Restoration strategies in boreal forests : prescribed burning and gap cutting effects on plant diversity and community composition

The boreal biome is one of the largest in the world and their forests have been widely exploited for centuries. Consequently, it has suffered ecological simplification and loss of biodiversity. Under these circumstances passive conservation is no longer enough and active restoration techniques need...

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Main Author: Espinosa Del Alba, Clara
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: SLU/Dept. of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Studies 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/15779/
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spelling ftsluppsalast:oai:stud.epsilon.slu.se:15779 2023-05-15T17:45:09+02:00 Restoration strategies in boreal forests : prescribed burning and gap cutting effects on plant diversity and community composition Estrategias de restauración en bosques boreales : efectos de quema prescrita y claras en la diversidad y composición de comunidades vegetales Espinosa Del Alba, Clara 2020 https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/15779/ eng eng SLU/Dept. of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Studies https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/15779/ restoration ecology boreal forest fire gap cutting biodiversity voluntary set-asides vascular plants bryophytes forest management H2 2020 ftsluppsalast 2022-09-10T18:12:42Z The boreal biome is one of the largest in the world and their forests have been widely exploited for centuries. Consequently, it has suffered ecological simplification and loss of biodiversity. Under these circumstances passive conservation is no longer enough and active restoration techniques need to be tested. I evaluated short- and long-term effects of two restoration methods aimed to increase ecosystem structural variability. I focused on the responses of two organism groups: vascular plants in the field layer and bryophytes in the ground layer. A before-after control-impact study design was applied. It consisted of 18 voluntary set-asides in northern Sweden; each assigned to one of three treatments: prescribed restoration burning, gap cutting and untreated stands. Data was collected in three occasions: once prior to restoration (2010) and twice post restoration; one year after (2012) and eight years after (2019). I analysed the differences in two diversity measures (richness and Shannon Diversity) with linear mixed effect models and community composition changes with multivariate methods. My results showed that fire treatment caused an initial decline in diversity for both field and ground layer. However, in the long-term the field layer recovered and surpassed the diversity values present in the area before restoration. Ground layer did not show any sign of recovery. Community composition in burned stands differed significantly between each time point as well as when compared to other treatments, for both layers. By contrast, I found no significant differences in diversity measures or community composition due to gap cutting. The restoration methods tested in this study displayed some divergent results. Prescribed burning generated opposite responses depending on time since restoration for vascular plants in the field layer. However, it was found consistently detrimental in the ground layer and therefore not to recommend when bryophytes are the target species. The absence of effects from gap cutting can be ... Other/Unknown Material Northern Sweden Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences: Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
institution Open Polar
collection Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences: Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
op_collection_id ftsluppsalast
language English
topic restoration ecology
boreal forest
fire
gap cutting
biodiversity
voluntary set-asides
vascular plants
bryophytes
forest management
spellingShingle restoration ecology
boreal forest
fire
gap cutting
biodiversity
voluntary set-asides
vascular plants
bryophytes
forest management
Espinosa Del Alba, Clara
Restoration strategies in boreal forests : prescribed burning and gap cutting effects on plant diversity and community composition
topic_facet restoration ecology
boreal forest
fire
gap cutting
biodiversity
voluntary set-asides
vascular plants
bryophytes
forest management
description The boreal biome is one of the largest in the world and their forests have been widely exploited for centuries. Consequently, it has suffered ecological simplification and loss of biodiversity. Under these circumstances passive conservation is no longer enough and active restoration techniques need to be tested. I evaluated short- and long-term effects of two restoration methods aimed to increase ecosystem structural variability. I focused on the responses of two organism groups: vascular plants in the field layer and bryophytes in the ground layer. A before-after control-impact study design was applied. It consisted of 18 voluntary set-asides in northern Sweden; each assigned to one of three treatments: prescribed restoration burning, gap cutting and untreated stands. Data was collected in three occasions: once prior to restoration (2010) and twice post restoration; one year after (2012) and eight years after (2019). I analysed the differences in two diversity measures (richness and Shannon Diversity) with linear mixed effect models and community composition changes with multivariate methods. My results showed that fire treatment caused an initial decline in diversity for both field and ground layer. However, in the long-term the field layer recovered and surpassed the diversity values present in the area before restoration. Ground layer did not show any sign of recovery. Community composition in burned stands differed significantly between each time point as well as when compared to other treatments, for both layers. By contrast, I found no significant differences in diversity measures or community composition due to gap cutting. The restoration methods tested in this study displayed some divergent results. Prescribed burning generated opposite responses depending on time since restoration for vascular plants in the field layer. However, it was found consistently detrimental in the ground layer and therefore not to recommend when bryophytes are the target species. The absence of effects from gap cutting can be ...
format Other/Unknown Material
author Espinosa Del Alba, Clara
author_facet Espinosa Del Alba, Clara
author_sort Espinosa Del Alba, Clara
title Restoration strategies in boreal forests : prescribed burning and gap cutting effects on plant diversity and community composition
title_short Restoration strategies in boreal forests : prescribed burning and gap cutting effects on plant diversity and community composition
title_full Restoration strategies in boreal forests : prescribed burning and gap cutting effects on plant diversity and community composition
title_fullStr Restoration strategies in boreal forests : prescribed burning and gap cutting effects on plant diversity and community composition
title_full_unstemmed Restoration strategies in boreal forests : prescribed burning and gap cutting effects on plant diversity and community composition
title_sort restoration strategies in boreal forests : prescribed burning and gap cutting effects on plant diversity and community composition
publisher SLU/Dept. of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Studies
publishDate 2020
url https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/15779/
genre Northern Sweden
genre_facet Northern Sweden
op_relation https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/15779/
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