Attributes and indicators of old-growth and successional Douglas-fir forests on Vancouver Island
The Douglas-fir forests of coastal British Columbia are within the most heavily modified forest ecosystem types in coastal BC and local land managers are developing new forestry practices to retain elements of old growth within the managed forest area. To determine how successful these practices are...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Environmental reviews 2003, Vol.11 (S1), p.S187-S204 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The Douglas-fir forests of coastal British Columbia are within the
most heavily modified forest ecosystem types in coastal BC and
local land managers are developing new forestry practices to
retain elements of old growth within the managed forest area. To
determine how successful these practices are requires the
selection and monitoring of appropriate attributes and knowledge
on how they change with stand development. In this paper we
summarize previously published results from an extensive data set
on four Douglas-fir dominated sites located on eastern Vancouver
Island. Data were collected as part of the Coastal Forest
Chronosequences project which was addressing questions on (1) how
does conversion to managed forests impact species and forest
structural diversity and (2) how does this diversity recover in
older second-growth stands. Each site contained four stands, a
postharvest chronosequence: regeneration (R, 510 years),
immature (I, 2545 years), and maturing (M, 7595 years)
stands, and an old growth (O, >240 years) control stand. Over 20
attributes are summarized including structural attributes, and at
three sites, detailed biodiversity and process attributes. All
old-growth plots exceeded the minimum age criteria and some but
not all of the minimum structural attribute criteria for
old-growth Douglas-fir forests in the US Pacific Northwest,
reflecting regional or site type differences. Most structural
attributes showed their greatest change within the first 100
years, although older stands (M and O) still differed based on
tree and snag sizes and tree mass or basal area. Most species
abundance and richness attributes and process attributes clearly
differentiated R from the forested stages but were of less value
for differentiating among older (M and O) stands. Arboreal lichen
abundance and species richness; the abundance of cryptogams,
achlorophyllus plants, litter collembola, and specific species of
fungi and carabids; litter fall and gap fraction were the
exception, these attributes clearly differentiating M from O
stands. In postharvest stands, the overall pattern of change with
succession for most attributes, as inferred from the
chronosequence, was confirmed to be very different from a
previously published conceptual model for post-fire succession.
Compared to the post-fire model, the greatest changes in the
postharvest stands occurred early in stand development, associated
with canopy closure. Although stand structural attributes can
clearly |
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ISSN: | 1208-6053 1181-8700 1208-6053 |
DOI: | 10.1139/a03-007 |