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Managing early succession for biodiversity and long-term productivity of conifer forests in southwestern Oregon

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Managing early succession for biodiversity and long-term productivity of conifer forests in southwestern Oregon
Names Bormann, Bernard T. (creator)
Darbyshire, Robyn L. (creator)
Homann, Peter S. (creator)
Morrissette, Brett A. (creator)
Little, Susan N. (creator)
Date Issued 2015-03-15 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Elsevier and can be found at: http://www.journals.elsevier.com/forest-ecology-and-management.
Abstract Early-successional stages have been truncated and altered in many western U.S. forest landscapes by
planting conifers, controlling competing vegetation, suppressing fire, and focusing on maintaining late-seral
species and undisturbed riparian zones. Declining area of early-successional stages may be reducing
resilience and sustainability on landscapes that experience elevated disturbance related to future climate
changes. In this study, two post-harvest early-successional treatments were compared to each other and
to two mature-forest treatments using 20 years of evidence from replicated 7-ha experimental units in a
southwestern Oregon forest dominated by Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii Mirb. Franco). One early-successional
treatment (Douglas-fir plantation) planted Douglas-fir and was followed by a brushing to
reduce hardwood competition to move quickly to the conifer stem-exclusion stage; the other (Early-seral
plantation) favored natural sprouting and regeneration of hardwood shrubs and trees and planted scattered
knobcone pines (Pinus attenuata Lemmon) and Douglas-fir. Plant diversity in the Early-seral plantation
was 56% (year 2) and 26% (year 6) higher than in the Douglas-fir plantation. Both early-successional
treatments far exceeded plant diversity in Unaltered and Thinned mature stands. Fifteen
years of growth of shrubs and hardwood trees in the Early-seral plantation was remarkable, resulting
in total aboveground biomass increment (18 Mg ha⁻¹ yr⁻¹) double that of the Douglas-fir plantations.
Important process effects related to primary productivity were noted: losses of soil organic matter from
the B horizon in young Douglas-fir, and, after wildfire, increases in N₂-fixing plant cover in Early-seral
plantation. The burl-sprouting and deep rooting of many hardwoods also created opportunities for nutrient
retention and release from primary minerals as well as deep-profile water supply. Recognizing the
importance of intentionally managing for shrubs and hardwood trees is particularly relevant at this site,
because stand reconstruction and historical records indicate these species, along with knobcone pine,
dominated the site for 40 years before the current mature Douglas-fir forest started gaining dominance.
In contrast, the prolific natural regeneration of Douglas-fir after recent harvest and wildfire suggests that
what comes back ‘‘naturally’’ in modern times will not allow this history to be repeated.
Genre Article
Topic Early succession
Identifier Bormann, B. T., Darbyshire, R. L., Homann, P. S., Morrissette, B. A., & Little, S. N. (2015). Managing early succession for biodiversity and long-term productivity of conifer forests in southwestern Oregon. Forest Ecology and Management, 340, 114-125. doi:10.1016/j.foreco.2014.12.016

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