Effect of skidder disturbance on commercial tree regeneration in logging gaps in a Bolivian tropical forest

被引:66
|
作者
Fredericksen, TS
Pariona, W
机构
[1] Ctr Int Forestry Res, Santa Cruz, Bolivia
[2] Univ Florida, Forest Management Trust, Gainesville, FL USA
[3] Proyecto BOLFOR, Santa Cruz, Bolivia
关键词
Bolivia; competing vegetation; regeneration; silviculture; soil scarification; tropical forest management; Schizolobium amazonicum; Cariniana ianeirensis; Hura crepitans; Pseudolmedia laevis; Spondias mombin;
D O I
10.1016/S0378-1127(01)00767-8
中图分类号
S7 [林业];
学科分类号
0829 ; 0907 ;
摘要
The impact of skidder disturbance on recruitment of commercial tree regeneration within logging gaps was studied using paired scarified and unscarified plots as well as whole-gap surveys of scarified and unscarified areas in a Bolivian tropical humid forest. More than a year following gap creation, variability in the density of regeneration among logging gaps was high, but commercial tree regeneration density tended to be greater in scarified areas than in unscarified areas within gaps for most species. Height growth was also significantly greater for trees in scarified compared to unscarified areas, despite a near doubling of soil compaction in scarified areas. The principal species benefiting from soil disturbance by skidders was Schizolobium amazonicum, which had nearly 10x higher density and 2x greater height growth in scarified compared to unscarified areas. Although initially devoid of vegetation and litter cover, scarified areas had vegetation and litter cover levels similar to unscarified areas after 7 months. Vegetation cover on scarified areas tended to be dominated by early successional tree species while unscarified areas were dominated by forbs and grasses. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:223 / 230
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Effects of selective logging on tropical forest tree growth
    Figueira, Adelaine Michela e S.
    Miller, Scott D.
    de Sousa, Cleilim Albert D.
    Menton, Mary C.
    Maia, Augusto R.
    da Rocha, Humberto R.
    Goulden, Michael L.
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-BIOGEOSCIENCES, 2008, 113
  • [22] Area disturbed and residual stand damage following logging in a Bolivian tropical forest
    Jackson, SM
    Fredericksen, TS
    Malcolm, JR
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2002, 166 (1-3) : 271 - 283
  • [23] Effects of future crop tree flagging and skid trail planning on conventional diameter-limit logging in a Bolivian tropical forest
    Krueger, W
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2004, 188 (1-3) : 381 - 393
  • [24] Effects of future crop tree flagging and skid trail planning on conventional diameter-limit logging in a Bolivian tropical forest
    Krueger, Werner
    Forest Ecology and Management, 188 (1-3): : 381 - 393
  • [25] Seed arrival in tropical forest tree fall gaps
    Puerta-Pinero, Carolina
    Muller-Landau, Helene C.
    Calderon, Osvaldo
    Joseph Wright, S.
    ECOLOGY, 2013, 94 (07) : 1552 - 1562
  • [26] The impact of lianas on tree regeneration in tropical forest canopy gaps: evidence for an alternative pathway of gap-phase regeneration
    Schnitzer, SA
    Dalling, JW
    Carson, WP
    JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2000, 88 (04) : 655 - 666
  • [27] Gaps contribute tree diversity to a tropical floodplain forest
    Terborgh, John
    Nunez, Nohemi Huanca
    Loayza, Patricia Alvarez
    Cornejo Valverde, Fernando
    ECOLOGY, 2017, 98 (11) : 2895 - 2903
  • [28] Tree Height Reduction After Selective Logging in a Tropical Forest
    Rutishauser, Ervan
    Herault, Bruno
    Petronelli, Pascal
    Sist, Plinio
    BIOTROPICA, 2016, 48 (03) : 285 - 289
  • [29] Logging damage and injured tree mortality in tropical forest management
    van der Werf, Edwin
    Indrajaya, Yonky
    Mohren, Frits
    van Ierland, Ekko C.
    NATURAL RESOURCE MODELING, 2019, 32 (04)
  • [30] Soil disturbance following four wheel rubber skidder logging on the steep trail in the north mountainous forest of Iran
    Najafi, Akbar
    Solgi, Ahmad
    Sadeghi, Seyed Hamidreza
    SOIL & TILLAGE RESEARCH, 2009, 103 (01): : 165 - 169