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Created by Philip Neumann
Winter Ecology, Spring ‘08
THE IMPACT OF LODGEPOLE
PINE SIZE ON HEAT-FORMED
TREE WELLS
Mountain Research Station – University of Colorado, Boulder
Objective


To further understand the relationship
between coniferous trees and their
surrounding snowpack.
To link the importance of tree well
formation to the rest of the winter
ecological community.
Two Methods of Tree Well Formation

Snow deflection:
 Overhanging
branches deflect snowfall
 Creates pocket of low snow accumulation
 Large affected areas

Melting and Sublimation:
 Trees
absorb solar radiation
 Radiation is reemitted into snowpack
 Small affected areas
Snow Deflection vs. Melting and
Sublimation
Factors That Create Heat-Formed
Tree Wells


Incoming solar radiation
% solar radiation absorbed by tree
 Not

due to tree-produced heat
Air Temperature
 Sublimation

or Melting
Metamorphosis over time
 Wind
loading/scouring
 Additional snow
Importance

Trees are a major source of heterogeneity in the
snowpack. Tree wells exists at the tree-snow
interface.
 Large

geographic spread
Local modification of snowpack creates a
functionally different environment.
 Reduced
soil insulation by snowpack
 Increased melting and sublimation

Current lack of study on heat-formed tree wells
Question
What is the relationship between
trees and their snowmelt patterns?
Hypothesis
An increase in diameter of tree wells will be directly
proportional to the increase in diameter of trees in
a 1:1 ratio.
Why?
 Increased
tree diameter increases lowest possible value
 Similar heat absorption per unit area from tree to tree
 More tree surface area for absorption for larger trees
 More snow surface area to heat for larger trees
Similar effective warming range
Hypothesis
Methods

Measure tree well diameter for trees in a 35x50ft
plot.
 Plot:
Sheltered, relatively even stand of planted
Lodepole Pine. 35ft downhill from a road clearing,
slope of 13*, aspect of 170*
 Measurements: Diameter of affected snowpack taken in
two directions and averaged for tree well #’s.
Diameter of tree measured at snow surface.
Transect
Results: Tree vs. Tree Well Diameter
Results: Tree Diameter vs. Adjusted Tree
Well Area (Total Tree Well-Tree Area)
Results

Data fits well to a linear equation:
 y=2.0591x
+ 1.1076
 R-Squared of .9477
 P-value of 4.763E-33


Data exhibits positive slope of ~2cm tree well/1cm
tree diameter.
Exponential growth in effected snowpack data.
Discussion

The hypothesis is rejected.
 Strong,
linear fit of the data implies a direct connection
between increasing tree size and tree well size.
 Slope of ~2 implies that an given increase in tree
diameter effects tree well diameter twice as much.
WHY?
Volume = Height x π(½ Diameter)²
Discussion

A change in diameter will affect circumference, and
therefore surface area, by the same multiplier.
 Explains
capture of solar radiation
 Accounted for in hypothesis

A change in diameter will affect tree volume by its
square
 Additional,
unaccounted for, factor
 Increase in mass and thermal capacity
 Increased daily duration of heat transfer
Discussion

Larger trees… more effected snow volume
 Creates
diurnal “thermal islands” in the snow
 Dictates snowmelt & sublimation rates
 May
impact available soil moisture in cold season
 May present easier internivean access
 May present area to avoid for some… predator access
 Increased
temperature variation may be important—
good or bad—for some species
 Most
likely creates habitat quality gradients
 May present low-competition niche for some
Discussion
Future studies:
 Heat
flux in tree wells
 Heat flux inside trees
 Photosynthesis rates in large/small trees
 Determined
 Microbial
by diurnal tree stem diameter variation
activity below tree wells
 Burrow entrance/exit
Conclusion

Increases in tree diameter result in exponential
increases in effected snowpack.
 Caused

by the thermal capacity of trees
Heat at tree-snow interface creates microclimate
 Increased
daytime temperatures
 Decreased soil insulation

Future studies could focus on:
 Soil
heat flux below tree wells
 Heat flux in trees
 The effects of heat flux on tree health
and surrounding plant and animal communities
Works Cited
Hardy, JP, Albert, MR. Snow-induced thermal
variations around a single conifer tree. Hydrological
Processes, 9: 1995.
Halfpenny, JC, , Ozanne, RD. 1989. Winter: An
Ecological Handbook. Boulder (CO): Johnson
Publishing Company. p.168-172
Sevanto, S, Suni, T, Pumpanen, J, et al. Wintertime
photosynthesis and water uptake in a boreal forest.
Tree Physiology, 26: 2006