Existing spatial patterns of a forest are in part a product of its disturbance history. Using laser altimetry and field measures
of canopy top height to represent pre- and post-hurricane canopy topography, respectively, we measured changes in spatial
patterns of stand structure of a United States southern mixed coniferous-deciduous for est. Autocorrelative and fractal properties
were measured in this opportunistic study to quantify changes in canopy architecture along twelve, 190-250 m transects that
were subjected to moderate to high levels of wind disturbance. Prior to the hurricane, canopy heights were autocorrelated
at scales <40 m with an average fractal dimension of 1.71. After the disturbance, autocorrelation disappeared; the average
fractal dimension rose to 1.94. This shift towards spatial randomness illustrates part of the cyclical nature of ecosystem
development. It shows how a catastrophic collapse of biomass accumulation corresponds to a decrease in ecosystem organization
across a landscape.
Autocorrelation - Canopy topography - Disturbance - Fractal dimension - Hurricane - Laser altimetry - Remote sensing - Duke Forest - Forest landscape - Ecosystem organisation
This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.