle
  • Sylvie Gourlet-Fleury
  • Kasso Daïnou
  • Jean-Francois Gillet
  • Maaike De Ridder
  • Thomas Drouet
  • Peter Groenendijk
  • Jean-Louis Doucet

Abstract

The sustainability of the polycyclic logging system in tropical forests has been increasingly questioned for a variety of reasons, and particularly in central Africa as commercial species, mostly light-demanding long-lived pioneer species, usually fail to recover a stable number of large trees after exploitation. Several factors are known to affect tropical tree demographic processes, like tree growth, survival and recruitment. Tree growth has particularly been showed to depend on ecological conditions, tree genetics, and competition with surrounding vegetation, as well as tree size or ontogeny. Yet, due to the paucity of available data, the importance of such factors is unclear and usually ignored when estimating future timber yields. To fill this gap, we chose to evaluate the variability in growth of one African long-lived pioneer and commercially very important species: Triplochiton scleroxylon K. Schum, gathering a broad dataset composed of tree ring data recorded in one site in Cameroon and periodic field inventory data recorded in seven sites across central Africa. In total, we analyzed 13,225 records of annual tree diameter increments recorded over 920 trees from seven sites in Cameroon, Republic of the Congo and Central African Republic. We evaluated (i) to what extent the average growth of trees that reach harvestable dimensions differs from population average and (ii) to what extent past perturbations influence the growth of remaining trees. We found the diameter growth of T. scleroxylon to be remarkably variable and this study provided an unprecedented quantification of the magnitude of some key growth determinants. In unlogged forests, the diameter increment of T. scleroxylon ranged between 0.40 cm year−1 in Southern Cameroon and 0.83 cm year−1 in South-Eastern Cameroon. The diameter increment was weakly related to tree size but increased twofold from unlogged to logged forests. Perturbation caused by logging stimulates growth of T. scleroxylon for at least 10–15 years. Finally, harvestable timber stock of large-sized T. scleroxylon was found to be constituted by trees that grew in average twice faster than trees of the entire extant population. As more and more inventory data become available, quantifying these effects could be replicated for other timber species and in other sites, to improve the accuracy of future timber resource estimates and improve forest management guidelines.

Suggested Citation

  • Gauthier Ligot & Adeline Fayolle & Sylvie Gourlet-Fleury & Kasso Daïnou & Jean-Francois Gillet & Maaike De Ridder & Thomas Drouet & Peter Groenendijk & Jean-Louis Doucet, 2019. "Growth determinants of timber species Triplochiton scleroxylon and implications for forest management in central Africa," ULB Institutional Repository 2013/284878, ULB -- Universite Libre de Bruxelles.
  • Handle: RePEc:ulb:ulbeco:2013/284878
    Note: SCOPUS: ar.j
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    Cited by:

    1. Romaric Ndonda Makemba & Christian Moupela & Félicien Tosso & Yves Brostaux & Thomas Drouet & Richard Oslisly & Vincent Freycon & Jean-Louis Doucet, 2022. "New evidence on the role of past human activities and edaphic factors on the fine-scale distribution of an important timber species: Cylicodiscus gabunensis Harms," ULB Institutional Repository 2013/349574, ULB -- Universite Libre de Bruxelles.

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