old growth-forests nature conservation dead trees stand structure harvesting selective felling understorey natural regeneration layer structure ground vegetation plant succession shrubs species richness ground cover forbs plant communities botanical composition site factors species diversity stand characteristics forests trees Ecosystems Forest Management Environmental Management Synecology Forest Ecology
Managers of federal forests in the US Pacific Northwest are charged with managing timber harvest while maintaining ecosystem functions and biological diversity associated with old, unmanaged forests. Thus, timber-orientated management is being replaced by ecosystem management, which includes leaving live trees (green trees), snags, and coarse woody debris after harvest. A retrospective approach was used to assess the potential effects of green-tree retention on vascular undergrowth in the western Cascades of Oregon. Fourteen natural 2-storied stands of remnant trees (>300 yr old) over 65-125 yr old regeneration were paired with neighbouring stands of the same age but lacking remnants. Species richness and cover of shrubs, all herbs, and late-successional shrubs and herbs did not differ systematically between stands with and without remnant trees. However, communities of herbs and shrubs varied with the percentages (percentage basal area/ha) of Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) and western hemlock (Tsuga heterophylla) in the regeneration, which varied with remnant densities. Regeneration densities and percentages of western hemlock in the regeneration were positively correlated with remnant tree densities. In contrast, percentages of Douglas fir in the regeneration and overall conifer volume were negatively correlated with remnant densities. Undergrowth cover and species richness was generally greater in relatively open Douglas fir dominated forests, which were associated with physiographically drier sites and fewer remnant trees. Results for these natural, 2-storied stands suggest that variable levels of green-tree retention in managed forests may provide for a diversity of undergrowth communities.
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Title
Relationships of remnant trees to vascular undergrowth communities in the western cascades: a retrospective approach
Creators
Bibit Halliday Traut (Author)
Patricia S. Muir (Author)
Publication Details
Northwest science., Vol.74(3), pp.212-223
Academic Unit
Northwest Science
Publisher
WSU Press
Identifiers
99900501535101842
Copyright
In copyright ; openAccess ; http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ; http://purl.org/eprint/accessRights/OpenAccess