Development of regional height to diameter equations for 15 tree species in the North American Acadian Region
2012
Rijal, Baburam | Weiskittel, Aaron R. | Kershaw, John A.
Equations that relate individual tree diameter at breast height (d.b.h.) and total height (HT) are important because HT is not widely measured and is often needed to estimate stem volume or predict HT growth. The primary goal of the study was to construct a regional HT to d.b.h. equation (H-D) for 15 tree species of the Acadian Region. Specific objectives were to (1) evaluate performance of the Forest Vegetation Simulator Northeast Variant (FVS-NE) equations, (2) explore suitable model forms and compare the influence of various tree- and stand-level variables on HT prediction and (3) develop species-specific equations that are unbiased across a broad geographic region. Data were available from an extensive database covering Maine, three provinces of the Canadian Maritimes and southern Québec. The study showed that the widely used FVS-NE model had significant prediction biases for all species in the region. The best model form among those evaluated was the von Bertalanffy–Richards (vB-R; commonly referred to as the Chapman–Richards), with added covariates that included crown competition factor, basal area in trees larger than subject tree and a climate-derived site index.
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