Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-2019

Abstract

This study addresses a situation in which a forest manager has been using a whole-stand model that seems to predict well for their stands and now wants to derive an individual-tree model from it to form an integrated system that can perform well at both stand and tree levels. A simple method was developed to derive tree survival models from three existing stand-level survival models. The derived tree survival models were based on the difference between the diameter of a given tree and the diameter at which tree and stand survival probabilities are equal. For stand survival prediction, each stand model performed less adequately than its derived tree model, and one of the derived tree survival models was the best overall. For tree survival prediction, the same derived tree model also performed best overall. Even though only three stand-level survival models were considered in this study, the method presented here should be applicable to any stand survival model. When no tree survival data were available, tree survival models derived from stand survival models ranked lowest in terms of performance but produced acceptable evaluation statistics for predicting tree-level survival.

Publication Source (Journal or Book title)

Canadian Journal of Forest Research

First Page

1598

Last Page

1603

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