GAPPARD: A computationally efficient method of approximating gap-scale disturbance in vegetation models

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Abstract

Models of vegetation dynamics that are designed for application at spatial scales larger than individual forest gaps suffer from several limitations. Typically, either a population average approximation is used that results in unrealistic tree allometry and forest stand structure, or models have a high computational demand because they need to simulate both a series of age-based cohorts and a number of replicate patches to account for stochastic gap-scale disturbances. The detail required by the latter method increases the number of calculations by two to three orders of magnitude compared to the less realistic population average approach. In an effort to increase the efficiency of dynamic veg. © Author(s) 2013.

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Scherstjanoi, M., Kaplan, J. O., Thürig, E., & Lischke, H. (2013). GAPPARD: A computationally efficient method of approximating gap-scale disturbance in vegetation models. Geoscientific Model Development, 6(5), 1517–1542. https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-6-1517-2013

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