Recovery of soil bulk density, porosity and rutting from ground skidding over a 20-year period after timber harvesting in Iran
Ground-based skidding can have detrimental effects on soil properties trough soil profile disturbance and compaction that can persist for decades. We investigated the recovery of physical properties of disturbed brown soils on four abandoned downhill skid trails in a deciduous mountain forest in nor...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Silva fennica (Helsinki, Finland : 1967) Finland : 1967), 2012, Vol.46 (4), p.521-538 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Ground-based skidding can have detrimental effects on soil properties trough soil profile disturbance and compaction that can persist for decades. We investigated the recovery of physical properties of disturbed brown soils on four abandoned downhill skid trails in a deciduous mountain forest in northern Iran. The most recent skidding operations had taken place 1â5Â yrs, 6â10 yrs, 11â15 yrs, and 16â20 yrs ago, providing a 20-year chronosequence with four 5-year recovery periods. For each recovery period, mean values for soil bulk density (BD), total porosity (TP), macroporosity (MP), soil moisture content (SM), and rut depth (RD) were assessed for three levels of traffic intensity (Primary (PS), Secondary (SS) and Tertiary (TS) skid trails) and two levels of slope gradients (Gentle (G) and Steep (S)) and compared to those in undisturbed (control) areas. Over the 20-year recovery period, PS trails on gentle slopes exhibited mean values that were 35â42% (BD), 3â7% (SM), and 13â19 cm (RD) greater and 18â24% (TP) and 19â28% (MP) lower compared to undisturbed areas; on steep PS trails, values were 40â46% (BD), 2â13% (SM), and 13â21 cm (RD) greater and 23â27% (TP) and 28â35% (MP) lower, respectively. While RD and SM recovered, 20 years was not long enough for the other physical soil properties, particularly on steep slopes. To minimize soil disturbance, skidding should be confined to areas with gentle slopes and alternative harvesting methods such as cable yarding should be used where slope gradients exceed 20%. |
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ISSN: | 2242-4075 0037-5330 2242-4075 |
DOI: | 10.14214/sf.908 |