Long-Term Ecosystem Nutrient Pool Status for Aspen Forest Harvest Simulations on Glacial Till and Sandy Outwash Soils

Author:

Richard Robert P.ORCID,Kane Evan S.ORCID,Bronson Dustin R.,Kolka Randall K.

Abstract

Sandy outwash and glacial till soils compose large amounts of public forestland due to historically poor agricultural yields. The outwash soils have low fertility, poor nutrient retention and are restricted from whole-tree harvesting (WTH) in some states, whereas the glacial till has medium nutrient retention and fertility, and is unrestricted from WTH. To assess the long-term sustainability of harvesting, a nutrient budget was constructed from field measurements, the National Cooperative Soil Survey (NCSS) database, and literature values for stem-only harvesting (SOH) and WTH at a 45-year rotation length and 11 rotations were simulated. The budgets showed that SOH and WTH recovery years, or the time necessary for the inputs to match outputs through leaching and one harvest, exceeded common rotation lengths for both soil types under all weathering scenarios, and the average WTH reduced the total available rotations by one harvest. The large variation in soil nutrient pools and harvest removals complicated the ability to identify the difference between SOH and WTH early in the model, but differences became apparent with sequential harvests. The recovery years were 2–20 times the 45-year rotation length under all weathering rates. Taken together, models in this study bridge the gap between short- and long-term studies and bring into question the sustainability of WTH and SOH practices on nutrient-poor soils.

Funder

U.S. Forest Service, Northern Research Station

Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Forestry

Reference56 articles.

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2. Biomass, nutrient distribution and litterfall in Populus, Pinus and Picea stands on two different soils in Minnesota

3. “Whole Tree” Harvesting: Nutrient Budget Evaluation;Boyle;J. For.,1973

4. Determining and Evaluating Nutrient Losses Following Whole-tree Harvesting of Aspen

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