4.4 Article

Comparing long-term projected outcomes of adaptive silvicultural approaches aimed at climate change in red pine forests of northern Minnesota, USA

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH
Volume 51, Issue 12, Pages 1875-1887

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/cjfr-2021-0097

Keywords

silviculture; forest modeling; adaptive management; climate change; forest adaptation

Categories

Funding

  1. Forest Resources Department
  2. Cloquet Forestry Center at the University of Minnesota
  3. USDA Forest Service, Northern Research Station

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The ASCC project tested ecosystem-specific adaptation approaches, with the first trial conducted in 2014 in northern Minnesota, USA. The transition treatment showed relative success, reducing mortality, increasing structural diversity, and achieving a species composition adapted to future climates.
The Adaptive Silviculture for Climate Change (ASCC) project was developed to test ecosystem-specific adaptation approaches. The first ASCC trial was installed on the Cutfoot Experimental Forest (CEF) in northern Minnesota, USA, in 2014. Three adaptation treatments (resistance, resilience, and transition), along with a no action control, were tested and compared using Forest Vegetation Simulator to determine their relative success. We compared mean annual increment (MAI) and mortality and determined how well each treatment achieved its species composition and stand structure targets. MAI was highest in the no action (3.77 +/- 0.43 m(3).ha(-1).year(-1)) and lowest in the transition (1.72 +/- 0.16 m(3).ha(-1).year(-1)). However, MAI for the transition treatment continually increased over time, which extended culmination age. The no action control had the highest mortality with 38.76 (+/- 1.32) trees.ha(-1) per 10-year timestep, while the resistance and transition treatments had the lowest levels at 9.36 (+/- 0.49) and 4.19 (+/- 0.35) trees.ha(-1), respectively. Our findings highlight the relative success of the transition, which had lower mortality, greater structural diversity, and a future-climate-adapted species composition. The results from this study provide important context for adaptive silviculture aimed at climate change and offers an example of potential outcomes of these forest adaptation options.

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