Assessing the Extent and Severity of the Impact on Forest Soils of Two Different Fully Mechanized Timber Harvesting Operations

Author:

Lee Eunjai1ORCID,Kim Taehyung2ORCID,Mun Ho-Seong1,Oh Jae-Heun1,Han Sang-Kyun2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Forest Technology and Management Research Center, National Institute of Forest Science, Pocheon 11187, Republic of Korea

2. Division of Forest Sciences, College of Forest and Environmental Sciences, Kangwon National University, Chuncheon 24341, Republic of Korea

Abstract

Recently, the use of powerful and heavy vehicles for timber harvesting on flat or slightly sloping terrains has been widely expanded to provide safe working conditions and high productivity. However, soil disturbances during ground-based mechanized operations in South Korea are not fully investigated and difficult to avoid. Therefore, we compared the soil displacement and compaction (bulk density and hydraulic conductivity) between two different operations: cut-to-length (CTL) logging with a harvester and forwarder, and whole-tree (WTH) logging with a harvester and skidder. After clear-cutting, severe visual disturbances and rut depths were more prevalent in the forwarding trails than in the skidding trails. The CTL harvesting method created larger amounts of slash (6.9 kg/m2) along the trails than the WTH harvesting did (1.8 kg/m2). We found a significant difference in the compaction between the reference and the track and a negative correlation between the slash quantity values and the percentage increase in compaction. Our results showed that using skidding extraction can cause more severe impacts than forwarding extraction. Thus, these results may be helpful in understanding the influence of ground-based CTL and WTH harvesting operations and achieving best practices to minimize the environmental impacts on soil.

Funder

Korea Forest Service

Publisher

MDPI AG

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