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The effects of selective logging on stand structure and the regeneration of subboreal forests in Hokkaido, northern Japan
Authors:Takuo Nagaike  Yasuhiro Kubota  Nobuyuki Watanabe
Affiliation:(1) Graduate School of Science and Technology, Niigata University, 950-2181 Niigata, Japan;(2) Faculty of Education, Kagoshima University, 890-0065 Kagoshima, Japan;(3) Graduate School of Environmental Earth Science, Hokkaido University, 060-0810 Sapporo, Japan
Abstract:We investigated the effects of selective logging on stand structure and regeneration in selectively logged subboreal forests in Taisetsuzan National Park in Hokkaido in northern Japan. The basal area decreased and the size structure of trees altered in the stands studied due to repeated, intense selective logging, in which larger trees were cut down as a priority. Sapling density in the stands was much lower than that in primary forests. In the simple and multiple regression analyses that were used to estimate the effects of selective logging on sapling density, sapling density had a significant positive correlation with tree density and had little correlation with the density of logged stumps or the height ofSasa (dwarf bamboo) growing on the forest floor. These results suggest that the establishment sites around canopy trees influenced the establishment of saplings, rather than the gaps caused by selective logging. However, both the coefficient of determination and the standardized partial regression coefficient of multiple regression analysis were higher for the stand with a dense cover ofSasa than for the stand with a sparse cover ofSasa. Thus, the success of regenerating forests with selective logging depends on both the site of advanced regeneration and the light conditions that regulate growth.
Keywords:establishment sites   Picea-Abies forest   Sasa   selective logging  sustainable yield
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