Maintenance cost, toppling risk and size of trees in a self-thinning stand

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Wind routinely topples trees during storms, and the likelihood that a tree is toppled depends critically on its allometry. Yet none of the existing theories to explain tree allometry consider wind drag on tree canopies. Since leaf area index in crowded, self-thinning stands is independent of stand density, the drag force per unit land can also be assumed to be independent of stand density, with only canopy height influencing the total toppling moment. Tree stem dimensions and the self-thinning biomass can then be computed by further assuming that the risk of toppling over and stem maintenance per unit land area are independent of stand density, and that stem maintenance cost is a linear function of stem surface area and sapwood volume. These assumptions provide a novel way to understand tree allometry and lead to a self-thinning line relating tree biomass and stand density with a power between -3/2 and -2/3 depending on the ratio of maintenance of sapwood and stem surface.

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Larjavaara, Markku. 2010. "<a href="https://repository.si.edu/handle/10088/9847">Maintenance cost, toppling risk and size of trees in a self-thinning stand</a>." <em>Journal of theoretical biology</em>, 265, (1) 63–67. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtbi.2010.04.021">https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtbi.2010.04.021</a>.

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