Abstract

In this work, we examine the effects of commercial thinning on stand volume and individual stem form in nine naturally regenerated black spruce (Picea mariana (Mill.) B.S.P.) stands. We compared these study sites with controls in the commercial boreal forest of northern Quebec, Canada. At stand level, dendrochronological data provided insight into changes in stand volume ten years after thinning. Analysis of a subsample of six individual trees from each commercially thinned stand and three individual trees from the controls illustrated the role of thinning on stem shape development. Although average volume increased for residual stems in thinned stands slightly more than in the controls (110% versus 106%), the treatment effect stand-level volume increment or stand-level total volume harvested (ten years after treatment) was not statistically significant. Moreover, at tree level, thinning did not significantly affect stem volume increment. However, radial growth increment significantly increased after treatment. Trees from commercially thinned stands showed a significantly higher growth increment along the lower first two-thirds of the stem. Response to thinning at tree level correlated strongly with the size and number of harvested competitors around a residual stem. We conclude that commercial thinning modified wood allocation rather than wood volume and did not affect taper and stem shape. These patterns of post-cutting growth are explained by wood allocation following thinning. After commercial thinning, growth increment is favored at the expense of height growth. As the treatment effect was found at the stem scale rather than at the stand scale, further research is needed in regard to commercial thinning treatments to investigate how to increase productivity at the stand scale.

Highlights

  • Black spruce (Picea mariana (Mill.) B.S.P.) is an important commercial and reforested species in Eastern Canada [1,2]

  • As the treatment effect was found at the stem scale rather than at the stand scale, further research is needed in regard to commercial thinning treatments to investigate how to increase productivity at the stand scale

  • The traditional harvesting method used in black spruce stands is clear-cutting; forest management practices in the boreal forest have evolved, and in Quebec, ecosystem-based management is applied to respond to concerns about sustainability [3]

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Summary

Introduction

Black spruce (Picea mariana (Mill.) B.S.P.) is an important commercial and reforested species in Eastern Canada [1,2]. The traditional harvesting method used in black spruce stands is clear-cutting; forest management practices in the boreal forest have evolved, and in Quebec, ecosystem-based management is applied to respond to concerns about sustainability [3]. Forests 2019, 10, 1024 which only part of the stand is harvested”; they specify no minimum level of retention. Commercial thinning is one type of partial cutting treatment. Many studies examining the boreal ecosystem response to partial cutting have focused on biodiversity and how various levels of cutting affect forest ecology, including regeneration [5], biodiversity protection [6], and cover retention [7]

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