“…Once a gap is created, the course for the surrounding forests is set for the coming years, as new gaps are more likely to emerge next to existing gaps, and as gaps keep growing over multiple years. This pattern of spatial dependence was found also in other studies in temperate (Blackburn et al, 2014;Senf, Campbell, et al, 2017), tropical (Gorgens et al, 2023) and boreal forests (Hytteborn & Verwijst, 2014;Vepakomma et al, 2012). Potential processes contributing to the contagious nature of canopy gaps are edge effects (Hunter et al, 2015;Pöpperl & Seidl, 2021), as edge trees are more susceptible to drought and wind (Buras et al, 2018;Seidl et al, 2014); but also dispersal mechanisms, such as the flight of bark beetles, which can contribute to spatially clustered canopy openings (Kautz et al, 2011;Seidl et al, 2016;Senf, Campbell, et al, 2017).…”