Tree regeneration in an Abiesfaxoniana forest after bamboo dieback, Wang Lang Natural Reserve, China
Bamboos in the understory of Abiesfaxoniana Render & Wilson forests in China impede tree regeneration when they are mature. However, bamboos die back every few decades and may synchronize tree seedling establishment on the forest floor. Tree seedling regeneration patterns were studied beneath 20 canopy gaps and adjacent closed forest in an old-growth A. faxoniana forest where understory bamboos died back in 1976. Most seedlings of A. faxoniana, Acercaudatum Wallich, and Betulautilis D. Don in gaps established 2 years after dieback of the bamboo Fargesiadenudata Yi. Acercaudatum seedlings in gaps were taller than those of B. utilis or A. faxoniana, and B. utilis seedlings were fourfold more abundant in gaps than the other species. All species (except A. caudatum) had greater seedling densities in gaps, but there were no density differences among species beneath closed forest. Bamboo cover and maximum culm height were greater under gaps than forest, and it takes bamboo seedlings about 18 years to grow to full height. Bamboo seems to reduce the success of an advanced regeneration strategy and promotes synchronized seedling establishment in gaps after it dies back.