Search results for "Stump harvesting"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

The arthropod community of boreal Norway spruce forests responds variably to stump harvesting

2016

Forest fuel harvesting increases the need to collect not just logging residues but also tree stumps from harvested stands. This biomass removal has raised concern over forest biodiversity. Here, the effects of stump harvesting on spiders, ants, harvestmen, ground beetles and epiedaphic springtails occupying boreal Norway spruce (Picea abies) forest floor were studied two and five years after harvesting by comparing pitfall trap samples from clear-cut sites with and without subsequent stump harvesting and from unharvested mature forests in central Finland. At harvested sites, traps were placed both on intact and exposed mineral soil surface. Open-habitat and generalist ground beetles benefit…

0106 biological sciencesManagement Monitoring Policy and LawBiologybioenergy010603 evolutionary biology01 natural scienceslukitFormicidaeNature and Landscape ConservationForest floorBiomass (ecology)OpilionesAgroforestryLoggingForestryForestryPicea abies04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesbiology.organism_classificationta4112Pitfall trapbioenergiaBorealvisual_artStump harvesting040103 agronomy & agriculturevisual_art.visual_art_medium0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesta1181AraneaeCollembolaCarabidaeTree stumpForest Ecology and Management
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Effects of stump removal on soil decomposer communities in undisturbed patches of the forest floor

2011

Abstract Soil preparation after clear-cutting leads to fragmentation of forest floor and, consequently, changes the habitat of decomposers. Stump removal for bioenergy is further increasing the disturbance in the soil. We studied responses of decomposers to stump removal in boreal spruce forests during the first 4 years after clear felling in relation to mounding. Samples for each decomposer organism group were taken from undisturbed forest floor patches that are the main habitat for decomposers after forest regeneration and whose amount and size obviously differ between the treatments. Microbial biomasses and community structure, and the abundance of enchytraeids, were not found to be affe…

Forest floorAbundance (ecology)EcologyStump harvestingSoil biologyTaigaForest managementEnvironmental scienceta1181ForestryFellingDecomposerScandinavian Journal of Forest Research
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Short-term responses of soil decomposer and vegetation communities to stump harvesting in boreal forests

2011

Recently, in addition to logging residues, stumps have become an important component in energy production since there is growing global interest in the use of renewable energy sources in order to decrease anthropogenic carbon emissions. Harvesting of stumps influences the forest floor by changing vegetation and soil organic layers and exposing mineral soil across large areas. We studied whether stump harvesting after clear felling poses further short-term changes in boreal forest soil decomposer community (microbes and mesofauna) and vegetation when compared to the traditional site preparation practice (mounding). In general, stump harvesting caused decline in enchytraeid abundance but did …

Forest floorEcologySoil biodiversitySoil biologySoil organic matterta1183ForestrySoil classificationManagement Monitoring Policy and Lawta4112DecomposerStump harvestingEnvironmental scienceta1181Soil mesofaunaNature and Landscape ConservationForest Ecology and Management
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Effects of stump removal on soil decomposer communities in undisturbed patches of the forest floor

2011

Soil preparation after clear-cutting leads to fragmentation of forest floor and, consequently, changes the habitat of decomposers. Stump removal for bioenergy is further increasing the disturbance in the soil. We studied responses of decomposers to stump removal in boreal spruce forests during the first 4 years after clear felling in relation to mounding. Samples for each decomposer organism group were taken from undisturbed forest floor patches that are the main habitat for decomposers after forest regeneration and whose amount and size obviously differ between the treatments. Microbial biomasses and community structure, and the abundance of enchytraeids, were not found to be affected by t…

body regionsForest managementfragmentationfungistump harvestingnutrient cyclingforest soilsoil fauna
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Responses of soil carbon and nitrogen transformations to stump removal

2012

We studied in central Finland whether stump harvesting after clear felling of coniferous forest poses further short-term changes in soil carbon and nitrogen dynamics when compared to the traditional site preparation method, mounding. Exposed mineral soil patches in Norway spruce (Picea abies) dominated clear-cut stands were sampled 1–5 years after the treatments. The extent of the exposed mineral soil surface was significantly larger at the stump removal sites when compared to the mounding sites. No differences were found in soil pH, organic matter content or total concentration of soil C between the treatments or treatment years. Total concentration of soil N was consistently higher and …

chemistry.chemical_classificationSoil testEcological ModelingSoil organic matterfungiForestrySoil classificationSoil scienceSoil carbondigestive systemcomplex mixturesSoil qualitybody regionssurgical procedures operativeAgronomychemistrySoil pHStump harvestinglcsh:SD1-669.5Environmental scienceOrganic matterlcsh:ForestrySilva Fennica
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