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Title Thinning treatments had minimal effect on soil compaction in mixed-conifer plantations
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Abstract

If biomass utilization results in soil compaction and reduced forest productivity, the potential benefits may be considered to be not worth the long-term impacts. We analyzed soil strength, an indicator of soil compaction, prior to and following commercial thins (sawlog and biomass harvest) and mastication treatments in 24- to 30-year-old mixed-conifer plantations in the central Sierra Nevada. Soil strength in mature, untreated second-growth stands was also measured as a reference. Neither the commercial thins nor the mastication treatments resulted in statistically detectable increases in compaction. Most of the existing compaction came from the original regeneration harvest that established the plantations several decades earlier. It will be important to monitor repeat treatments and long-term effects, but this study suggests that managers should not expect large impacts from thinning treatments on soil compaction in forests such as the one studied here as long as best practices are used.

Authors
York, Robert A. : R.A. York is Research Stations Manager and Adjunct Assistant Professor of Forestry in the UC Center for Forestry and Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management at UC Berkeley
Keller, Richard K. : R.K. Keller is Assistant Forester at Jefferson Resource Company
Thomson, Ariel C. : A.C. Thomson is Assistant Forester at the UC Center for Forestry.
Publication Date Jul 1, 2015
Date Added Oct 12, 2015
Copyright © The Regents of the University of California
Copyright Year 2015
Description

In mixed-conifer plantations in the Sierra Nevada, no large impacts were seen from commercial thinning or mastication treatments.

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