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Title: Snag density varies with intensity of timber harvest and human access.
Authors: Wisdom, Michael J.
Bate, Lisa J.
USDA, FS
Source: Forest ecology and management. 2008 Apr. 20, v. 255, no. 7 [Amsterdam]: Elsevier Science, p. 2085-2093.
NALT Subjects: snags
density
anthropogenic activities
logging
national forests
public lands
forest stands
roads
topography
forest management
fuelwood
land use
wildlife habitats
habitat destruction
statistical models
regression analysis
Northwestern United States
Other Subjects: fuelwood cutting
Issue Date: 20-Apr-2008
Abstract: Many species of vertebrates depend on snags (standing dead trees) for persistence, and limited research suggests that snag density is lower in areas of intensive timber harvest and increased human access. While intensive timber harvest is one source of potential snag loss, ease of human access to forest stands may also facilitate loss via firewood cutting of snags. Accordingly, we hypothesized that density of snags (number of snags/ha) would decline in forest stands with increasing intensity of timber harvest and increasing ease of human access. We tested our hypothesis by sampling stands under varying levels of timber harvest and access on National Forest land in the northwestern United States. Stands with no history of timber harvest had 3 times the density of snags as stands selectively harvested, and 19 times the density as stands having undergone complete harvest. Stands not adjacent to roads had almost 3 times the density of snags as stands adjacent to roads. Unharvested stands adjacent to non-federal lands and closer to towns had lower snag density, as did stands with flat terrain in relation to nearest road. Our findings demonstrate that timber harvest and human access can have substantial effects on snag density. Meeting snag objectives for wildlife will require careful planning and effective mitigations as part of management of timber harvest and human access.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10113/21630
Appears in Collections:USDA Research and Information

Files in This Item:

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IND44047000.pdf404KbAdobe PDFView/Open

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