Early growth of white spruce underplanted beneath spaced and unspaced aspen stands in northeastern British Columbia

We examined the growth of white spruce planted underneath a 33-year-old stand of trembling aspen following thinning and fertilization. Thinning the stand to 2000 stems·ha –1 resulted in increased light reaching spruce seedlings and significant increases in height and diameter growth of seedlings ove...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Canadian Journal of Forest Research
Main Authors: Comeau, Philip G, Filipescu, Cosmin N, Kabzems, Richard, DeLong, Craig
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Canadian Science Publishing 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/x04-105
http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/x04-105
Description
Summary:We examined the growth of white spruce planted underneath a 33-year-old stand of trembling aspen following thinning and fertilization. Thinning the stand to 2000 stems·ha –1 resulted in increased light reaching spruce seedlings and significant increases in height and diameter growth of seedlings over that observed in either the unspaced or 3000 stems·ha –1 treatments. Fertilization (applied 3 years prior to planting) stimulated development of understory vegetation and did not benefit the planted spruce. While growth was improved by thinning, the benefits of the thinning treatment to establishment of white spruce appeared to be small, and amounted to increasing seedling height from 62 cm (unthinned) to 73 cm (thinned to 1000 or 2000 stems·ha –1 ) at the end of 5 years. Results indicated that when stands are thinned for the purpose of accelerating growth rates of underplanted spruce, residual basal areas above 25 m 2 ·ha –1 should be retained to suppress growth of understory vegetation. Comparison of height at age 5 for seedlings planted under untended stands at Fort Nelson with three sites near Dawson Creek indicated no differences between locations, when height at the time of planting was included as a covariate.