Tb. Harrington et al., INTERSPECIFIC COMPETITION AND HERBICIDE INJURY INFLUENCE 10-YEAR RESPONSES OF COASTAL DOUGLAS-FIR AND ASSOCIATED VEGETATION TO RELEASE TREATMENTS, Forest ecology and management, 76(1-3), 1995, pp. 55-67
Responses of competing vegetation and planted Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga
menziesii (Mirb.) France var. menziesii) were studied for 10 years af
ter six herbicide and manual release treatments in the Washington and
Oregon Coast Ranges. Research objectives were to quantify regional, lo
ng-term responses of vegetation to various levels of competition, ligh
t and soil water availability, and intensity versus importance of fact
ors influencing Douglas-fir growth. Three treatments reduced shrub cov
er relative to the untreated check: triclopyr in year 1, glyphosate in
years 1-5, and repeated control (via several herbicide applications)
in years 1-10. Reductions in woody cover from glyphosate stimulated in
creases in herb cover in years 3 and 5, while repeated control reduced
herb cover in years 1, 2 and 5. Through year 10, Douglas-fir survival
(86-99%) varied little among treatments. Visual symptoms of herbicide
injury to Douglas-fir from triclopyr (45% of trees) and glyphosate (1
7% of trees) were associated with 0.1-0.2 m reductions in first-year h
eight. After adjusting for tree size, Douglas-fir growth in stem basal
area 2 years after triclopyr was less than that of the untreated chec
k, suggesting prolonged effects of herbicide injury. Because it sustai
ned low levels of interspecific competition, caused minimal tree injur
y, and prevented overtopping cover from red alder (Alnus rubra Bong.),
repeated control was the only treatment in which Douglas-fir size (9.
8 m height and 21 cm basal diameter in year 10) significantly exceeded
(P less than or equal to 0.02) that of the untreated check (7.8 m hei
ght and 12 cm diameter).