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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 313 (1985), S. 570-572 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] The northern Qubec forest-tundra (Fig. 1) extends from the limit of continuous forest (Boreal forest) to the tree line9. Forests grow mainly into the lowlands in well-watered and protected sites, whereas treeless lichen-dominating vegetation is found on the interfluves. Forests become increasingly ...
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 1992-10-01
    Description: Analysis was performed on 112 stems of black spruce (Piceamariana (Mill.) BSP) from the Réserve faunique des Laurentides to compare the growth in height, DBH, and volume of layers released by clear-cutting to the growth of individuals of comparable age originating from seeds after fire. The sampled stands originated from fires and clear-cuttings that occurred between 1894 and 1941. Stem analysis also permitted the calculation of specific volume increment, which corresponds to the annual volume increment divided by the surface of the cambium. Results show that height, DBH, and volume measured 60 years after clear-cutting were better correlated to the height of the advanced growth at the moment of release (Ho) than to the number of years of suppression. The mean annual increments in height and DBH of released layers were positively related to height at the year of logging when the height was less than 2 m. When layers were taller, mean annual increments in height and DBH were negatively related to initial height. These relationships were however variable, since for two-thirds of the stand's life, the periodic annual increments in height and diameter did not differ significantly (α = 0.05) between small (Ho  2 m). The superiority of taller layers is consequently due to greater heights before release. Volume growth rate of layers was positively related to initial height until approximately 60 years after clear-cutting. However, no differences in specific volume increment could be associated with initial height. Therefore, the relationship between initial height and volume increment can be attributed to the difference of cambial area between small, medium, and large second-growth spruces. Black spruce originating from seeds had greater height, DBH, and specific volume increments than second-growth trees, until about 50 years after stand origin. Thereafter, growth rates are comparable. Consequently, after 40 years, stands originating from seeds are comparable in height, volume, and DBH to layers that reached between 1 and 2 m in height after clear-cutting. Neither drainage class nor point density had a significant effect on the sampled black spruces. Stem analysis also revealed an important growth reduction that can be associated with the last spruce budworm (Choristoneurafumiferana Clem.) outbreak in the Réserve faunique des Laurentides. We can deduce from the results of this study that the performance of second-growth stands compared with fire-origin stands will mainly depend on the density of the advanced growth and its height structure.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2005-03-01
    Description: We used an extensive vertebrate exclosure experiment to evaluate black spruce (Picea mariana (Mill.) B.S.P.) postdispersal seed and seedling predation by invertebrates in three boreal habitats of Eastern Canada: recent burn, sprucemoss, and lichen woodland. Between 9% and 19% of seeds were eaten by invertebrates. Seed predation was higher in recent burns than in sprucemoss and lichen woodlands. Abundance and diversity of potential invertebrate seed consumers sampled in pitfall traps also varied among habitat types. Among the invertebrate seed consumers sampled, Myrmica spp. (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) and Pterostichus adstrictus (Eschscholtz, 1823) (Coleoptera: Carabidae) were the most numerous; Formica spp. (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) and Pterostichus punctatissimus (Randall, 1838) (Coleoptera: Carabidae) were also present. Between 2% and 12% of juvenile black spruce seedlings were eaten by invertebrates. The most important seedling consumers were slugs (molluscs). Invertebrate predation of seeds and seedlings was highest (19% and 12%) in recent burns, indicating that invertebrate predation may significantly influence black spruce regeneration in these sites.
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 1992-04-01
    Description: Stem analysis was used to compare the height, diameter at breast height, and volume growth of seven merchantable black spruce (Piceamariana (Mill.) B.S.P.) stands regenerated after harvesting from advance growth of layer origin with the growth of three merchantable black spruce stands regenerated after fire from seed. The year of harvesting in the second-growth stands was precisely determined using synchronous growth release after logging, scars left by the logging operation, and historical records. The year of the fires in seed-origin stands was determined using fire scars and historical records. Fire-origin stands showed typical even-aged structure, and logged, second-growth stands showed an uneven-aged structure associated with an asymmetric curve. When compared with seed-origin stands, layer-origin stands showed a significantly greater total height 30 years after the stand origin because of the initial height of the layers. However, annual height increments were similar between the two origin types at 30 years. The mean diameter increment at 30 years was significantly higher in the second-growth stands. The mean annual specific volume increment values for the entire period of growth were slightly higher for the fire-origin stands. Layers that were small at the time of logging (2 m). There was a significant negative correlation between the height, diameter, and age of the layers at the time of logging and both the mean specific volume increment and the mean annual height increment 30 years after logging. In the second-growth stands, the number of merchantable trees and volume increment increased gradually because of the uneven structure of the stands. In contrast, in the seed-origin stands, the trees attained merchantable size at around 30 years after the fire, and the merchantable volume rose rapidly after this. The layer-origin populations had a significant advantage over the seed-origin populations because of the initial height and diameter of the layers at the time of logging. All seven layer-origin stands achieved, or were predicted to achieve, higher merchantable volumes than the seed-origin stands at 40 years. Our results indicate that the second-growth stands growing on mesic sites have the potential to produce merchantable forests comparable to the yield tables available for black spruce provided that the number of stems per hectare is adequate.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2006-06-01
    Description: Wet heartwood in black spruce (Picea mariana (Mill.) BSP) causes considerable problems during the drying process. Forest companies try to avoid harvesting stands with wet heartwood, but no relationship has been yet established between the incidence of wet heartwood and tree or site characteristics. To characterize areas containing a significant proportion of black spruce affected by wet heartwood, a total of 635 black spruce trees were sampled in eighteen 400 m2 study plots under management in the central boreal forest of Quebec. A total of 18 study sites were analysed and classified as wet, intermediate, or dry, based on the proportion of individuals with wet heartwood. Thirteen of the study sites were classified as wet, two as intermediate, and three as dry. The average age calculated for trees on wet sites was significantly (p = 0.0001) higher than that of the other two classes, whereas growth rate was significantly lower on wet sites. No difference was noted in the average height or diameter of the individuals from all three classes. The wet sites contained organic soil, whereas Podzols characterized two of the three dry study sites. An additional sampling of black spruce (n = 509) revealed a significant relationship between the groundwater level and heartwood moisture content classification (i.e., dry, intermediate, or wet). Trees in the dry heartwood class grew on sites with the lowest groundwater levels (p = 0.002) compared with trees in the wet or intermediate classes.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2006-08-01
    Description: Balsam fir (Abies balsames (L.) Mill.) seeds dispersed in autumn–winter can be covered by many layers of broadleaves when they germinate under deciduous trees during the following growing season. Our goal was to test the effect of seed density, broadleaf litter thickness, and substrate type on emergence, morphology, and dry mass allocation of balsam fir. The greenhouse experiment included three seeding densities, four litter thicknesses covering the seeds, and two substrate types. The broadleaf mixture was composed of white birch (Betula payrifera Marsh.), trembling aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.), and pin cherry (Prunus pensylvanica L.f.) collected on the forest floor of a 30-year-old postfire stand. Seed density had no effect on emergence from under broadleaf litter. Emergence was lower on the litter substrate than on potting soil. Seedling emergence and vigor declined as broadleaf thickness increased. Depending on substrate type, emergence was reduced by 20% (leaf litter substrate) to 28% (potting soil) when seeds were covered by 1.4–2.0 cm of broadleaves. An overtopping layer of 2.5–3.0 cm reduced emergence by 57%. Balsam firs emerging from under broadleaf litter allocated more dry mass to longer and thinner hypocotyls at the expense of cotyledon and root growth, albeit seeded on potting soil. This study identifies biomechanical constraints that severely reduce early seedling vigour suggesting that in situ survival under broadleaf litter is very low.
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 1991-11-01
    Description: The distribution and growth in height of two black spruce populations were studied in two areas that had been strip cut, one in 1968–1969 in the Nicauba Experimental Forest and the other in 1954 around Lake Massie. By careful sampling of trees, advance growth could be differentiated from post-established regeneration; to a certain extent, spruce originating from seed could also be distinguished from trees that grew by layering. Stem analysis was used to compare the juvenile growth of advanced and post-established regenerated black spruce to that of trees in the residual strips. The stocking and the density are high for black spruce 18–20 years after logging, regardless of their origin (seed, layering, advance growth, or post-established regeneration): more than 80% and over 18 000 stems/ha, respectively. The yield for seedlings is not uniform from strip to strip; it is significant in some and negligible in others. Thirty-four years after strip-cutting the area around Lake Massie, the stocking of black spruce is also over 80% and the density is greater than 22 000 stems/ha, but these trees originated almost exclusively by layering. In the Nicauba Experimental Forest, seedlings established themselves very rapidly after strip-cutting. Overall, over a 20-year period, the juvenile rate of growth in height of the dominant advance growth (mainly layers) in the two areas is comparable to that of the dominant trees in the residual strips of Nicauba; it is almost double the rate observed in dominant post-established regenerated black spruce in the Nicauba area.
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 1996-08-01
    Description: Regeneration dynamics have been studied in three open lichen–spruce woodlands located in the black spruce feather-moss forest zone. Black spruces (Piceamariana (Mill.) BSP) belonging to the adult stratum originated from a fire that occurred in 1877. Population history and ecology has been studied on the basis of the establishment period of individuals. The age of black spruces belonging to the regeneration stratum was calculated by using the cross-dating method. The establishment period of the seedlings was determined by the age structure. The black spruces of these open forests belong to two different populations. The adult population originated from the 1877 fire whereas the regeneration population seems to have established itself following another fire that occurred in 1922–1923. Black spruce seedlings of the regeneration stratum are very old (60 years-old on average) in spite of a low height (mean height of 96 cm). Although these open forests are under favourable climatic conditions, they have dynamics similar to lichen–spruce woodlands of the taiga zone. In the last 45 years, no seedlings have settled in these sparse forests.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2007-08-01
    Description: Community structure and relative abundance of 27 species of small mammals and forest birds were compared among three types of residual forest stands and unharvested control forest (CO). Treatments were young and old mosaics (a checkerboard pattern of residual and logged forest units of 85–100 ha each) and megablocks (residual stands of 250–300 ha isolated within a logged area of 2500–3000 ha). Relative abundances were also used to establish habitat use models (HUMs). We found no statistical difference in species relative abundances between treatments and COs, although small sample sizes limited statistical power. HUMs explained a large amount of variation in habitat use for 15 mammal and bird species (mean 57.4 ± 3.5%, ranging between 22.3% and 75.7%). Variance partitioning emphasized the importance of stand structure characteristics as the principal predictors of abundance for censused species. Our results suggested that mosaics and megablocks are both suitable configurations to maintain studied species because no species exhibited lower relative abundances in such residual forest stands than COs. We suggest that residual forest stands planning should shift from a strictly landscape perspective toward a more holistic approach that considers residual forest structure as well as landscape characteristics.
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2002-03-01
    Description: The widespread use of careful logging in the province of Quebec raises many questions about the effects of this practice on the structure and productivity of boreal black spruce (Picea mariana (Mill.) BSP) stands compared with fire-origin stands that are currently being harvested. The objective of this study is to describe and compare the evolution pattern of the diameter structure of stands originating from fire or logging dating back to the first half of the 20th century. The dendrochronological approach allowed the reconstitution of the dynamics of 40- to 96-year-old stands. Second-growth stands differ from fire-origin stands by their highly hierarchized initial structure. After the recruitment period, the degree of hierarchy of the structure of second-growth and fire-origin stands is comparable. After logging, the diameter structure of black spruce stands keeps a higher skewness index than that of stands originating from fire. For both stand types the skewness decreases or remains constant with time, which invalidates the model proposed by Mohler et al. (C.L. Mohler, P.L. Marks, and D.G. Sprugel. 1978. J. Ecol. 66: 599614). This observation questions the existence of a strong asymmetric competition among trees in black spruce stands. Results indicate that the yield of black spruce stands originating from clearcuts from the early 20th century is higher than or equal to fire-origin stands mainly because (i) basal area was maintained to levels higher than or equal to fire-origin stands and (ii) most advanced growth was taller that 1 m at the time of logging.
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