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Title: Bottomland hardwood forest recovery following tornado disturbance and salvage logging.
Authors: Nelson, John L.
Groninger, John W.
Battaglia, Loretta L.
Ruffner, Charles M.
USDA, FS
Source: Forest ecology and management. 2008 July 30, v. 256, no. 3 [Amsterdam]: Elsevier Science, p. 388-395.
NALT Subjects: hardwood forests
lowland forests
wind
storms
forest damage
anthropogenic activities
forest succession
forest regeneration
woody plants
herbaceous plants
ground vegetation
overstory
species diversity
stems
density
floodplains
conservation areas
logging
tornadoes
Illinois
Issue Date: 30-Jul-2008
Abstract: Catastrophic wind events, including tornado, hurricane, and linear winds, are significant disturbances in temperate forested wetlands. Information is lacking on how post-disturbance salvage logging may impact short and long-term objectives in conservation areas where natural stands are typically managed passively. Woody regeneration and herbaceous cover were assessed for three years in a bottomland hardwood forest across a gradient of damage from an F4 tornado, with and without subsequent salvage logging. Soil disturbance intensity and recovery associated with salvage logging within wind-disturbed sites were also assessed. Woody stem density and proportion of potential overstory species (species with the potential to occupy a position in the canopy) increased as a function of wind disturbance intensity. Stem density, proportion of overstory trees, or species diversity did not differ between wind+salvage and wind-disturbed-only plots. Significant dissimilarity occurred among soil disturbance classes within salvaged sites. By the third growing season, vegetation in soil disturbance classes in wind+salvage areas was converging toward undisturbed conditions and bottomland hardwood forest recovery was underway in all vegetation disturbance types and soil disturbance classes. Post-tornado salvage logging, applied judiciously, may contribute to microsite and vegetation diversity.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10113/21590
Appears in Collections:USDA Research and Information

Files in This Item:

File SizeFormat
IND44077269.pdf276KbAdobe PDFView/Open

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