4.7 Article

Fast recovery of suppressed Norway spruce trees after selection harvesting on a drained peatland forest site

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FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
卷 530, 期 -, 页码 -

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DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2022.120759

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Continuous cover forestry (CCF); Carbon isotope composition(?13C); Tree stem diameter growth; Harvest release effect; Norway spruce; Selection harvest

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Continuous cover forestry (CCF) is considered as an eco-friendly choice for drained peatlands. However, CCF management faces challenges in tree growth, especially in suppressed trees after selection harvesting. This study aimed to quantify the delayed stem diameter growth response in suppressed Norway spruce trees compared to dominant ones after selection harvesting, and to examine the immediate effect of harvesting on carbon assimilation. The results showed that the suppressed trees experienced a delayed growth response, while carbon uptake increased immediately after selection harvesting.
Continuous cover forestry (CCF) has been promoted as an environmentally sustainable option for drained peatlands. The CCF management has been challenged due to potentially lower tree growth compared to tradi-tional even-aged management, especially with suppressed trees that are released during a selection harvesting under CCF management. Our objective was to quantify the time lag of stem diameter growth response of suppressed Norway spruce trees (Picea abies Karst.) after a selection harvesting compared to that of dominant trees. We also tested if the carbon assimilation of the trees increased immediately after selection harvesting. We used radial increment cores from suppressed Norway spruce trees to estimate the impact of selection harvesting on the diameter growth and intrinsic water use efficiency (iWUE). We measured carbon isotope composition (delta 13C) of wood, to quantify how the reduced competition between trees altered iWUE and its components, the photosynthetic rate (A) and sto-matal conductance (g). The study was conducted in the Lettosuo experimental site on fertile forestry drained peatland area in southern Finland. Approximately 70 % of the initial stand area (18.5 ha) was harvested according to CCF principles by applying selection harvesting, and the rest of the area was divided to intact control area and to clear-cut area. In the study site, by selection harvest, trees were removed from multiple age classes, but especially mature trees individually or in a small groups were taken away to maintain uneven-aged structure of the forest. All the target trees grew in the similar competitive position before selection harvesting. Our results show that there was a delay with the diameter growth of the suppressed trees to selection har-vesting, whereas the most significant growth-enhancing effect occurred three-four years after selection har-vesting. In contrast to the delay in the increment, the photosynthetic rate relative to stomatal conductance increased immediately after selection harvesting, as shown by the instant 2.5 parts per thousand increase in delta 13C to a post-harvest level. Our results show that carbon uptake increased immediately for suppressed Norway spruce trees after selection harvesting, but the harvest did not induce a clear increase in stem diameter growth during the first years after the harvest.

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