4.7 Article

Effects of silvicultural selection treatments on spatial pattern and dynamics in a Pinus palustris Mill. woodland

Journal

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 505, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2021.119888

Keywords

Ecological forestry; Natural disturbance-based management; Recruitment; Mortality; Spatial patterns; Forest heterogeneity

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This study evaluated the effects of different harvesting methods on the ecological system of longleaf pine woodlands, showing that natural disturbance-based treatments can impact the spatial pattern of forest canopy and alter forest dynamics. Individual tree selection and group selection methods have different effects on regeneration and tree density.
Natural disturbance-based silviculture emphasizes harvest methods that emulate the timing and structural changes of natural disturbances. Longleaf pine woodlands are ecologically important ecosystems of the southeastern U.S. that support high biodiversity. Options for multi-aged silviculture include individual tree and group selection methods to promote regeneration-the latter method may be modified by retention of reserve trees. To explore the extent to which selection methods are congruent with natural disturbance regimes, we evaluated how treatments in mature second-growth longleaf pine woodlands affected overstory structure, pattern, and dynamics, and we made comparisons to an old-growth longleaf stand. In 2010, stands were harvested using individual tree selection, group selection, or group selection with reserves. We compared treatment effects on spatial pattern of residual trees, recruitment of trees into the 10 cm diameter class (hereafter recruitment), and tree mortality 8 years after harvest. Basal area and residual volume were similar among treatments, but the individual tree selection treatment had lower density and a unimodal rather than bimodal diameter distribution compared to other treatments. Group selection and group selection with reserves increased spatial aggregation, compared to individual tree selection which reduced aggregation. Recruitment was similar across treatments but usually occurred near existing trees in the group selection treatments and was further from existing trees in the individual tree selection treatment. Tree mortality primarily occurred as single trees rather than tree groups for all treatments. These results indicate that natural disturbance-based treatments vary in their effects on overstory spatial pattern and alter forest dynamics. In longleaf pine woodlands, the rationale for individual tree selection emphasizes maintaining a continuous input of needles as fine fuels for control of resprouting hardwoods with prescribed fire. This method, may simplify overstory spatial structure and alter forest dynamics after initial harvest. Maintenance of vertical and horizontal complexity is a central tenet of natural disturbance-based management, thus attention to spatial pattern must be given when individual tree selection methods are used. In longleaf pine woodlands, natural disturbance-based techniques such as group selection with reserves may better mimic spatial patterns seen in old-growth stands while preserving continuity of fine fuels.

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