The Destructive Static Tree-Pulling Test Provides Reliable Estimates of the Soil-Root Plate of Eastern Baltic Silver Birch ( Betula pendula Roth.).
Oskars KrišānsRoberts MatisonsJānis VugulsAndris SeipulisValters SamariksRenāte SalenieceĀris JansonsPublished in: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Under the intensifying cyclonic activity, the wind resistance of European forests could be increased through science-based adaptive forest management, which requires the quantification of tree stability. In this regard, the dimensions of the soil-root plate can be directly attributed to tree wind resistance; however, naturally uprooted trees might be a biased source of information for the evaluation of adaptive measures due to uncontrolled conditions and uneven sample size. Therefore, the dimensions of the soil-root plates of naturally windthrown silver birch trees ( Betula pendula Roth.) are compared to artificially overturned trees under a static tree-pulling test in Eastern Baltic region. The application of static tree-pulling overestimated the dimensions of the soil-root plates of silver birch compared to windthrown trees. The overestimation of soil-root plate dimensions was consistent spatially and across soil types, which is likely a regional adaptation to local wind climate. This implies that static tree-pulling is representative of the assessment of the effects of adaptive management on tree stability via the dimensions of the soil-root plates.