Abstract

Recent research suggests that partial-cut harvesting techniques can be used to alter successional trajectories in pine- and spruce-lichen woodlands, allowing forest managers to extend the period of reindeer lichen growth in mid- to late seral boreal forest stands. In Quebec, a fully replicated partial-cutting trial found that terrestrial lichen abundance remained at least as high in the partial cut as in the clearcuts or unlogged stands, and that the partial cut appeared to be on a trajectory to have even more terrestrial lichen due to sustained higher growth rates. In Alberta, a retrospective study found higher terrestrial lichen abundance in an early horse-logged partial cut than in undisturbed adjacent old forests or in clearcuts. Follow-up studies of partial-cut harvesting trials in British Columbia found that group selection plots 10 years after harvesting had lichen cover equivalent to that of undisturbed forest. In contrast, studies on lichen woodlands that have been defoliated by mountain pine beetle showed a major decline in reindeer lichen cover and a corresponding increase in vascular plant cover, similar to the results of previous studies on clear-cut logging impacts. Taken together these studies provide qualified support for the hypothesis that partial-cut harvesting can be used to enhance, or at least maintain, terrestrial lichen mats used as forage by caribou.

Highlights

  • The changes in stand structure that occur during succession in boreal and sub-boreal lichen woodlands are accompanied by major shifts in the composition of forest floor lichen communities

  • We review the impacts of three major types of disturbances: fire, partial-cut logging, and canopy mortality due to mountain pine beetle attack

  • Data from partial cuts are most relevant to our objectives, they are the most limited, and there are valuable lessons to be learned from other successional series

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Summary

Introduction

The changes in stand structure that occur during succession in boreal and sub-boreal lichen woodlands are accompanied by major shifts in the composition of forest floor lichen communities. Coxson and Marsh (2001) found that in stands where forest cover had been removed by logging 10 years previous on a deep winter snowpack, reindeer lichens were more abundant on shaded north-facing cut block margins than in the adjacent unlogged forest, reflecting the likely influence of greater light availability and higher humidity (with extended duration of wetting episodes) on lichen growth in these sites.

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