首页> 外文期刊>The Forestry Chronicle >Salvage logging in the boreal and cordilleran forests of Canada: Integrating industrial and ecological concerns in management plans.
【24h】

Salvage logging in the boreal and cordilleran forests of Canada: Integrating industrial and ecological concerns in management plans.

机译:加拿大北方和阔叶林的打捞伐木:将工业和生态问题纳入管理计划。

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

Fire has been part of the North American boreal and cordilleran ecosystems for thousands of years. Because fire and harvesting compete directly for the same wood supply, and provinces have, within the last few decades, tended to reach their annual allowable cut, salvage logging has emerged as a practice to minimize the impact of fire on long-term wood supply. In most parts of the boreal and cordilleran forests, fire-killed boles rapidly degrade after their death, as wood-boring insects, stain, wood-decay fungi and checking lead to significant loss of grade or volume in the months following the fire. Because of this impending degradation, salvage operations are often hurried and other considerations, including the potential ecological impacts of salvage logging, have seldom been taken into consideration when defining harvesting strategies. The ecological consequences of rapid salvage have been widely studied only in the last 5 years, and it is now clear that salvage logging can have negative impacts on natural regeneration by seed, water quality, and fire-associated animal species. In this paper, we review both industrial and ecological constraints to salvage logging and discuss how both can be integrated in salvage plans. In particular, we focus on the issues of salvage timing and retention. At this point, some type of retention of merchantable stands, even if only for a few years, appears to be the only way to alleviate the negative ecological impacts of post-fire logging. On-site operational constraints, e.g., stands that cannot be harvested due to lack of accessibility, represent an important starting point for any retention strategy.
机译:数千年来,火灾一直是北美北方和山脉生态系统的一部分。由于砍伐和砍伐直接竞争相同的木材供应,并且在过去的几十年中,各省都趋向于达到其年度允许砍伐量,因此,采用打捞伐木的做法已成为一种做法,目的是尽量减少砍伐对长期木材供应的影响。在北方森林和山脉森林的大部分地区,由于木材枯萎的虫子,污渍,木材腐烂真菌和检查导致火灾后数月的等级或体积显着下降,因此在死后的大部分森林中,经过防火处理的树干迅速退化。由于这种即将到来的退化,经常匆忙进行打捞作业,并且在定义收获策略时很少考虑其他因素,包括打捞伐木的潜在生态影响。快速打捞的生态后果仅在最近5年中得到广泛研究,现在很清楚,打捞伐木可能对种子,水质和与火相关的动物物种的自然再生产生负面影响。在本文中,我们回顾了打捞采伐的工业和生态约束条件,并讨论了如何将这两个因素整合到打捞计划中。特别是,我们专注于抢救时间和保留问题。在这一点上,某种形式的可出售林分的保留,即使仅保留数年,似乎也是减轻火灾后伐木带来的负面生态影响的唯一方法。现场操作限制,例如由于缺乏可及性而无法收割的展位,代表了任何保留策略的重要起点。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号