دورية أكاديمية

Restoration of burned and post-fire logged Austrocedrus chilensis stands in Patagonia: effects of competition and environmental conditions on seedling survival and growth.

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Restoration of burned and post-fire logged Austrocedrus chilensis stands in Patagonia: effects of competition and environmental conditions on seedling survival and growth.
المؤلفون: Urretavizcaya, M. Florencia, Defossé, Guillermo E.
المصدر: International Journal of Wildland Fire; 2019, Vol. 28 Issue 5, p365-376, 12p
مصطلحات موضوعية: WILDFIRES, SALVAGE logging, SEEDLINGS, SOIL temperature, SOIL moisture
مصطلحات جغرافية: ARGENTINA, PATAGONIA (Argentina & Chile)
مستخلص: In Andean Patagonia, Argentina, severe wildfires produce high mortality in Austrocedrus chilensis forests. Owing to its high timber quality, A. chilensis trees are generally salvage logged right after wildfires. Post-logged areas result in open, denuded stands with low herbaceous or shrub cover, which precludes natural A. chilensis regeneration. In severely burned A. chilensis stands, we determined how different site conditions (salvage logging, SL, and without logging, WL), and the combination of different methods of control of above- and belowground competition and micro-environmental factors (incident radiation, soil temperature and soil moisture) affected survival, growth and hydric status of planted A seedlings. Two growing seasons after plantation, seedling survival was lower than 10% at SL sites, whereas it was near 90% at WL sites. Four seasons after establishment, and regardless of competition treatments, no seedlings survived at SL sites, whereas over 75% survived at WL sites. Radiation attenuation by canopy of WL sites benefitted A. chilensis seedling survival, and no additional control of early successional herbaceous species should be necessary to attain high seedling survival 4 years after restoration. Selective logging, by leaving ~50% of burned snags, and active restoration practices, may help reconcile economic needs of society and ecological requirements of A. chilensis for recovering former structure and functions. We determine how post-fire salvage logging (SL) v. without logging (WL) affected Austrocedrus chilensis seedling survival and growth under different aerial and root-competition treatments. High radiation levels at SL sites precluded A. chilensis seedlings survival, whereas aerial or root competition had insignificant effects. Remaining snags at WL sites attenuate radiation, allowing high seedling survival. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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قاعدة البيانات: Complementary Index