CROWN RELEASE AS A POTENTIAL OLD-GROWTH RESTORATION APPROACH IN NORTHERN HARDWOODS

Citation
Mt. Singer et Cg. Lorimer, CROWN RELEASE AS A POTENTIAL OLD-GROWTH RESTORATION APPROACH IN NORTHERN HARDWOODS, Canadian journal of forest research, 27(8), 1997, pp. 1222-1232
Citations number
61
Categorie Soggetti
Forestry
ISSN journal
00455067
Volume
27
Issue
8
Year of publication
1997
Pages
1222 - 1232
Database
ISI
SICI code
0045-5067(1997)27:8<1222:CRAAPO>2.0.ZU;2-B
Abstract
The question of whether crown release might hasten the development of large trees in second-growth northern hardwoods was examined by measur ing 6- to 10-year growth response to a wide range of past thinning tre atments in seven stands in northern Wisconsin. Percent increase in bas al area growth after thinning was linearly correlated with percent plo t basal area removed and with percent crown perimeter release of indiv idual trees. Trees on untreated plots showed a mean 7% growth decline, while mean response on treated plots ranged from a 21% increase for t rees given 25% crown perimeter release to an 88-107% increase for tree s given full release. A basal area increment model calibrated with the data suggests that 30 cm DBH sugar maples (Acer saccharum Marsh.) giv en full crown release would reach 50 cm DBH (the mean size of canopy t rees in old-growth stands) in 46-49 years, compared with 92 years with no treatment. In addition to accelerating the development of large tr ees, crown release has the potential for enhancing foliar height diver sity and increasing the number of canopy gaps, standing snags, and fal len logs, all of which occur only to a limited extent in existing seco nd-growth, even-aged stands.