Mitigating post-fire regeneration failure in boreal landscapes with reforestation and variable retention harvesting: At what cost?

Author:

Cyr Dominic1,Splawinski Tadeusz Bartek2,Pascual Puigdevall Jesus3,Valeria Osvaldo45,Leduc Alain6,Thiffault Nelson7,Bergeron Yves2,Gauthier Sylvie8

Affiliation:

1. Environment and Climate Change Canada, 6347, Science and Technology Branch, Gatineau, Quebec, Canada;

2. Université du Québec en Abitibi-Témiscamingue, 7001, Institut de recherche sur les forêts et Chaire en aménagement forestier durable, Rouyn-Noranda, Quebec, Canada;

3. Natural Resources Canada, 6314, Canadian Forest Service, Laurentian Forestry Center, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada;

4. Université du Québec en Abitibi-Témiscamingue, 7001, Institut de recherche sur les forêts et Chaire en aménagement forestier durable, Rouyn-Noranda, Quebec, Canada

5. Universidad Mayor, 28084, Hémera Centro de Observación de la Tierra, Escuela de Ingeniería Forestal, Facultad de Ciencias, Santiago, Chile;

6. Université du Québec à Montréal, 14845, Département des sciences biologiques, Montreal, Canada, H3C 3P8;

7. Canadian Forest Service, 6338, Canadian Wood Fiber Centre, Quebec, Quebec, Canada;

8. Natural Resources Canada, 6314, Canadian Forest Service, Laurentian Forestry Center, Quebec, Quebec, Canada;

Abstract

Successive disturbances such as fire can affect post-disturbance regeneration density, with documented adverse effects on subsequent stand productivity. We conducted a simulation study to assess the potential of reactive (reforestation) and proactive (variable retention harvesting) post-fire regeneration failure mitigation strategies in a 1.37-Mha fire-prone boreal landscape dominated by black spruce and jack pine. We quantified their respective capacity to maintain landscape productivity and post-fire resilience, as well as their associated financial returns under current and projected (RCP 8.5) fire regimes. While post-fire reforestation with jack pine revealed to be the most effective strategy to maintain potential production, associated costs quickly became prohibitive when applied over extensive areas. Proactive strategies such as an extensive use of variable retention harvesting, combined with replanting of fire-adapted jack pine only in easily accessible areas, appeared as a more promising approach. Despite this, our results suggest an inevitable erosion of forest productivity due to post-fire regeneration failure events, highlighting the importance to integrate fire a priori in strategic forest management planning as well as its effects on long-term regeneration dynamics.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Ecology,Forestry,Global and Planetary Change

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