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Thinning mixed-species stands of Douglas-fir and western hemlock in the presence of Swiss needle cast. Junhui Zhao, Douglas A. Maguire, Douglas B. Mainwaring, Alan Kanaskie. Background.
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Thinning mixed-species stands of Douglas-fir and western hemlock in the presence of Swiss needle cast Junhui Zhao, Douglas A. Maguire, Douglas B. Mainwaring, Alan Kanaskie
Background • Young Douglas-fir plantations (≤40 yr) are tremendously important to the economic and environmental health of Oregon and Washington due to their extent and productivity (Campbell et al. 2004, Gray et al. 2005). • Over the past 20 years, coastal forests in this region have been suffering from an epidemic of Swiss needle cast (SNC).
Premature loss of older foliage, Needle longevity 1-4 years
Swiss Needle Cast affect Douglas-fir Needle on the left showing rows of black fruiting bodies of Swiss needle cast.
(Photo by Bryan Black) 1983 1980 1970 1961 2008:1984 Direction of growth The trees’ growth between 1984 and 2008 was packed into just a millimeter.
Current plantation strategy • Due to its historically greater value, Douglas-fir continues to be an important component of planted stands. • Increasing proportions of Douglas-fir are generally planted stands from west to east within the Coast Ranges of Oregon, with western hemlock making up most of the remainder. (Beth Fitch, pers. comm)
Pre-commercial thinning • Infected stands respond positively to thinning. • But Douglas-fir growth remains lower than its potential in absence of SNC.
Growth market value NO. 2 Saw log DF WH
Aims of this study • to develop distance-independent individual tree diameter growth models for Douglas-fir and western hemlock growing in plots established across a gradient in SNC severity; • to compute the implied relative basal area growth of Douglas-fir and western hemlock trees of varying initial diameter as a function of foliage retention; • to develop a field chart to help managers select trees for removal and retention during thinning of mixed Douglas-fir and hemlock stands .
Study plots • 10-30-yr old Douglas-fir plantation • 76 stands • 0.2 acre • Measured in 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004, and 2008.
Method • Develop diameter increment models for Douglas-fir and western hemlock by testing: • Tree size: DBH, CR, HCB • Competition: TPA, D40, H40, QMD, AGE, BA, CCF, SDI, SI, BAL, CCFL • Site: ELEV, SL, LONG, LAT • SNC: FR
The models • Douglas-fir (R2=0.733) • Western hemlock (R2=0.766)
85.0% more 40.4% less
Model application • TPA=400 ( DF250, WH150). CR=0.7. • Diameter of western hemlock: 2-12 inches • Diameter of Douglas fir: 0-5 inches larger than western hemlock. • All Douglas-fir trees have the same DBH, and all Western hemlock have the same DBH.
Model application • The ratio of basal area growth of the Douglas-fir and western hemlock trees was computed as a function of foliage retention and the difference between the diameters of the two species. • For a given foliage retention, the diameter difference between the species where the growth ratio equals one implies a diameter difference threshold during a thinning.
Conclusion • The foliar losses of Douglas-fir imposed by SNC diminish Douglas-fir crown density and diameter increment, thereby enhancing diameter increment of western hemlock, the most common associate of Douglas-fir in coastal forests of Oregon. • Application of Douglas-fir and western hemlock diameter increment models to simulate indicates that the relative basal area growth of the two species in young, mixed stands varies directly with foliage retention.
Conclusion • When thinning in mixed stands where foliage retention is as low as 1.5 yrs, western hemlock trees will grow more in basal area than Douglas-fir tree that are 2-3 inches larger in diameter. • These results can be useful for forest managers who can prescribe “D+x” thinning where x represents the diameter advantage that Douglas-fir must have over an adjacent western hemlock to be selected as the leave tree. In this approach, “x” would be selected as a function of SNC intensity as measured by foliage retention.
Acknowledgements • This project was funded by the Swiss Needle Cast Cooperative (SNCC) hosted at Oregon State University. • We gratefully acknowledge field work performed by many different field crews working for the SNCC and the Oregon Department of Forestry.