4.7 Article

Impact of different storm severity levels and post-storm management on understory vegetation richness, diversity and composition 19-20 years after wind disturbance

Journal

FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 524, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2022.120506

Keywords

Windthrow; Herbaceous layer; Forest dynamics; Salvage logging; Vascular plants

Categories

Funding

  1. Estonian Research Council
  2. [PRG1586]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study found significant impacts of storm disturbance and post-storm management on understory vegetation. Salvage-logged plots showed the highest coverage and species richness of herbaceous plants, but no significant effect on diversity or evenness. Approximately two decades after the storm, understory communities differed significantly due to different management practices.
The herbaceous understory is a key component of forest biodiversity. Moreover, it holds the capability to alter the dynamics and composition of the overstory. Severe wind disturbance changes the conditions in a forest ecosystem radically, causing alteration of understory characteristics as well. In this paper we analyze impacts of different storm damage levels and post-storm management on understory vegetation richness, diversity and composition in mixed spruce-hardwood forest stands located in hemiboreal Estonia. We examined understory vegetation in moderately damaged (n = 4), heavily damaged (n = 4) and post-storm salvage-logged stands (n = 4) 19-20 years after storm disturbance. Mature mixed spruce-hardwood forests were included as a reference group (n = 4). Study plots were also assessed regarding canopy openness, richness of microhabitats and coverage of woody species. A total of 98 herbaceous and 2 dwarf shrub taxa were found on 208 vegetation quadrats (1 m2 square each). Total coverage of the herb layer and species richness were greatest at salvage-logged plots when compared to other treatments. However, we found no significant effect of treatment on diversity (Shannon's H') nor evenness (Pielou's index) of herbaceous species. Our results indicate that approximately-two decades after wind disturbance, the understory communities differ from each other as a response to different storm damage levels and post-storm management. Compared to control plots, salvage-logged plots demonstrated greatest contrast regarding species composition. Salvage-logged plots had greatest light levels, but lowest estimates for microsite richness and woody species coverage. Moderately damaged plots demonstrated greatest within-group variation regarding light conditions and species composition. Our findings suggest that salvage logging after severe wind disturbance might induce delayed succession toward a closed canopy due to intense understory competition and lack of opportunity-providing microhabitats for tree regeneration.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available