Mr. Gale et al., PLANT COMMUNITY RESPONSES TO HARVESTING AND POSTHARVEST MANIPULATIONSIN A PICEA-LARIX-PINUS WETLAND WITH A MINERAL SUBSTRATE, Wetlands, 18(1), 1998, pp. 150-159
Forested wetlands in the Northern Great Lakes Region are becoming incr
easingly used as a timber resource. Yet, limited information is availa
ble on the effects of harvesting and post-harvest manipulations (site
preparation and fertilization) on tree and ground vegetation in these
wetland communities. The objective of this study was to examine produc
tion changes and species diversity in the vascular plant community fou
r years after a forested, mineral wetland in Northern Michigan was who
le-tree harvested, site prepared (bedded or trenched), and fertilized
(N, P, N + P). The wetland had an original overstory of black spruce (
Picea mariana), tamarack (Larix laricina), and jack pine (Pinus banksi
ana), with a significant cover of Sphagnum and Ericaceous shrubs. Site
preparation techniques were done immediately after harvesting. The si
te was then planted with jack pine seedlings (1-0 stock). Fertilizatio
n occurred four years after harvesting and site preparation. Results i
ndicate that trees in bedded areas with N fertilizer applied had signi
ficantly greater total seedling height, basal diameter and height incr
ement when compared with those from harvest-only or trenched areas. On
harvest-only areas, seedling production was greater with P and N + P
fertilizers than with N fertilizer alone. Fertilizer responses were at
tributed to which type of site preparation (bedding versus trenching)
was used and the degree of organic matter and Sphagnum incorporated in
to the mineral soil. Only site-preparation treatments (not fertilizati
on treatments) had significant effects on numbers and cover of vascula
r plant groups (woody, herbaceous, and grass/sedge). Number of species
and total cover of all vascular plants were significantly greater on
the harvest-only areas than on trenched, bedded, or uncut areas. As ex
pected, relative cover of the grass/sedge group increased with increas
ing site disturbance (bedded and trenched, mainly due to disturbance a
nd lack of the thick Sphagnum mat. When compared to the adjacent uncut
area, relative cover of herbaceous species was significantly reduced
on treated areas, In future years, if the significant effects of manip
ulation treatments on tree productivity and vascular plants continue,
the resulting community may be different than the successional sequenc
e witnessed by the original forest. This will, however, depend on the
rate of crown closure and the invasion of bryophyte species.