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1 December 2007 Effects on vegetation composition of a modified forest harvesting and propagation method compared with clear-cutting, scarification and planting
Johan Bergstedt, Mats Hagner, Per Milberg
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Abstract

Question: How does the vegetation of boreal forests respond to harvesting and scarification?

Location: 650 m a.s.l., central Sweden (61°38′ N).

Methods: The response of boreal forest vegetation to cutting and scarification was studied in a field trial, which consisted of three treatments plus conventional harvesting as a control in a complete block design with four replicates. The cutting was done 14 years prior to vegetation inventory and scarification and planting were conducted the first or second years after cutting.

Results: The species most abundant at higher cutting intensities were crustose lichens, Cladonia spp., Cladina arbuscula, Polytrichum spp. and pioneer mosses, the grass Deschampsia flexuosa, and the tree Betula pubescens, A few species had substantially lower abundance in treatments with higher cutting intensity, notably Hylocomium splendens and Vaccinium myrtillus. Scarification had a strong effect that was different from the one created by cutting. In scarification treatments, Polytrichum spp. were the only species with high abundance; most species had low abundance, i.e. Barbilophozia lycopodioides, Vaccinium vitis-idaea, Pleurozium schreberi, Carex globularis, Empetrum nigrum, Cladina arbuscula, Sphagnum spp.

Conclusions: Our results elaborate on the details of the well-known effect of cutting on ground-layer flora, and also give support for the profound and long-lasting effect that soil scarification has on forest vegetation.

Nomenclature: T. Karlsson (1998).

Johan Bergstedt, Mats Hagner, and Per Milberg "Effects on vegetation composition of a modified forest harvesting and propagation method compared with clear-cutting, scarification and planting," Applied Vegetation Science 11(2), 159-168, (1 December 2007). https://doi.org/10.3170/2007-7-18343
Received: 2 March 2006; Accepted: 1 June 2007; Published: 1 December 2007
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KEYWORDS
boreal forest
Cutting intensity
field trial
Forest understorey
logging
propagation
Sweden
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