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Old‐growth structural attributes associated with the last giant subtropical conifers in South America

Giant Araucaria trees in Brazilian Atlantic forests today are rare but remain critically important for structuring these ecosystems, providing unique and rare habitat elements that can serve as points of reference for their management. Old‐growth Araucaria trees, with their complex crowns and big tr...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Austral ecology 2022-09, Vol.47 (6), p.1271-1285
Main Authors: Scipioni, Marcelo Callegari, Higuchi, Pedro, Fockink, Guilherme Diego, Allen, Craig D.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Giant Araucaria trees in Brazilian Atlantic forests today are rare but remain critically important for structuring these ecosystems, providing unique and rare habitat elements that can serve as points of reference for their management. Old‐growth Araucaria trees, with their complex crowns and big trunk cavities, supply more important ecological services than smaller trees with simple crowns. Forest ecology managers lack information on the old‐growth structures of Brazilian Araucaria forest, their ecological importance and their potential societal values and uses. In this study, we investigated old‐growth attributes of Araucaria angustifolia and relate their wide structural variability to ecological management goals. In this study, we used currently available data on the last large old Araucaria trees, as well as our own new records, from large trees of 1.6–3.2 m diameter in the Araucaria forests in southern Brazil. In order to quantify the structural attributes of these remnant trees, their main trunks, any reiterated canopy trunks and trunk cavities were measured for diameters, heights and volumes. These old‐growth trees had an average height of 38.4 m, and total tree volumes ranged from 21.5 to 106.6 m3. The biggest reiterated trunk was 1.1 m in diameter and 17 m long, which is larger than most adult Araucaria trees. Number of cavities and number of reiterated trunks were all significantly related to the diameters of these large remnant Araucaria trees; both features are absent in Araucaria
ISSN:1442-9985
1442-9993
DOI:10.1111/aec.13212