Seedling establishment on small cutting areas with or without site preparation in a drained spruce mire – a case study in northern Finland

A large proportion of drained spruce mire stands is currently approaching regeneration maturity in Finland. We studied the effect of cutting â small canopy openings (78, 177, and 314Â m) and small clear-cuts (0.25â0.37 ha) â with or without site preparation (scalping) on the establishment of natural...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Silva Fennica
Main Authors: Hökkä, Hannu, Repola, Jaakko, Moilanen, Mikko, Saarinen, Markku
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Finnish Society of Forest Science 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.920
https://doaj.org/article/dd13489fc2104766860ee89e064443be
Description
Summary:A large proportion of drained spruce mire stands is currently approaching regeneration maturity in Finland. We studied the effect of cutting â small canopy openings (78, 177, and 314Â m) and small clear-cuts (0.25â0.37 ha) â with or without site preparation (scalping) on the establishment of natural Norway spruce seedlings in one experimental drained spruce mire stand in northern Finland. The cuttings were made in winter 2004â2005 and site preparation with scalping in early June 2005. The experimental design was composed of four blocks with altogether four clear-cuts and 33 canopy openings. The seedling establishment was surveyed annually (2006, 2008â2010) from five circular sample plots (one 10 m and four 5Â m plots in size) located within the canopy openings and from 18 circular 5 m sample plots systematically located in the scalped and untreated halves of the clear-cuts. Site preparation was found unnecessary, because it resulted in a clearly lower number of seedlings in the openings. A slight negative effect was also found in the clear-cuts. In the two years following the cuttings, the number of seedlings increased quickly in the canopy openings, but more gradually in the clear-cut areas. In 2010, on average 15 500 new seedlings were observed in the canopy openings and 6700 in the clear-cut areas, of which 5050 and 1200, respectively, were >0.1 m tall spruces. The proportion of birch increased in the last two years, being ca. 22% in the openings and 45% in the clear-cuts in 2010. The spatial distribution of seedlings was more uneven in the clear-cuts than in the openings, with 41% and 20% of survey plots empty, respectively.2222