Twenty-five years post-treatment conifer responses to silviculture on a Kalmia-dominated site in eastern Canada

Author:

Thiffault Nelson1,Titus Brian D.2,English Basil3

Affiliation:

1. Direction de la recherche forestière, Min. des Forêts, de la Faune et des Parcs du Québec, Québec G1P 3W8, and Centre d’Étude de la Forêt (CEF)

2. Natural Resources Canada, Pacific Forestry Centre, 506 West Burnside Rd., Victoria, British Columbia V8Z 1M5

3. Silviculture Section, Forest Service of Newfoundland and Labrador, P.O. Box 2006, Corner Brook, Newfoundland A2H 6J8

Abstract

Research has demonstrated the potential of soil scarification, fertilization, and herbicide application to improve conifer seedling establishment and early growth. However, tree responses to and interactions among silvicultural treatments vary, making it difficult to predict mid- and long-term impacts of silviculture on stand productivity. We thus evaluated the 25-year effects of scarification and herbicide–fertilization combinations on black spruce (Picea mariana), jack pine (Pinus banksiana) and tamarack (Larix laricina) planted on a Kalmia angustifolia-dominated site. Our results show that the effects of scarification and herbicide–fertilization combinations diverged among species. Black spruce was the most responsive species to scarification for height and diameter at breast height. The combination of herbicide and fertilization treatments still had significantly positive effects on the long-term height and diameter growth of all species. Silvicultural treatments resulted in significant reductions in rotation length (based on height) when compared to height in nontreated-plots, depending on the species; reductions in years to attain a given height were greater for black spruce than for the other species. Our results illustrate the need to take species autecology into account when predicting productivity gains associated with early silviculture, and to provide managers with specific guidelines for the reforestation of ericaceous-dominated sites in Canadian boreal ecosystems.

Publisher

Canadian Institute of Forestry

Subject

Forestry

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