Abstract

Clear-cut harvesting of forests may be associated with increased availability and losses of nitrogen (N), and variable-retention (VR) harvesting has been proposed as an environmentally acceptable alternative to clear-cutting. In boreal forests, however, harvesting has often not led to significant increases in N availability and it is thus important to assess whether variable retention practices are necessary and justifiable in such forests with respect to nutrient dynamics. We compared N availability in clear-cut and VR-harvested stands in the boreal mixedwood forest of northwestern Alberta. We measured soil concentrations of nitrate, ammonium, soluble organic N, and microbial N in uncut, 50% and 20% retention, and clearcuts of deciduous-dominated, coniferous-dominated, and mixed stands 4 years after harvesting. There was little apparent effect of harvesting on N availability in all forest types. Nitrate, ammonium, and microbial N concentrations and net N mineralization and nitrification rates were similar in clearcuts and uncut forests and there was no threshold effect of harvesting on N availability. Soluble organic N concentrations were lower in coniferous and mixed clearcuts than in uncut stands on only one occasion. Clear-cut harvesting in itself does not appear to lead to long-lasting increased N availability and losses in boreal mixedwoods. Adoption of VR harvesting in these ecosystems may not be justified on the grounds of reducing changes in N availability when compared with clear-cutting.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call