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The influence of Tree harvesting methods on soil erosion. By Simon Hart. Introduction. Forests cover almost one third of earths land surface. Provide timber & non timber forest products. Services Stabilising soil against wind and water erosion
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The influence of Tree harvesting methods on soil erosion By Simon Hart
Introduction • Forests cover almost one third of earths land surface. • Provide timber & non timber forest products. • Services • Stabilising soil against wind and water erosion • Moderate stream flow absorbing excessive rainfall • Recycling moisture completing hydrological cycle
The current situation • Many forests have already been lost • Estimated at 17 million ha/ year (CIDA, 2001) • Reasons are poverty and population growth. • Harvesting timber can have and adverse effect on the environment if not done correctly.
Soil erosion • Varies, dependent on: • Soil type • Climate • Vegetation • Aspect • Gradient
Tropics is considered more at risk • High amounts of rainfall • Fragile soils • Temperate forestry • Uplands • Steep slopes
What is erosion? • ‘Erosion results from accelerated removal of soil materials by running water, wind or gravitational creep’ (Pritchett, 1987) • Natural process existed through geological time • Ganges and Mississippi deltas • Before the arrival of Europeans
Forest harvesting Natural sequence of event for any crop Renewable resource Increased erosion following deforestation has been reported for centuries Increased sedimentation
Harvesting systems • Combination of methods to fell trees and extract to roadside • Felling and extraction methods vary • Mechanical • Manual • Combination
Clear felling/ clear cut • Both temperate & tropical • Economic • Easy to implement • Concern in recent years • Removes all merchantable timber • Often trees of same species and age
Effects • By removing trees you are removing water losses, evapotranspiration • Less interception • Roots holding soil together • Source of organic matter • Increase in surface runoff and soil erosion
Tropics more destructive • Brash is burnt • No protective layer • Soil left bare • Temperate brash often remains onsite • Brash mats, help protect soil
Surface erosion, mass wasting and channel scour can all result from forest harvesting • Mineral soils are exposed to raindrop impact • Detached particles are transported as surface erosion • Care taken with location, construction and maintenance of extraction routes (skidder tracks) reduces stream turbidity as a result of soil erosion.
Stream turbidity (JTU) Treatment Base flow mean Stormflow maximum Commercial clear-cut During logging 490 56000 First year after cut 38 5000 Second year after cut 2 170 Silvicultural clear cut During logging 6 90 First year after cut 5 35 Second year after cut 2 23 Undisturbed control 2 25 Effects of timber harvesting on stream turbidity in a humid region (Kochenderfer and Aubertin, 1975)
Whole tree harvesting • Method of clear felling • All material including brash is removed • More destructive • More traffic over site • No protective layer
Partial cut harvesting • Selection Method- harvesting selected trees in an uneven-aged stand either individually or in small groups at periodic intervals throughout a harvesting rotation. Harvested trees may be the most valuable trees, the poorest quality trees, the oldest trees or trees of a certain species. • Shelterwood Method-harvesting mature trees in two or more cuttings to allow establishment and early growth of seedlings under partial shade and shelter of older trees. • Seed tree Method- leaving individual trees or groups of trees uncut to provide seed to regenerate the cutover area.
Permanent cover = less erosion • Allows cuts to be made in sensitive areas • Slopes • Riverbanks Risk of wind throw Result being worse
Reduced impact logging (RIL) • Developed in Brazil • Array of best harvesting techniques to reduce damage to residual forest • 57 % less sediment yield compared to conventional logging (Malaysia) • Lower amount of bare soil
pre-harvest inventory and mapping of trees • pre-harvest planning of roads and skidtrails • pre-harvest vine cutting • directional felling • cutting stumps low to the ground • efficient utilization of felled trunks • constructing roads and skid trails of optimum width • winching of logs to planned skid trails • constructing landings of optimal size • minimizing ground disturbance and slash management.
Mechanical harvesting • Heavy trafficking on soft ground • Efficient drainage system • Construction of roads • Construction of skidder trails
An experiment in harvesting , piedmont forest showed that overall export was 90% due to poor roading and channel damage
Harvest method/ logging system Percentage bare soil Clear-cut/ tractor 26-29 Highlead 16-19 Skyline 6-12 Balloon 6 Selection/ tractor 16 Cable 21 Percentage mineral soil exposed using various timber harvest methods and logging systems in Oregon and Washington (Rice, 1972)
Benefits • Soil disturbance kept to a minimum • Absence of ground traffic • Caution, trails do not become warn by repeated dragging
Skidding • Serious soil disturbance • Dragging logs along behind a tractor unit • 11 times sediment yields have been reported as a result • Malaysia, 30% of ground was bare and damaged after mechanical extraction • Particularly damaging in wet conditions
Other mechanical harvesting methods • Forwarders • Harvesters • Fully laden forwarders can have a big impact on soil even with good brash mats. • Should be confined to dry periods to reduce compaction and erosion of soil.
Conclusion • Harvesting operations in the tropics are often more at risk of causing soil erosion • Planning and management of a harvesting operation is an important factor in reducing soil erosion • Cost of preventing soil erosion is often cheaper than repairing the damage