The effects of a typhoon on Japanese warm temperate rainforest

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  • effects of a typhoon on Japanese warm t

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<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>A powerful typhoon (Typhoon No. 13) affected stands of primary warm temperate rainforest in Yakushima, southern Japan, in 1993. Censuses in three sites 1–5 months after the typhoon showed low levels of mortality resulting from the typhoon (0.4–3.0% of stems). Stems killed by the typhoon were generally larger than surviving stems. Among surviving stems there were generally low levels of damage (e.g. 0.5–1.3% of surviving stems lost crowns) and not all damage was widespread (e.g. defoliation was apparent only in one of three sites). The sizes of uprooted stems, stems that lost crowns and relatively undamaged stems were not different. Different species appeared to be damaged in different ways at different sites. Damage was most evident in higher altitude seaward sites but gap formation was more frequent in lower altitude sites near valley floors. After the typhoon the resultant gap area occupied 9.4% of one site and 8.6% of another, which is greater than that before the typhoon. Fresh sprouts were found on 17.35% of 2161 stems after the typhoon, including many apparently undamaged stems as well as those that were damaged. Species which sprouted most frequently were those that regenerate by seed least frequently in these forests; these species may maintain their relative abundance in part by sprouting. Most tree species in these forests may be relatively resistant to typhoons and there may be more opportunities for their regeneration following gap formation caused by the typhoon.</jats:p>

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