Abstract

The amount of biomass stored in forest ecosystems is a result of past natural disturbances, forest management activities, and current structure and composition such as age class distributions. Although natural disturbances are projected to increase in their frequency and severity on a global scale in the future, forest management and timber harvesting decisions continue to be made at local scales, e.g., the ownership or stand level. This study simulated potential changes in natural disturbance regimes and their interaction with timber harvest goals across the Superior National Forest (SNF) in northeastern Minnesota, USA. Forest biomass stocks and stock changes were simulated for 120 years under three natural disturbance and four harvest scenarios. A volume control approach was used to estimate biomass availability across the SNF and a smaller project area within the SNF (Jeanette Project Area; JPA). Results indicate that under current harvest rates and assuming disturbances were twice that of normal levels resulted in reductions of 2.62 to 10.38% of forest biomass across the four primary forest types in the SNF and JPA, respectively. Under this scenario, total biomass stocks remained consistent after 50 years at current and 50% disturbance rates, but biomass continued to decrease under a 200%-disturbance scenario through 120 years. In comparison, scenarios that assumed both harvest and disturbance were twice that of normal levels and resulted in reductions ranging from 14.18 to 29.85% of forest biomass. These results suggest that both natural disturbances and timber harvesting should be considered to understand their impacts to future forest structure and composition. The implications from simulations like these can provide managers with strategic approaches to determine the economic and ecological outcomes associated with timber harvesting and disturbances.

Highlights

  • Future global change scenarios predict increases in the frequency and severity of natural disturbances in forest ecosystems [1,2]

  • The objective of this study is to investigate how potential changes in natural disturbance regimes alter timber harvesting goals across the Superior National Forest in northeastern Minnesota, USA

  • Despite the uncertainty inherent in long-term projections of forest conditions, these results quantified the impacts of natural disturbance and harvesting on forest biomass stocks under current management strategies in northeastern Minnesota, USA

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Summary

Introduction

Future global change scenarios predict increases in the frequency and severity of natural disturbances in forest ecosystems [1,2]. Forest productivity gains in response to future global change scenarios may be hypothesized, including projected natural. Forests 2018, 9, 491 disturbance rates in simulations of forest growth can negate any potential gains in productivity related to climate change [7]. These natural disturbances directly impact the age class distribution of trees of different species, which subsequently impacts forest biomass and carbon at landscape level. In the US state of Minnesota, 819,000 m3 of wood was harvested on federal ownerships in 2012 [13], representing an important component of the state’s timber supply

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