Toward Continuous Cover Forestry on Boreal Lowlands -- Hydrological
Responses to Partial Harvesting
Abstract
Interest towards continuous cover forestry (CCF) has grown in recent
years as it is considered more favorable from environmental perspectives
than even-aged management. CCF could be particularly feasible on
peatlands and other lowland soils as continuously maintaining a tree
cover with significant evapotranspiration capacity could decrease the
need for artificial drainage. Clear cutting, site preparation, and
regular cleaning of drainage ditches increase greenhouse gas emissions
and affect water quality by releasing sediment, nutrients and carbon to
water bodies. Whereas even-aged management on peatlands relies on these
intensive and environmentally adverse practices, regeneration in CCF
forests would occur naturally and evapotranspiration of the tree stand
would play a key role in maintaining drainage conditions. Partial
harvest is an essential component of CCF and our study focuses on
understanding its impacts on hydrology. The study site comprises a
fertile drained peatland forest in Southern Finland, where three
parallel sites were established in March 2016: (i) clear-cut with site
preparation and seedling planting, (ii) partial harvest removing 75% of
tree biomass, and (iii) control left untouched as reference. Data on
ecosystem fluxes (Eddy covariance) and ground water depth were available
from each site after the harvest and for a pre-treatment period of 6
years. In our attempt to understand the mechanisms behind observed
changes after clear-cut and partial harvest, we applied a
one-dimensional multi-layer multi-species soil-vegetation-atmosphere
transfer model in conjunction with data analysis. The hydrology of each
parallel site was simulated to explore the role of the amount and
diversity of vegetation. Results suggested that on the partial harvest
site the undergrowth of birch and spruce had the potential to partly
compensate for the transpiration of the harvested pine, which dominated
the stand before the treatment and limited the light received by the
undergrowth trees. Such changes in vegetation-driven water balance
components revealed by mechanistic modeling form the basis for
understanding vegetation controls on growing season ground water depth,
which is a key factor for the successful implementation of CCF in
peatland forests.