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Long term effects of wet site timber harvesting and site preparation on soil properties and loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) productivity in the lower Atlantic Coastal PlainNeaves, Charles Mitchell III 22 May 2017 (has links)
Short term studies have suggested that ground based timber harvesting on wet sites can alter soil properties and inhibit early survival and growth of seedlings. Persistence of such negative effects may translate to losses in forest productivity over a rotation. During the fall and winter of 1989, numerous salvage logging operations were conducted during high soil moisture conditions on wet pine flats in the lower coastal plain of South Carolina following Hurricane Hugo. A long-term experiment (split-plot within an unbalanced randomized complete block design) allowed assessment of long term effects of rutted and compacted primary skid trails and subsequent site preparation on soil properties and loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) productivity. The experiment had 12 blocks, four levels of site preparation as the whole plot factor (bedding, disking with bedding, disking, and no site preparation), and two levels of traffic as the subplot factor (primary skid trail, no obvious traffic). After 23 years, bedding and disking with bedding treatments effectively enhanced soil physical properties and stand productivity via promoting greater survival and stocking, but had little effect on the size of individual trees relative to disking and no site preparation treatments. Primary skid trails significantly reduced the size of individual trees, but had no appreciable long term effects on soil properties or stand productivity after 23 years. The study suggests that bedding is the most efficient practice to enhance soil properties, seedling survival, and stand productivity on wet sites. However, site preparation is not necessary for these soils and sites, if strictly intended to restore soil properties and stand productivity in primary skid trails. Reduction in individual tree sizes on primary skid trails emphasizes benefits in minimizing the spatial extent of disturbance. / Master of Science / Heavy equipment traffic associated with ground-based timber harvesting has potential to alter soil properties resulting in lower productivity of the subsequent forest. Various soil tillage techniques have been suggested to offset changes in soil properties and forest productivity on disturbed soils, and to enhance soil properties and forest productivity on undisturbed soils. An experiment was conducted on low-lying Atlantic Coastal Plain sites to compare the effects of four soil tillage treatments (bedding, disking, disking with bedding, no tillage) on soil properties and forest productivity 23 years after treatments were installed. Bedding displaces soil from furrows into continuous, linear mounds called beds, such that bed surfaces are above the original soil surface. Disking is a tillage practice commonly implemented in agriculture. For the disking with bedding treatment, plots were disked followed by bedding. The no tillage treatment served as a control. Additionally, the experiment provided comparison of soil properties and forest productivity between soils heavily disturbed by logging activities and relatively undisturbed soils. Bedding and disking with bedding created favorable, localized soil conditions that promoted greater loblolly pine survival which translated to approximately double the total stand volume per unit area relative to disking and no tillage treatments. Differences in the sizes of individual trees among tillage treatments were minimal. Heavily disturbed soils and soils undisturbed by logging activity were similar in terms of soil properties and loblolly pine volume per unit area; however, individual trees were smaller on heavily disturbed soils. The implications of this study provide practical guidance for forest management decisions. Of treatments compared, bedding is the most efficient to increase total stand productivity on poorly drained sites. Disking with bedding offers no additional benefits, but is more expensive to implement. Results also imply that soils disturbed by logging have potential to recover over time such that long term forest productivity is sustained. However, the reduction in individual tree sizes emphasizes benefits of minimizing soil disturbance during timber harvests.
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