Cascades of causes and effects of forest decline

RM Klein, TD Perkins - Ambio, 1987 - JSTOR
RM Klein, TD Perkins
Ambio, 1987JSTOR
Realization that forest decline (Waldsterben) has become an ecological crisis throughout the
developed world has resulted in massive research efforts to determine the causes of
declines. It is now recognized that no single causal factor is responsible, although there are
a variety of anthropogenic causal factor complexes interacting with natural events and
processes that, together, induce stresses in forests that culminate in declines of individual
plants and of ecosystems. It is the thesis of this article that forest declines involve all biotic …
Realization that forest decline (Waldsterben) has become an ecological crisis throughout the developed world has resulted in massive research efforts to determine the causes of declines. It is now recognized that no single causal factor is responsible, although there are a variety of anthropogenic causal factor complexes interacting with natural events and processes that, together, induce stresses in forests that culminate in declines of individual plants and of ecosystems. It is the thesis of this article that forest declines involve all biotic and abiotic facets and parameters of forested ecosystems and that the declines are themselves new causal factor complexes that continue to affect the stability of forested ecosystems independently of the initial causal factor complexes. Lacking direct field or laboratory studies on these cascades of causes and effects, this article attempts to utilize the growing body of information on plant physiological ecology to provide a heuristic framework for evaluating longterm forest decline.
JSTOR
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