Moving towards multi-layered, mixed-species forests in riparian buffers will enhance their long-term function in boreal landscapes

•Forest management has promoted conifers and altered stream and riparian function.•We suggest delineating and managing riparian buffers throughout the rotation cycle.•Make multi-layered, mixed-species forests with more deciduous species the goal.•Riparian zones will provide functions throughout the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Forest ecology and management 2021-08, Vol.493, p.119254, Article 119254
Hauptverfasser: Maher Hasselquist, Eliza, Kuglerová, Lenka, Sjögren, Jörgen, Hjältén, Joakim, Ring, Eva, Sponseller, Ryan A., Andersson, Elisabet, Lundström, Johanna, Mancheva, Irina, Nordin, Annika, Laudon, Hjalmar
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Forest management has promoted conifers and altered stream and riparian function.•We suggest delineating and managing riparian buffers throughout the rotation cycle.•Make multi-layered, mixed-species forests with more deciduous species the goal.•Riparian zones will provide functions throughout the rotation, not just at final-felling. Riparian buffers are the primary tool in forest management for protecting the habitat structure and function of streams. They help protect against biogeochemical perturbation, filter sediments and nutrients, prevent erosion, contribute food to aquatic organisms, regulate light and hence water temperature, contribute deadwood, and preserve biodiversity. However, in production forests of Sweden and Finland, many headwater streams have been straightened, ditched, and/or channelized, resulting in altered hydrology and reduced natural disturbance by floods, which in turn affects important riparian functions. Furthermore, in even-aged management systems as practiced in much of Fennoscandia, understory trees have usually been cleared right up to the stream’s edge during thinning operations, especially around small, headwater streams. Fire suppression has further favored succession towards shade tolerant species. In the regions within Fennoscandia that have experienced this combination of intensive management and lack of natural disturbance, riparian zones are now dominated by single-storied, native Norway spruce. When the adjacent forest is cut, thin (5 - 15m) conifer-dominated riparian buffers are typically left. These buffers do not provide the protection and subsidies, in terms of leaf litter quality, needed to maintain water quality or support riparian or aquatic biodiversity. Based on a literature review, we found compelling evidence that the ecological benefits of multi-layered, mixed-species riparian forest with a large component of broadleaved species are higher than what is now commonly found in the managed stands of Fennoscandia. To improve the functionality of riparian zones, and hence the protection of streams in managed forest landscapes, we present some basic principles that could be used to enhance the ecological function of these interfaces. These management actions should be prioritized on streams and streamside stands that have been affected by simplification either through forest management or hydrological modification. Key to these principles is the planning and managing of buffer zones as early as possible in th
ISSN:0378-1127
1872-7042
1872-7042
DOI:10.1016/j.foreco.2021.119254