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LIMITED SALVAGE LOGGING EFFECTS ON FOREST REGENERATION AFTER MODERATE‐SEVERITY WINDTHROW
Author(s) -
Peterson Chris J.,
Leach Andrea D.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
ecological applications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.864
H-Index - 213
eISSN - 1939-5582
pISSN - 1051-0761
DOI - 10.1890/07-0603.1
Subject(s) - windthrow , salvage logging , disturbance (geology) , logging , regeneration (biology) , ecology , species richness , cumulative effects , forest management , environmental science , forest restoration , biology , forest ecology , ecosystem , paleontology , microbiology and biotechnology
Recent conceptual advances address forest response to multiple disturbances within a brief time period, providing an ideal framework for examining the consequences of natural disturbances followed by anthropogenic management activities. The combination of two or more disturbances in a short period may produce “ecological surprises,” and models predict a threshold of cumulative disturbance severity above which forest composition will be drastically altered and regeneration may be impaired. Salvage logging (the harvesting of timber after natural disturbances; also called “salvaging” or “sanitary logging”) is common, but there have been no tests of the manner in which salvaging after natural wind disturbance affects woody plant regeneration. Here we present findings from three years after a moderate‐severity wind disturbance in west‐central Tennessee, USA. We compare two unsalvaged sites and two sites that had intermediate‐intensity salvaging. Our approach demonstrates the calculation of cumulative severity measures, which combine natural windthrow severity and anthropogenic tree cutting and removal, on a plot‐by‐plot basis. Seedling/sapling density and species richness were not influenced by cumulative disturbance severity, but species diversity showed a marginal increase with increasing cumulative severity. The amount of compositional change (from pre‐disturbance trees to post‐disturbance seedlings/saplings) increased significantly with cumulative severity of disturbance but showed no evidence of thresholds within the severity range examined. Overall, few deleterious changes were evident in these sites. Moderate‐severity natural disturbances followed by moderate‐intensity salvaging may have little detrimental effect on forest regeneration and diversity in these systems; the ecological surprises and threshold compositional change are more likely after combinations of natural and anthropogenic disturbances that have a much greater cumulative severity.

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