Effects of Low Levels of Dispersed Retention on the Growth and Survival of Young, Planted Douglas-Fir

被引:4
|
作者
Smith, Nicholas J. [1 ]
Beese, William J. [2 ]
机构
[1] Nick Smith Forest Consulting, Nanaimo, BC V9T 3Z2, Canada
[2] Vancouver Isl Univ, Nanaimo, BC V9R 5S5, Canada
关键词
sector sampling; dispersed retention; Douglas-fir; variable retention; stand growth; VARIABLE-RETENTION; TREE RETENTION; FORESTS; HARVESTS; SYSTEMS; STANDS; YIELD;
D O I
10.3390/f3020230
中图分类号
S7 [林业];
学科分类号
0829 ; 0907 ;
摘要
Three large-scale, experimental, dispersed residual tree sites established in coastal British Columbia, Canada were measured for planted Douglas-fir tree growth and survival five to six years after planting. The dispersed trees were predominantly large diameter (60 cm+) Douglas-fir left with a range of 0% to 30% of the original forest stand basal area (0 m(2) ha(-1) to 14 m(2) ha(-1)). Two sites had 0%, 5% and 15% retention, while one site had 0%, 5%, 10% and 30% retention. The trees were measured in sector plots established to randomly sample the range of microsites in each treatment. There was no detectable difference between height and basal diameter growth or mortality rates between the retention treatments over the measurement period, except for a reduction of basal diameter growth at the 30% retention level (p < 0.05). Thus a statistically significant impact on growth was demonstrated for the 30% retention compared to the 0% retention level. We expected intermediate growth rates between the 0% and the other lower retention levels but were unable to demonstrate this due to the low statistical power of the test (10 observations) and high site variability for these very young trees.
引用
收藏
页码:230 / 243
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Effects of small aggregates of mature tree retention on adjacent planted coastal Douglas-fir growth and survival
    Smith, N. J.
    Beese, W. J.
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2021, 480
  • [2] Douglas-fir planted forests
    Hermann, RK
    Lavender, DP
    NEW FORESTS, 1999, 17 (1-3) : 53 - 70
  • [3] Douglas-fir planted forests
    Richard K. Hermann
    Denis P. Lavender
    New Forests, 1999, 17 : 53 - 70
  • [4] SHADE FROM BRUSH INCREASES SURVIVAL OF PLANTED DOUGLAS-FIR
    COFFMAN, MS
    JOURNAL OF FORESTRY, 1975, 73 (11) : 726 - 728
  • [5] EARLY SURVIVAL AND GROWTH OF PLANTED DOUGLAS-FIR WITH RED ALDER IN 4 MIXED REGIMES
    MURRAY, MD
    MILLER, RE
    USDA FOREST SERVICE PACIFIC NORTHWEST RESEARCH STATION RESEARCH PAPER, 1986, (366): : 1 - 13
  • [6] Effects of stand density on the growth of young Douglas-fir trees
    Woodruff, DR
    Bond, BJ
    Ritchie, GA
    Scott, W
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH, 2002, 32 (03) : 420 - 427
  • [7] EVALUATING FERTILIZER AND OTHER MATERIALS TO SPEED GROWTH OF PLANTED DOUGLAS-FIR
    STRAND, RF
    AUSTIN, RC
    JOURNAL OF FORESTRY, 1966, 64 (11) : 739 - &
  • [8] The effects of gap size in a group selection silvicultural system on the growth response of young, planted Douglas-fir: a sector plot analysis
    de Montigny, L. E.
    Smith, N. J.
    FORESTRY, 2017, 90 (03): : 426 - 435
  • [9] Growth phenology of coast Douglas-fir seed sources planted in diverse environments
    Gould, Peter J.
    Harrington, Constance A.
    St Clair, J. Bradley
    TREE PHYSIOLOGY, 2012, 32 (12) : 1482 - 1496
  • [10] Physiology and Growth of Douglas-Fir and Redwood Seedlings Planted After Partial Harvesting
    Kerhoulas, Lucy
    Polda, Wade
    Kerhoulas, Nicholas
    Berrill, John-Pascal
    FRONTIERS IN FORESTS AND GLOBAL CHANGE, 2020, 3