Foresty
researcher studies how trees adapt to wind
By Kim Colavito Markesich
Mark Rudnicki, assistant professor in the Department
of Natural Resources Management and Engineering, is
conducting research at the Southern Maine Massabesic
Experimental Forest on the nature of wind flow and
tree sway.
“I started looking at tree sway during my dissertation
research,” Rudnicki says. “And of course,
as is typical of most of these investigations, more
questions came up than were answered.”
Wind affects the growth and structure of plants. So
why are trees in a forest taller and more slender than
a single tree out in the open? Trees in the open experience
much larger wind forces than trees in a forest, as
most of their wind energy is dissipated by colliding
with neighbors. Trees exposed to more wind force are
thicker and shorter, which gives them the strength
required to hold up under such wind forces.
To measure wind sway, a sensor is attached on the main
trunk of each tree in a group of 35 trees. Rudnicki
relies on PhD student Vincent Webb to attach the sensors
near the top of each tree.
“He’s an experienced
arborist,” says Rudnicki.
The sensor measures tilt at a rate of ten times per
second, whenever wind causes the tree to sway. From
recording these measurements Rudnicki is able to calculate
the distance of tree sway simultaneously for all trees
in the group.
“We want to understand how trees collide with
each other,” Rudnicki explains. “By knowing
the sway dynamics, we begin to understand the intensity
of collisions when the wind blows.” This load
force, or drag on the tree crown, produces energy — energy
that must be absorbed by the base of the tree trunk
or dissipated through collision with other trees.
“That collision effect is a group-level phenomenon,” Rudnicki
says. “We want to learn how they interact and
adapt to wind load as a group to enhance stability
and how it controls the structure of the entire canopy.”
Rudnicki hypothesizes that how the trees move or sway
is not random but is part of a finely tuned organization.
Understanding this process could increase productivity
and reduce losses for commercial forestry. Where loggers
once clear cut forests, professional foresters now
employ strategies of selective tree cutting. However,
foresters know that remaining trees can be uprooted
or broken by wind (“windthrow”) after thinning,
and they would benefit from silvicultural prescriptions
that are adapted to minimize these windthrow losses.
When a few trees are cut out of a canopy, the entire
organization of that canopy changes. “If we understand
how the trees hold each other up, we might be able
to adjust our thinning process to work with this phenomenon,” Rudnicki
notes.
Another aspect of tree physiology concerns acid rain,
a particular issue for the New England states. Calcium
is an essential nutrient for trees and plays an integral
part in how a tree reacts to stressors such as frost,
heat, insect attack, and wind force. “We know
that acid rain neutralizes the calcium in soil,” Rudnicki
says. “This calcium depletion could be causing
our forests to slowly decline.”
Rudnicki is also interested in the relationship between
global warming climate changes and the subsequent increase
in wind events. Webb is designing a theoretical model
for tree sway and collision that could one day help
anticipate how climate changes and severe weather patterns
affect our forests.
“The work that Mark is doing is bringing to light
some exciting implications for forest sustainability
in a changing climate,” says Professor Emeritus
David Miller. “Wind storms are the major periodic
disaster that destroys existing tall forests in the
Northeast. One of the predicted climate changes is
increased storm intensity and more frequent storms.
Dr. Rudnicki’s work
is likely to lead to forest management practices which
can mitigate this effect.”
According to Miller, Rudnicki’s research will
present numerous real-world applications such as air
pollution control, carbon cycling, movement of airborne
bio-terrorist materials, and the growth and development
of canopy biota and wildlife.
“Rudnicki is one of only two or three researchers
in the world who are expert in the physics and measurement
of forest canopy motion,” Miller points out. “His
work is five to ten years ahead of the mainstream research
community.”
“Mark is working at the forefront of his field
by supplementing his tree movement measurements with
state-of-the-art micrometeorological measurements to
gain a complete understanding of winds both in and
above the forest,” says April Hiscox, postdoctoral
fellow in the Department of Natural Resources Management
and Engineering. “His interdisciplinary approach
to his research is an innovative way to advance the
science in forestry, ecology, and
meteorology.”
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