Mixedwood management positively affects forest health during insect infestations in eastern North America1

Author:

MacLean David A.1,Clark Kenneth L.2

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Forestry and Environmental Management, University of New Brunswick, P.O. Box 4400, Fredericton, NB E3B 5A3, Canada.

2. USDA Forest Service, Northern Research Station, Silas Little Experimental Forest, 501 Four Mile Road, New Lisbon, NJ 08064, USA.

Abstract

Mixedwood stands are composed of hardwoods and softwoods, with neither comprising greater than 75%–80% of basal area or aboveground biomass. By conferring associational resistance and greater resilience to forests when stressed or disturbed, the more diverse composition of mixedwood stands contributes to forest health. We analyzed three examples where mixedwood stands are more resistant to insect infestations in eastern North America. In balsam fir (Abies balsamea L. Mill.) and spruce (Picea spp.) forests, susceptibility and vulnerability to spruce budworm infestations is reduced with increasing hardwood density. In mid-Atlantic oak-dominated forests, oak mortality following gypsy moth infestations was much greater in oak-dominated forests than in oak–pine mixedwoods, while pine mortality during southern pine beetle infestations was greater in pine-dominated forests than in oak–pine mixedwoods. Overall, mixedwood stands have greater resistance to infestations of defoliators and bark beetles and recover more rapidly from disturbances, reducing economic losses associated with tree mortality and mitigating short-term impacts to ecosystem functioning resulting from insect damage, especially carbon sequestration. Finally, we discuss challenges and opportunities for mixedwood management to minimize insect damage. Management strategies that incorporate mixedwood stands may provide better continuity in supply of forest products and ecosystem services in the face of projected increases in insect infestations associated with changing climate.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Ecology,Forestry,Global and Planetary Change

Reference108 articles.

1. Ecosystem carbon dioxide fluxes after disturbance in forests of North America

2. Old pests in new places: Effects of stand structure and forest type on susceptibility to a bark beetle on the edge of its native range

3. Associational Resistance and Associational Susceptibility: Having Right or Wrong Neighbors

4. Blum, B.M., and MacLean, D.A. 1984. Silviculture, forest management, and the spruce budworm. In Managing the spruce budworm in eastern North America. Edited by D.M. Schmitt, D.G. Grimble, and J.L. Searcy. USDA Forest Service, Washington, D.C., Agricultural Handbook 620. pp. 83–102.

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