Logging response alters trajectories of reorganization after loss of a foundation tree species

Author:

Barker Plotkin Audrey12ORCID,Orwig David A.1ORCID,MacLean Meghan Graham2ORCID,Ellison Aaron M.134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Harvard Forest Harvard University Petersham Massachusetts USA

2. Department of Environmental Conservation University of Massachusetts Amherst Massachusetts USA

3. Sound Solutions for Sustainable Science Boston Massachusetts USA

4. Harvard University Herbaria Harvard University Cambridge Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractForest insect outbreaks cause large changes in ecosystem structure, composition, and function. Humans often respond to insect outbreaks by conducting salvage logging, which can amplify the immediate effects, but it is unclear whether logging will result in lasting differences in forest structure and dynamics when compared with forests affected only by insect outbreaks. We used 15 years of data from an experimental removal of Tsuga canadensis (L.) Carr. (Eastern hemlock), a foundation tree species within eastern North American forests, and contrasted the rate, magnitude, and persistence of response trajectories between girdling (emulating mortality from insect outbreak) and timber harvest treatments. Girdling and logging were equally likely to lead to large changes in forest structure and dynamics, but logging resulted in faster rates of change. Understory light increases and community composition changes were larger and more rapid in the logged plots. Tree seedling and understory vegetation abundance increased more in the girdled plots; this likely occurred because seedlings grew rapidly into the sapling‐ and tree‐size classes after logging and quickly shaded out plants on the forest floor. Downed deadwood pools increased more after logging but standing deadwood pools increased dramatically after girdling. Understory light levels remained elevated for a longer time after girdling. Perhaps because the window of opportunity for understory species to establish was longer in the girdled plots, total species richness increased more in the girdled than logged plots. Despite the potential for greater diversity in the girdled plots, Betula lenta L. (black birch) was the most abundant tree species recruited into the sapling‐ and tree‐size classes in both the girdled and logged plots and is poised to dominate the new forest canopy. The largest difference between the girdling and logging treatments—deadwood structure and quantity—will persist and continue to bolster aboveground carbon storage and structural and habitat diversity in the girdled plots. Human responses to insect outbreaks hasten forest reorganization and remove structural resources that may further alter forest response to ongoing climate stress and future disturbances.

Funder

Division of Environmental Biology

Division of Biological Infrastructure

Publisher

Wiley

Reference68 articles.

1. Predicting the impact of hemlock woolly adelgid on carbon dynamics of eastern United States forests

2. Barker Plotkin A. A.2023.“Litterfall in Hemlock Removal Experiment at Harvard Forest since 2005 ver 19.”Environmental Data Initiative.https://doi.org/10.6073/pasta/673669500a2330d787ed98019a4da4af.

3. Barker Plotkin A. A. A. M.Ellison D. A.Orwig andM. G.MacLean.2024.“Synthesis of Hemlock Removal Experiment at Harvard Forest 2003‐2019 ver 1.”Environmental Data Initiative.https://doi.org/10.6073/pasta/e962581f8bd1d8f2628abf5f0a54e7c8.

4. Survivors, not invaders, control forest development following simulated hurricane

5. Microtopography and ecology of pit-mound structures in second-growth versus old-growth forests

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