10.1371/journal.pone.0196712.g005
Brad Oberle
Brad
Oberle
Kiona Ogle
Kiona
Ogle
Amy E. Zanne
Amy E.
Zanne
Christopher W. Woodall
Christopher
W. Woodall
Snags in the upper Midwest have a higher residual probability of falling that snags in the southeasten United States.
Public Library of Science
2018
forest C cycling
wood decay
forest C model
wood decay controls snag fall
snag-dependent wildlife habitat
snag fall
wood decay resistance
2018-05-09 17:33:45
Figure
https://plos.figshare.com/articles/figure/Snags_in_the_upper_Midwest_have_a_higher_residual_probability_of_falling_that_snags_in_the_southeasten_United_States_/6240752
<p>The surface is a bilinear interpolation over values estimated at the centers of 151 square (1.7° x 1.7°) grid cells. The bar at the right indicates the color scale denoting probability of snag persistence, with green colors representing slower than expected rates of snag fall after controlling for other drivers (predictor variables) that vary spatially, including tree species composition, stand density, physiographic class, and temperature.</p>